Milton Shoe Finisher Samuel E. Drew (1868-1938)

By Muriel Bristol | February 25, 2024

Samuel E. Drew was born in Stoneham, MA, October 4, 1868, son of Samuel and Jane (Martin) Drew.

Samuel Drew, a currier, aged sixty-three years (b. NH), headed a Stoneham, MA, household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Jane [(Martin)] Drew, keeping house, aged fifty-four years (b. Nova Scotia), his children, Frank A. Drew, a currier, aged twenty years (b. MA) (b. MA), and Samuel E. Drew, attending school, aged eleven years, his sister-in-law, Emeline F. [(Martin)] Jones, works in shoe factory, aged forty-two years (b. Nova Scotia), and his nephew-in-law, Frederick R. Jones, aged nine years (b. MA).

Father Samuel Drew died of partial necrosis of the brain in Stoneham, MA, August 30, 1883, aged sixty-one years, five months. He was a married currier, and native of Durham, NH.

Samuel E. Drew married in Milton, August 25, 1892, Ina Frances Wentworth, both of Milton. He was a shoemaker, aged twenty-three years, and she was a lady, aged eighteen years. Rev. Frank Haley performed the ceremony. She was born in Milton, June 26, 1874, daughter of George C.S. and Mary C. (Hanson) Wentworth. (Her mother, Mary C. (Hanson) Wentworth, had died of apoplexy in Milton, October 14, 1890, aged forty-five years, nine months, and nine days).

(The children of Samuel E. and Ina F. (Wentworth) Drew were George Wentworth Drew (1895-1955) and Cora Thelma Drew (1896-1897)).

Son George Wentworth Drew was born in Milton, September 12, 1893.

Daughter Cora Thelma Drew was born in Milton, June 26, 1896. She died of meningitis in Milton, November 23, 1897, aged one year, four months, and twenty-eight days. Her father was a shoe cutter. M.A.H. Hart, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Samuel E. Drew appeared in the Milton directories of 1900 and 1902, as a shoe cutter, with his house on Main street, north of the depot. (Father-in-law George C.S. Wentworth appeared also as a shoe cutter, with his house on Main street, north of the depot).

George C.S. Wentworth, a day laborer, aged sixty years (b. ME), headed a Milton (“Milton Village”) household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household included his son-in-law, Samuel E. Drew, a day laborer, aged thirty years (b. MA), his daughter (Drew’s wife of seven years), Ina F. [(Wentworth)] Drew, aged twenty-five years (b. NH), and his grandson, George W. Drew, at school, aged six years (b. NH). George C.S. Wentworth owned their house, free-and-clear. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Harold A. Bassett, a barber, aged thirty-one years (b. Canada), and George Downs, a day laborer, aged forty-eight years (b. NH).

Mother Jane (Martin) Drew died of hepatitis in Stoneham, MA, May 9, 1902, aged seventy-four years. She was a widow and native of Cornwallis, Nova Scotia, Canada.

ANNUAL MASQUE BALL. Entertainment Given at Milton, N.H., by Dramatic Club of That Place. MILTON, N.H., Jan. 8 – The Milton dramatic club gave its second annual masked ball at A.O.U.W. hall tonight. There were 92 couples in the march, which was led by Mr. and Mrs. Fred S. Hartford. The ball officers were Fred S. Hartford chief marshal, Samuel E. Drew, Frank S. Norton aids. George A. Gilmore, George V. Paey, Samuel Swett assistants. Among those present were: Mr. John Hartigan, Mr. Charles Parker, Mr. Herbert Finnegan, Mr. W. Went worth, Mr. & Mrs. E. Looney, Mr. Herbert Willey, Mr. Harry Page, Mr. William Elliott, Mr. Frank Burke, Mr. Fred Downs, Miss Alice Brock, Miss Annie Marcoux, Miss Annie Young, Miss Clara Hurd, Miss M. O’Loughlin, Miss Florence Dore, Mr. Frank Cassidy, Mr. Ernest Leighton, Miss Mary Varney, Miss Grace Pike, Miss Grace Stone, Mrs. Piercy, Mr. & Mrs. C. Wingate, Mr. & Mrs. J. O’Loughlin, Mr. Frank Jones, Mr. Philip Irish, Mr. Walter Randall, Mr. James Howard, Mr. William Dore, Mr. & Mrs. Leslie Hayes, Mr. Scott Randall, Miss Effie Howard, Mr. & Mrs. J. Marcoux, Miss Blanche Tufts, Mr. Charles Drew, Mr. & Mrs. Charles Page, Mr. Herbert Dow, Mr. Fred Emery, Mrs. John Daniels, Mr. & Mrs. Fred Home, Miss Lizzie Stead, Miss Blanch Dore (Boston Globe, January 9, 1904).

Samuel E. Drew appeared in the Milton directory of 1905, as a shoe cutter, with his house at 80 Main street, north of depot.

MILTON, N.H. Among those who attended the Red Men’s council at Manchester lately were Wm. L. Wallace and Guy Hayes; the ladies who went were Mrs. Lillian Wentworth, Mrs. Ina Drew, Mrs. Carrie Hodges and Mrs. Ina Webber. Wm. L. Wallace received the appointment as great guard of the wigwam (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), October 19, 1906).

Samuel E. Drew appeared in the Milton directory of 1909, as a shoe cutter and milk dealer, with his house at 80 Main street, north of depot.

The Milton Selectmen of 1909 were Charles A. Jones, Samuel E. Drew, and Haven R. Jewett.

MILTON. At the town meeting last Tuesday, Charles A. Jones, Haven Nutter [Haven R. Jewett] and Samuel Drew were chosen for selectmen. Dr. M.A.H. Hart was reelected on the school board for the next three years. Everett F. Fox town treasurer. T.L. Avery and B.B. Plummer, Jr., town auditors, H.W. Downs constable, J.H. Rhines chief of police (Farmington News, March 12, 1909).

MILTON. Town meeting Tuesday of last week was the quietest held for years. Selectmen elected were Charles A. Jones, Samuel E. Drew and Haven R. Jewett. Police officers James H. Rines and Charles L. Beaton. At the school meeting, besides the usual appropriation, the sum of S200 was raised for fire escapes for the school houses at Milton and Milton Mills (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), March 19, 1909).

The Milton Selectmen of 1910 were Charles A. Jones, Samuel E. Drew, and Haven R. Jewett.

Samuel Drew, a finisher (shoe factory), aged thirty-nine years (b. MA), headed a Milton (“Milton 3 Ponds”) household at the time of the Thirteenth (1910) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of seventeen years), Ina [(Wentworth)] Drew, aged thirty-five years (b. NH), his son, George Drew, aged sixteen years (b. NH), and his servant, Alice Perkins, a private family servant, aged sixteen years (b. NH). Samuel Drew owned their house, free-and-clear. Ina Drew was the mother of two children, of whom one was still living. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Hannah [(Pinkham)] Drew, a widow, aged seventy-six years (b. NH), and George L. Downs, a painter (odd jobs), aged fifty-six years (b. NH).

The Milton Selectmen of 1911 were S.E. Drew, B.B. Plummer, and C.S. Philbrick.

MILTON, N.H. The Tip-Top Club gave its annual concert and ball at A.O.U.W. Hall Friday night, with many attending. Bunting and flags constituted the decorations. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Drew led the grand inarch, consisting of 96 couples. The floor manager was Raymond Tupper, and the aids were J. Herbert Willey, Samuel Drew and James O’Loughlin (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), December 29, 1911).

Samuel E. Drew appeared in the Milton directory of 1912, as a shoe operative and milk dealer, with his house at 80 Main street, north of depot.

The Milton Selectmen of 1912 were S.E. Drew, B.B. Plummer, and C.S. Philbrick.

Samuel E. Drew appeared in the Milton directory of 1917, as a shoe operative, with his house at 80 Main street, north of depot. Son George W. Drew appeared as being employed in Detroit, MI, with his home with S.E.D. [S.E. Drew], at 80 Main street.

AUCTIONS, REAL ESTATE. SAMUEL E. DREW, Auctioneer, will sell at Milton, N.H., Saturday, October 20, 1917, at 12 noon, farm of 75 acres, 1 mile from town, with good building, silo, fruit trees, growing pine and hardwood; also all household goods and farming tools; posters sent on application * (Boston Globe, October 14. 1917).

Son Corporal George W. Drew appeared on a U.S. Army Transport Service manifest for Company A, 125 Infantry [Regiment]. Cpl. Drew named his mother, Ina Drew of Milton, NH, as his next of kin. The company would sail from Hoboken, NJ, on February 19, 1918, presumably for Europe, on troop transport “36.”

LOCAL. The official list of New Hampshire casualties for the week just passed gives the name of Private George W. Drew of Milton, son of the well known auctioneer Samuel S. Drew, as having been slightly wounded (Farmington News, May 19, 1919).

Son George W. Drew married in Detroit, MI, September 20, 1919, Izetta L. Aylesworth, both of Detroit, MI. He was a salesman, aged twenty-six years, and she was a clerk, aged twenty-two years. Rector Bertram Pallinger performed the ceremony. She was born in Isabella County, MI, August 20, 1897, daughter of Robert B. and Elizabeth “Lizzie” (Forbes) Aylesworth.

Samuel E. Drew, a state road patrolman, aged fifty years (b. MA), headed a Milton household at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Ina W. [(Wentworth)] Drew, aged forty-five years (b. NH), and his father-in-law, George C.S. Wentworth, aged eighty years (b. ME). Samuel E. Drew owned their farm on Upper Main Street in Milton Village, free-and-clear. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Wilbur F. Abbott, a leatherboard laborer, aged thirty-nine years (b. NH), and George L. Downs, a house painter, aged sixty-six years (b. NH).

George W. Drew, a furnace co. salesman, aged twenty-six years (b. NH), and his wife, Izetta [(Aylesworth)] Drew, a bank clerk, aged twenty-two years (b. MI), were among the fourteen lodgers in the Detroit, MI, household of Marion Johnson, a toolmaker (machine shop), aged twenty-seven years (b. OH), at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census.

Ina F. (Wentworth) Drew died of apoplexy in Milton, May 6, 1922, aged forty-seven years, ten months, and ten days. She was a lifelong resident of Milton. M.A.H. Hart, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Samuel Drew took up managing local estate and real estate auctions at some time in the late 1920s.

AUCTION sale of household goods and farm implements at the residence of Warren L. Gilman, corner of Central and High streets, opposite B.F. Perkins carriage factory, Farmington, on Saturday, October 6, at 10 o’clock in the forenoon. Chance to buy well kept furniture, household wares and farm implements at auction prices. Sale rain or shine. Samuel Drew, Auctioneer. (Farmington News, September 28, 1928).

Son George E. Drew moved to Roanoke, VA, in or around 1928-29, where he ran the principal Virginia office of the Michigan-based Holland Furnace Company

RICHMOND. Two of the corporations domesticating in Virginia yesterday paid the State $7500 in fees. All corporations pay on the basis of their capitalization to do business in Virginia. The two heavy contributors were the Pet Milk Company, a Delaware corporation, which paid $5000, and the Holland Furnace Company of Michigan, $2500. The principal Virginia office of the milk company is given as Abingdon, with John J. Fenstenmacher, agent in charge. The furnace company has its principal Virginia office at Roanoke, with George W. Drew in charge (Portsmouth Star (Portsmouth, VA), March 12, 1929).

Samuel E. Drew appeared in the Milton directory of 1930, as dealing in grain and milk, on Main street.

Hugh Innes, a mill laborer (fibre mill), aged forty-six years (b. Canada), headed a Milton household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of thirteen years), Hattie Innes, aged forty-five years (b. MA), and his boarder, George C.S. Wentworth, aged ninety years (b. ME). Hugh Innes rented their house on North Main Street, for $15 per month. They had a radio set. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of George Downs, a house painter, aged seventy-six years (b. NH), and Wilbur Abbot, a laborer (fibre mill), aged fifty-two years (b. NH).

[This would seem to be the same house occupied first by George C.S. Wentworth, who resided there still as a boarder, and then by his son-in-law, Samuel E. Drew, who appears to have moved to Rochester, NH, where he resided in his auction house. It might seem that Samuel E. Drew owned the house, but had rented it to Hugh Innes].

George W. Drew, an engineer (furnace co.), aged thirty-six years (b. NH), headed a Roanoke, VA, household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of eleven years), Izetta L. [(Aylesworth)] Drew, aged thirty-three years (b. MI), his children, Janice G. Drew, aged three years (b. NY), and George W. Drew, [Jr.,] aged three years (b. NY), and his servant, Rodessa Graveley, a private family servant, aged twenty years (b. VA). George W. Drew rented their house at 1010 Auburn Avenue, for $50 per month.

Samuel E. Drew appeared in the Rochester, NH, directories of 1931, 1933, 1935, and 1936, as an auctioneer and realtor at 15 S. Main street (6), with his residence at the same location.

FEINEMAN BROTHERS CHERISH RELIC. Among the imposing appointments of the Feineman Brothers store in Rochester hangs a framed sale bill, memento of the enterprise of the forebears of the present owners, S.H. and E.S. Feineman, who founded the business which has grown to be one of the largest and most flourishing men’s wear establishments in the state. Although the old print bears the date of May, 1863, and proclaims a spring sale of merchandise on a lavish scale for those days, it is in a most remarkable state of preservation, having been printed on English paper, made from rags, and printed with English ink. The merchandise exploited contained many items and nearly every piece was an imported product from England, France, Germany, Belgium and Arabia. Prices were high because of the Civil war, but the quality and utility of the product must have been remarkable compared with present day standards. The present owners of the store had no idea of the existence of literature connected with the store dating so far back until Samuel Drew, the well known auctioneer, presented them with this copy which was found among the personal effects 01 the late George H. Goodwin at the time of the auction last summer. It is displayed in a most effective manner near the entrance of their place of business (Farmington News, April 24, 1931).

Father-in-law George C.S. Wentworth died of influenzal pneumonia in Milton, February 1, 1934, aged ninety-four years, three months, and thirteen days. He was a retired shoe cutter. M.A.H. Hart, M.D., signed the death certificate.

REAL ESTATE AT AUCTION. To settle estate of Mary A. Brown, late of Farmington, a nine-room house, large barn, two garages and sheds, will be sold at public auction on the premises at 10 a.m. standard time, Saturday, September 1. Property is pleasantly and centrally located. Sale rain or shine. Charles G. Jenness, Executor Samuel E. Drew, Auctioneer (Farmington News, August 31, 1934).

Samuel E. Drew of Central Square in Rochester, NH, died of acute endocarditis at the Strafford County Farm in Dover, NH, April 17, 1938, aged sixty-nine years, six months, and thirteen days. He was a widowed auctioneer. J.H. Richards, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Samuel E. Drew appeared posthumously in the Rochester, NH, directory of 1939, as an auctioneer and realtor at 15 S. Main street (6), with his house at the same location.

Court Rules On Ski Slope Site. ROCHESTER, Sept 30 (Special) – A 10-acre plot of land covering a major part of the hill near the Boston and Maine depot at Milton, used last year by the Teneriffe Sports Club as a ski slope, is legally the property of former Councilor Burt R. Cooper and Judge Gardner S. Hall of Rochester, counsel for the heir of Samuel E. Drew, according to a judgment returned in Superior Court at Dover. Mr. Drew, long a resident of Milton, died last year and the land, part of his estate, was purchased by the selectmen of the town after the legal number of years had passed with the taxes unpaid. Another section of the Drew property was sold to Maynard Benton. Taxes had been paid to cover part of the property and the heirs argued successfully before the court that the selectmen could not know which of the two sections of the property the paid taxes had covered. The Teneriffe Sports Club developed the mountainside after the property was taken over by the town, erecting a ski tow there (Evening Express (Portland, ME), September 30, 1939).

George W. Drew, a supervisor (wholesale concern), aged forty-six years (b. NH), headed a Bridgeport, CT, household at the time of the Sixteenth (1940) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Izelle [(Aylesworth)] Drew, aged forty-two years (b. MI), and his children, George Drew, aged thirteen years (b. NY), and Jaris Drew, aged thirteen years (b. NY). George W. Drew rented their house at 171 Rocton Avenue, for $35 per month. They had all resided in the same place, i.e., Bridgeport, CT, in 1935.

Son George W. Drew registered for the WW II military draft in Bridgeport, CT, April 27, 1942. He was forty-eight years of age (b. Milton, NH, September 12, 1893), and was employed by the Bridgeport Brass Company on East Main Street. Izette Drew of the same address was his next of kin. His telephone number was 4-3495. He was 5′ 8″ tall, weighed 210 pounds, and had hazel eyes, gray hair, and a ruddy complexion.

Son George W. Drew died in West Haven, CT, February 16, 1955.

OBITUARY. George W. Drew. George W. Drew, of 149 Norman street, died Wednesday in the West Haven Veterans hospital. Services are being arranged by the West Haven branch of the Keenan funeral home, 238 Elm street (Bridgeport Telegram, February 18, 1955).

Daughter-in-law Izette L. (Aylesworth) Drew died in Cape Coral, FL, November 24, 1982.

DEATHS. Lee County. DREW, IZETTA L., 85, of 2505 S.E. 17th Ave., Cape Coral, funeral services today, Metz Funeral Home of Cape Coral in charge of arrangements (News Press (Fort Meyers, FL), November 26, 1982).


References:

Find a Grave. (2011, February 27). Cora Thelma Wentworth Drew. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/66210287/cora-thelma-drew

Find a Grave. (2000, March 3). George W. Drew. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/2661421/george-w-drew

Find a Grave. (2011, February 27). Samuel E. Drew. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/66210108/samuel-e.-drew

Find a Grave. (2009, November 26). George Clarence Scott Wentworth. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/44820152/george-clarence_scott-wentworth

Milton’s Strand Theatre / Silver Slipper Pavilion – 1926-48

By Muriel Bristol | February 24, 2024

Continued from Milton’s A.O.U.W. Hall – 1890-1925

Walter Eugene Young was born in Rochester, NH, April 6, 1888, son of Walter and Alice (Tufts) Young.

Walter E. Young married in Dover, NH, December 18, 1907, Edna M. Olsen, both of Rochester, NH. He was a box maker, aged nineteen years, and she was a shoe operative, aged twenty years. Rev. Albert J. Northrup performed the ceremony. She was born in Rochester, NH, circa 1887, daughter of Claus and Christina (Hansen) Olsen. (Her parents were natives of Norway).

(The known children of Walter E. and Edna M. (Olsen) Young were: Norma A. Young (1918-2011), and Walter H. Young (1920-)).

Claus Olson, a carpenter (odd jobs), aged sixty-eight years (b. Norway), headed a Rochester, NH, household at the time of the Thirteenth (1910) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of forty-two years), Christina [(Hansen)] Olson, aged sixty-six years (b. Norway), his son-in-law (of two years), Walter E. Young, a shoe worker (shoe factory), aged twenty-two years (b. NH), his daughter, Edna M. [(Olson)] Young, a top stitcher (shoe factory), aged twenty-two years (b. NH), and his granddaughter, C. Christina Day, aged twenty years (b. NH). Class Olson rented their house at 26 Jackson Street. Christina Olson was the mother of ten children, of whom seven were still living. They had immigrated from Norway in 1883 and 1884, respectively.

Walter E. Young opened his Olympia Theatre in the former Knights of Pythias Block on Central Street in Farmington, NH, May 11, 1914. This would be the first of his several theatre venues in the region.

Local. W.E. Young will open his new Olympia Theatre in the K. of P. block on Central street next Monday evening, May 11. The initial bill will be one of the very best and presented under the advantage of the most modern and up-to-date equipments, with which the new theatre will be provided. Mr. Young plans to make the event most auspicious in dedicating the new play house. The individual opera chairs now being put in will be a special feature of comfort to the patrons. Full particulars of opening will be published next week. Patrons will note the change in name, for the new theater is to be christened “The Olympia.” Proprietor Young will also present, as an opening attraction, “Madam Flower” of Boston, known as the “Bronze Melba,” who will be heard here for the first time in her characteristic song roles (Farmington News, May 8, 1914).

Walter E. Young appeared in the Farmington, NH, directory of 1917, as working with moving pictures at 14 Central street, and rooming at 48 Central street. The Olympia Theatre appeared under Moving Picture Shows, at 14 Central street.

Walter E. Young of Farmington, NH, registered for the WW I military draft in Farmington, NH, June 5, 1917. He was twenty-eight years old (b. Rochester, NH, April 6, 1888), married, and was self-employed in Farmington, NH, in the moving picture business. He was of a short height, medium build, with brown eyes and black hair. (His gravestone bears the inscription “PVT 20 CO 151 DEPOT BRIGADE, WORLD WAR I”).

Daughter Norma Agnes Young was born in Rochester, NH, August 20, 1918. She was the first child. Her father was employed in the motion picture business.

Walter E. Young, a proprietor (picture theatre), aged thirty-one years, headed a Farmington, NH, household at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census. his household included his wife, Edna M. [(Olsen)] Young, aged thirty-two years (b. NH), and his daughter, Norma A. Young, aged one year. Walter E. Young rented their apartment on East Grove Street. The other apartment was occupied by the household of John V. Kimball, a superintendent (box mill), aged thirty-two years (b. NH).

Son Walter Harris Young was born in Farmington, NH, October 4, 1920. He was the second child. His father was employed with motion pictures.

Walter E. Young appeared in the Farmington, NH, directory of 1921, as proprietor of the Strand Theatre, at 14 Central street, with his house at 21 E. Grove street.

The following three silent films were shown at Young’s Strand Theatre in Farmington, NH, in September 1922. The same films were probably shown also at Young’s Strand Theatre in Milton. Silent film showings usually featured live piano accompaniment by some local pianist.

At all these theatres, all this week – Paramount Pictures will be shown. … STRAND THEATRE, Farmington, N.H. Sept. 4 – Heliotrope; Sept. 7 – Right to Love; Sept. 9 – Frontier of the Stars (Portsmouth Herald, September 2, 1922).

Walter E. Young appeared in the Farmington, NH, directory of 1924, as proprietor of the Strand Theatre, at 14 Central street, with his house at N. Main street.

The A.O.U.W. sold their A.O.U.W. Hall to impresario Walter E. Young (1888-1956) of Farmington, NH, in December 1925. It had then a second life as both the Silver Slipper dance hall and as one of his chain of Strand Theatres. (He had at various times other theaters in Somersworth, Pittsfield, Gilmanton, New Durham and Milton). The Milton A.O.U.W. building’s original two-story construction had included

… three stores and a grand entrance on the ground floor, a large hall for dramatics and other entertainments on the second floor, with Lodge room and necessary ante room on the upper floor (Farmington News, October 10, 1890).

Walter E. Young appeared in the Rochester, NH, directory of 1926, as proprietor of the Opera House Theatre, in East Rochester, with his house at Farmington, NH. The Opera House Theatre appeared at 19 Main street, in East Rochester.

SILVER SLIPPER PAVILION. Walter E. Young is giving the patrons of his popular dance pavilion, the Silver Slipper at Milton, a real old-fashioned barn with all the fixin’s this Friday evening. Farm fed livestock, hay, fodder and vegetables will be among the decorations and there will be swings and all the regular old-time farm appointments. Milk drinking and egg laying contests will be among the features. This event should prove a big hit for the Silver Slipper and furnish a whale of a good time for all Mr. Young is the originator of the barn dance idea on a big scale and whenever he advertises such an affair the public may be assured that no details will be left out (Farmington News, August 6, 1926).

W.E. YOUNG PRESENTS COLORED ENTERTAINERS AT THE OPERA HOUSE. I am glad to announce that I have been able to get the combined shows, “Bamvelle Revue” and ‘Tennessee Blossoms,” to come to Farmington next Monday night, August 16. There are 20 people in all. This is a high-class colored show, with a colored orchestra. They have a snappy Creole chorus, funny comedians and some of the finest singing you ever heard. It is the only show that we have ever played and turned people away from the box office. It is the first show we ever played to more people on the second night than on the first. I knew that I have some Blossoms, to come to Farmington will like or I never would attempt to take them to the opera house. They are at Central Park this week. On next Tuesday evening they will appear at Alton. Signed, Walter E. Young.
This played to 1800 people in one day at Wolfeboro. – Ansel Sanborn. Turned people away at Pittsfield two days. – W.E. Young. Turned people away at the Silver Slipper in Milton. – W.E. Young. Played to 800 people Monday, 1200 Tuesday, 2200 Wednesday. – Mr. Lyons, Manager, Central Park, Somersworth (Farmington News, August 13, 1926).

LOCAL. Friendship Council, Junior Order, United American Mechanics will present a moving picture show at the Strand theatre on Monday, December 13, and has selected for the feature picture The White Desert, from Courtney Ryley Cooper’s great book. There will be two shows on the evening of that date, the first at 6.30 and the second at 8 o’clock (Farmington News, December 3, 1926).

Walter E. Young paid $91.35 in total taxes on the former A.O.U.W. Hall building, which was valued at $3,500, in the year ending January 31, 1927.

LOCAL. The Farmington Woman’s club, through the courtesy of W.E. Young, will present a moving picture entertainment at the Strand theatre on the afternoon and evening of April 11. The proceeds that the club receives from the patronage of this picture will be applied to a scholarship fund. The feature picture of this date will be “Classified,” with Corinne Griffth in the star role. This young actress is a favorite with moving picture patrons and any picture she figures in is sure to be a headliner. There will be a matinee at 3.30 and two evening shows. It is assured that there will a heavy advance sale of tickets, not only by reason of the merits of the entertainment, but for the worthy cause it benefits (Farmington News, April 1, 1927).

COUNTRY CARNIVAL, SILVER SLIPPER PAVILION. Walter E. Young announces a grand country carnival to be held at the Silver Slipper Pavilion in Milton this Friday evening, October 14. The hall will be specially decorated for the occasion and handsome prizes will be awarded in a wood-sawing contest for ladies, waltz and fox trot contests. Prizes also will be given to holders of the lucky tickets. Among other attractions will be a special bill of movies and social dancing, with music by “Ross and His Gang.” No one who is looking for a good time will miss this event. Free parking space will be provided for autos (Farmington News, October 14, 1927).

MOVING PICTURES AND HALLOWEEN PICTURES. Walter E. Young, well known moving picture man of the locality, and entertainment promoter, promises the public of this vicinity two special entertainment dates, October 27 and 28. The former, this Thursday evening, will be held at Pittsfield and will feature a Hallowe’en dance and feature picture, entitled, “McFadden’s Flats.” Music will be furnished by Ross and His Gang. Hallowe’en hats and novelties will be given away. Attend in Hallowe’en costume if you like. On Friday evening, Mr. Young will feature the same celebration at his famous Silver Slipper pavilion at Milton. There will be movies and lavish decorations, together with free Hallowe’en favors. Plan to attend one or both of these big Hallowe’en dances (Farmington News, October 28, 1927).

SANBORNVILLE. Esther McCrillis of the village will take part in the play, Miss Busley’s Boarders, which will be given by Nute high school students at the Strand theatre, Milton, December 12 (Farmington News, December 9, 1927).

Walter E. Young appeared in the Farmington, NH, directories of 1928, and 1929, as proprietor of the Strand Theatre, at 14 Central street, with his house at 62 N. Main street.

LOCAL. A rally will be held next Wednesday evening, October 17, at the Milton Strand theatre, under the auspices of the Milton democratic committee. Good speakers and good music will be in attendance and the public is cordially invited (Farmington News, October 19, 1928).

LOCAL. Next Monday evening, November 12, Oscar G. Morehouse Post, American Legion, of Milton will celebrate the 10th anniversary of the World war armistice with a grand concert and ball at the Silver Slipper, Milton’s popular dance hall and moving picture theatre. The feature has been planned with many carnival aspects and patriotic features and dance fans from this locality should plan to attend. Music will be furnished by Edney’s Blue Ribbon orchestra (Farmington News, November 9, 1928).

In 1929, Walter E. Young owned Milton real estate valued at $3,500, on which he paid $95.55 in town property taxes. As he lived in Farmington, NH, this real estate would have been the former A.O.U.W. Hall, which he had repurposed as the Strand Theatre and Silver Slipper Pavilion.

Walter E. Young acquired the latest technology to introduce “talking” movies, or “talkies,” in his Strand Theatre in Farmington, NH, in April 1929. This technology would have appeared also at his Milton Strand Theatre not long after its installation at Farmington Strand Theatre.

TALKING MOVIES COMING TO THE STRAND THEATRE. The fact that Manager W.E. Young is ill will not in any way interrupt the progress of installing talking movies at the Strand theatre. The machine has been shipped and will be set up as soon as it can be adjusted to the acoustic conditions of the theatre, which undoubtedly will require some changes. It is estimated that two weeks will be required for the entire process. As soon as this work is completed billing of some of the best pictures will be undertaken and Farmington and vicinity will be in a position to enjoy the latest innovation of the screen (Farmington News, April 5, 1929).

SILVER SLIPPER AT MILTON. Have you heard the latest about Cy Green’s Toonerville Jazz Band? Well, Cy and his musicians will journey to Milton this Friday evening, October 11, and will perform at the Silver Slipper, rain or shine Manager W.E. Young announces that moving pictures will precede the dancing from 7 to 8.30, and from the close of the picture program until the zero hour dancing will be featured with novelty introductions. Enjoy Ye Olde Tyme band at the Sliver Slipper (Farmington News, October 11, 1929).

STRAND THEATRE. Manager W.E. Young announced today that the installation of his new Vitaphone equipment, including motors and horns, has completely perfected the talking movies at his well-known amusement resort, the Strand, and his regular daily programs of highest class, new release pictures are to be resumed on Monday, January 6. A sure treat in “Broadway Scandals,” with Sally O’Neil and Jack Egan, is billed for Friday and Saturday, January 3 and 4 (Farmington News, January 3, 1930).

SILVER SLIPPER PAVILION. The Silver Slipper Pavilion in Milton will celebrate its third anniversary this Friday evening with a dance that will open the reason at this popular amusement resort. The decorations that have been prepared for the occasion will make a beautiful background for the gay crowd that will be on hand for the big time and novelties will be introduced throughout the evening. If it is a hot night the weather won’t matter for there will be cool breezes right off the river also big electric fans. Music will be furnished by Billy French and his vaudeville orchestra (Farmington News, June 6, 1930).

SILVER SLIPPER. If you have not heard Billy French’s Vaudeville orchestra, you have a big time ahead. This team of musicians will be at the Silver Slipper in Milton this Friday evening June 13 and all your friends will be there. You’ll enjoy dancing by cool breezes by the river and big electric fans. Other features will be electric novelty displays and moonlight dances. There will be dancing at the Silver Slipper every Friday night (Farmington News, June 13, 1930).

SILVER SLIPPER PAVILION. The dance at the Silver Slipper last Friday night was accorded a good patronage, and all enjoyed the novelties introduced for the event. This Friday evening June 20 will mark another date for this resort. French’s Vaudeville orchestra will furnish the music and there will be captivating electrical and novel features that will be of unusual amusement to the patrons of the Silver Slipper at Milton. Remember there will be dancing there every Friday night (Farmington News, June 20, 1930).

Walter E. Young, a theatre manager (movies), aged forty-one years (b. NH), headed a Farmington, NH, household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of twenty-two years), Edna M. [(Olsen)] Young, aged forty-two years (b. NH), his children, Norma A. Young, aged eleven years (b. NH), and Walter H. Young, aged nine years (b. NH), and his aunt, Isabel Billings, a widow, aged seventy years (b. NH). Walter E. Young owned their house at 62 North Main Street, which was valued at $4,000. They had a radio set.

Walter E. Young appeared in the Farmington, NH, directories of 1931, 1935, 1936, and 1939, as proprietor of the Strand Theatre, with his house at 62 N. Main street. The Strand Theatre, Walter E. Young, proprietor, appeared at 14 Central street.

Son Walter H. Young had an attack of appendicitis and had an appendectomy operation, March 18, 1931. (His WW II military draft registration would mention his appendectomy scar).

PERSONAL. Master Walter Young, son of Mr. and Mrs. W.E. Young, is a patient in the Rochester hospital, where he underwent surgery for an attack of appendicitis Wednesday night (Farmington News, [Friday,] March 20, 1931).

FREE VEGETABLE MATINEE FOR THE CHILDREN, STRAND THEATRE, MONDAY. W.E. Young has made a very generous announcement in behalf of the local relief movement next Monday, December 14. Mr. Young will open bis theatre, after school, for a children’s matinee. There is no question but all youngsters who “know their vegetables” will be there. Not one cent of money is asked for the admission of any child, but each one is requested to bring a donation of vegetables, such as potatoes, carrots, cabbages, turnips, etc., or other food stuff. All of the provisions deposited at the box office at this matinee will be delivered to the local welfare committee for distribution where they will do the most good. To insure a special attraction for the children, Mr. Young has promised a picture that will just suit them – “Side Show,” with Winnie Lightner, the world famed comedienne in the starring role. This novel idea is sure to make a big hit with the boys and girls, and it is not hard to imagine how that heap of provisions will pile up through this arrangement by the management of the Strand theatre (Farmington News, December 11, 1931).

In 1932, Walter E. Young owned Milton real estate valued at $3,500, on which he paid $81.20 in town property taxes. Although not explicitly stated, this would have been his Milton Strand Theatre / Silver Slipper Pavilion property.

George E. Willey, who is having such a popular run of success at his Tuesday night dances at Middleton Corner, featured a capacity crowd last Tuesday evening, having as his musical drawing card Paul Ross and His Gang. This orchestra will be a regular attraction at this dance until further notice (Farmington News, June 17, 1932).

LOCAL. The state republican committee announces the following itinerary of republican rallies for this immediate locality. At Strand theatre Milton Tuesday evening, October 25, speakers William Parker Straw of Manchester, republican nominee and candidate for Congress from the first district, and the republican candidates for county offices. Rally will be held at 8 o’clock and everybody is welcome. At Strafford town hall Thursday evening, October 27, at 8 o’clock, speakers will be republican candidates for county office, and it is expected that other speakers will be heard. Farmington town hall November 6, at 8 o’clock, speakers Norris H. Cotton of Concord and the republican county candidates. Henry Wilson American band will furnish music and there will be a parade and fireworks. Everybody is welcome and invited to participate in the jubilee (Farmington News, October 21, 1932).

SILVER SLIPPER AT MILTON OPENED BY GEORGE E. WILLEY. The famous Silver Slipper at Milton, which has been closed for some time, has been reopened by George E. Willey and on the opening date, Tuesday evening, the fans flocked to Milton in response to his announcement. Mr. Willey entertained an enthusiastic crowd that promises support of the venture with their continued patronage and there seems no doubt that the one-time popularity of this resort will be fully reinstated. Dance programs will be conducted every Tuesday night and music will be furnished by the well-known Indigo Rhythm orchestra of Farmington, which will be a big drawing card (Farmington News, January 6, 1933).

Walter E. Young renovated his Farmington Strand Theatre, in February 1937, to feature a “new vestibule type,” including a box office.

NEW SEATS AND FRONT AT STRAND THEATRE. The boarding up of the front of the Strand theatre is only the beginning of an aspiring program of improvements that is being undertaken by W.E. Young. Within the past two weeks Mr. Young has equipped his theatre with chairs and now has turned his attention to the front which will be converted to the new vestibule type, with box office. When this is completed, he will take up other features of improvement which are under contemplation for making this an up-to-date amusement resort. The work now in hand will not interfere with the regular schedule of movie programs (Farmington News, February 12, 1937).

The Milton Strand Theatre / Silver Slipper Pavilion building was damaged by a serious fire, October 8, 1937.

FIRE THREAT AT MILTON. Wooden Block Badly Damaged This Morning. (By Associated Press). Milton, Oct. 8. – Fire, which for a time threatened Milton’s business district this morning, caused damage estimated by Fire Chief. Prank Mclntire at $6,000 to a wooden block owned by Walter Young of Farmington. A theatre, a restaurant and lodge room were damaged. A new water system installed recently was used for the first time (Portsmouth Hearld, October 8, 1937).

In 1939, Walter E. Young owned Milton real estate valued at $3,500, on which he paid $140.00 in town property taxes. This would have been his Milton Strand Theatre / Silver Slipper Pavilion property.

Don’t miss it. Jim Perkins is back behind the footlights – bringing the grand opening to the Silver Slipper at Milton, with a barn dance on Saturday evening, May 20. Music by Uncle Abe’s Mountaineers from Belmont. Clog dance contest and all the makin’s of a good time (Farmington News, May 19, 1939).

SECOND BARN DANCE. The second in a series of barn dances being held at the Silver Slipper hall at Milton will be held Saturday evening May 27. Jim Perkins, who is managing these dances, is well known in this capacity and his dances always draw a crowd. Music is furnished by Uncle Abe’s Mountaineers of Belmont, and one of the features will be a clog contest creation (Farmington News, May 26, 1939).

For his Saturday evening dance program at the Silver Slipper dance hall at Milton Village, on Saturday evening; July 8, James Perkins is bringing to the locality for their first appearance in the locality “The Harmony Boys,” featuring Eddie Tracy of Portland, Me. These boys are base hitters on the “Katahdin Mountaineers” broadcast hour and recently took the show at Bangor. Come and meet them in person under the management of Veteran “Jim” at Milton on July 8 (Farmington News, July 7, 1939).

TENERIFFE SPORTS CLUB WINTER CARNIVAL AT MILTON NEXT SATURDAY AND SUNDAY. The major interest of sports fans in this vicinity is centered on the two days’ carnival under the auspices of the Teneriffe Sports club to be held at Milton on Saturday and Sunday, January 27 and 28. All day programs of winter sports will be in order. The opening date will be climaxed with the carnival ball at the Silver Slipper ballroom with the Blue Ribbon orchestra to furnish a dance program from 8 to 12 (Farmington News, January 26, 1940).

LOCAL. Mrs. W.E. Young was in Boston a part of last week and attended a fashion show at the Vespen George School of Art, where her daughter, Miss Norma Young, is a student. The latter was one of forty students who modeled garments of their own construction (Farmington News, April 26, 1940).

Walter E. Young, a manager (theatre) aged fifty-one years (b. NH), headed a Farmington, NH, household at the time of the Sixteenth (1940) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Edna M. [Olsen)] Young, a hairdresser (at home), aged fifty-two years (b. NH), his children, Norma A. Young, aged twenty-one years (b. NH), and Walter H. Young, aged nineteen years (b. NH), and his guest, Hazel M. Leighton, a cashier (theatre), aged forty years (b. NH). Walter E. Young owned their house at 62 North Main Street, which was valued at $4,200. They had all resided in the “same house” in 1935.

Walter E. Young appeared in the Farmington, NH, directory of 1941, as proprietor of the Strand Theatre, with his house at 62 N. Main street. The Strand Theatre, Walter E. Young, proprietor, appeared at 14 Central street.

FOR SALE. Ford roadster, all in running condition. Take it away for $25. W.E. Young, Farmington (Farmington News, September 19, 1941).

Son Walter Harris Young of 565 East Magnolia, L.A., Burbank, CA, registered for the WW II military draft in Burbank, CA, February 16, 1942. He was twenty-one years old (b. Farmington, NH, October 4, 1920), and was employed at Plant One of the Vega Aircraft Corp, Burbank, CA. His telephone number was CH6-3219, and his contact person was Mrs. Walter E. Young of 62 No. Main Street, Farmington, NH. He was of a 5′ 6″ tall, weighed 151 pounds, with brown eyes, brown hair, and a light complexion. He had an appendectomy scar on his right side.

Walter Eugene Young of 62 No. Main Street, Farmington, NH, registered for the WW II military draft in Rochester, NH, April 27, 1942. He was fifty-three years old (b. Rochester, NH, April 6, 1888), married, and was self-employed at 16 Central Street in Farmington, NH, as a theatre proprietor. His telephone number was 3441, and his contact person was Edna Young of 62 No. Main Street, Farmington, NH. He was of a 5′ 5″ tall, weighed 180 pounds, with brown eyes, brown hair, and a light complexion. He had a tattoo on his left arm.

RED’S MUSIC MAKERS OPEN SILVER SLIPPER AT MILTON. On Thanksgiving night, this Thursday, November 25, Red’s Music Makers will hold a grand opening dance at the Silver Slipper in Milton and will feature their sax team which composes one of the best dance bands in New England. This dance will be followed by a series of Saturday night dates at this well-known dance hall. The Silver Slipper formerly was one of the most popular recreation centers in this vicinity and the dance fans will hail with enthusiasm its opening under the management of Red’s Music Makers. Remember that every Saturday night you have a date at the Silver Slipper (Farmington News, November 26, 1943).

JACK HOWARD, OPENING SILVER SLIPPER AT MILTON. The dance fans of this vicinity will follow Jack Howard to Milton this Friday night, May 5, when he will open the Silver Slipper ballroom for weekly dances. His famous All Ace band will be the musical feature and it is expected that the hall will be packed. The well-known Silver Slipper always has been a popular amusement resort and Jack Howard has the biggest dance following of any amusement promoter over a wide area. These attractions without question will overflow the house on every open date (Farmington News, May 5, 1944).

ANOTHER SUCCESSFUL OPENING OF THE Silver Slipper Ball Room AT MILTON, N.H., BY JACK HOWARD AND HIS FAMOUS All Ace Band (5 pieces), Friday, May 12. THIS SAME BAND WILL APPEAR AT THE Silver Slipper Ball Room, Milton, N.H. The dance-loving public sure knows where to go for a good time, and a more orderly crowd of dancers could not have been found in the state. It just goes to show you how Mr. Howard conducts these dances. Through a mistake made in transportation last week there has been different arrangements made for Friday night and there will be plenty of cars leaving the square at 7.45 p.m., 50¢ round trip, that will take care of every one who wishes to enjoy an evening of sport, pastime and pleasure at this popular dancing resort. Admission 60¢, Tax Included. Dancing 8.30 p.p. to 12.30 a.m. Refreshments by Hanson. “Where Old Friends Meet” (Farmington News, May 12, 1944).

ANOTHER GOOD TIME AT THE Silver Slipper Ball Room, MILTON, N.H., Friday, May 19, Where JACK HOWARD And His All Ace Band (5 PIECES) WILL AGAIN HOLD FORTH FEATURING, “ROSIE,” THAT SENSATIONAL TRAP DRUMMER THAT YOU HAVE ALL HEARD ABOUT, ALONG WITH PROF. JACKSON AND HIS TALKING BANJO, “STAN” DOLLIVER WITH THAT OLD SLIP HORN, GEORGE GOODALL AND HIS BANJO, ENDING UP WITH “PEEWEE” FROST AT THE PIANO. THE DANCE LOVING PUBLIC IS FAST COMING TO REALIZE THAT FOR A GOOD TIME GO TO MILTON, N.H., WHERE OLD FRIENDS MEET. DANCING EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT AT THE SILVER SLIPPER WITH NEW FEATURES ADDED EACH WEEK. ADMISSION 50¢, TAX 10¢; TOTAL 60¢. DANCING 8.30 P.M. to 12.30 A.M. REFRESHMENTS BY HANSON (Farmington News, May 19, 1944).

ANOTHER BIG NITE AT THE Silver Slipper Ball Room, MILTON, N.H., Fri., May 26th, Where JACK HOWARD And His All Ace Band (5 PIECES) WILL AGAIN HOLD FORTH IN AN EVENING OF FUN AND FROLIC FOR THE DANCE LOVING PUBLIC. “WHERE OLD FRIENDS MEET.” The Silver Slipper Ballroom is fast becoming one of the pleasure spots in this section of the state, and with the increasing of attendance each week it goes to show you what a musical treat you are missing if you don’t follow the crowd on Friday nights. ADMISSION 60¢ Tax Included. DANCING 8.30 P.M. UNTIL 12.30 A.M., REFRESHMENTS BY HANSON. WATCH for the hand bills on the opening of the Middleton Dance Hall, Middleton, N.H. (Farmington News, May 26, 1944).

“By Special Request” From the dance fans I have been asked to change the Friday Nite dance that has been held at the Silver Slipper Ball Room, Milton, N.H., to the Old Town Hall “Where Old Friends Meet,” MIDDLETON, N.H. So on Friday Nite {This Week} July 21, Jack Howard and his Three Aces will appear at one of the coolest spots in New England for the rest of the season. Dancing From 9 P.M. Until 1 A.M. And of course, Every Tuesday Ev’ng, THE THREE ACES AT Middleton Town Hall (Farmington News, July 21, 1944).

Jack Howard and his All Ace Band continued to perform at the Middleton Town Hall through August 5, 1944 (Farmington News, August 5, 1944).

FORTIETH WEDDING ANNIVERSARY OF MR. AND MRS. W.E. YOUNG. Many relatives and friends of Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Young visited them at their home on North Main street last Saturday in celebration of their fortieth wedding anniversary. Open house was observed during the afternoon and until the early hours of the following morning. The home was attractively decorated with cut flowers, many of which were gifts for the event, and the household radiated hospitality from garret to the especially arranged basement. About seven o’clock the large party was summoned to the dining room where upward of forty persons enjoyed a turkey dinner. When Mr. and Mrs. Young plan a dinner they know just the type of menu and the way to prepare it to make it a success and on this occasion it was tops. After the long period occupied with dining, the guests were reluctant to leave the pleasant atmosphere and many remained until the small hours of the morning. Mr. and Mrs. Young came to Farmington about thirty-five years ago and engaged in the moving picture business. Those were the days of the silent films. In the block which they now own their friends first knew the theatre as Dreamland, but later they awakened to the signs of the times and the favorite amusement place became known as the New Strand, and from time to time it was modernized to become a theatre where patrons from their home town and surrounding communities have enjoyed many leisure hours. More recently they purchased the Oak Birch Inn properties at Alton Bay, and their contacts there have extended their acquaintance over a wide area and from a great many have come expressions of good wishes on their anniversary. These Included presents in large numbers, among which from a group of relatives was the novel gift of a clock with door chimes combination. The guests who sat down to the anniversary dinner included the following: Mr. and Mrs. John Perrault, Mr. and Mrs. Howell Preston, Mrs. Olga Massey, Mr. and Mrs. Leland Currier, Mr. and Mrs. John Callahan, Mr. and Mrs. Sumner Jenness, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hervey, all of Rochester, Mr. and Mrs. William Bishop and Mr. and Mrs. Alden Phillips, Kittery, Me., Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Jones, Bath, Me., Mr. and Mrs. Shirley Pillsbury, Swampscott, Mass., Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Viccaro, Merrimacport, Mass., Mr. and Mrs. Leston Gray and Walter H. Young of Farmington, Mrs. Fred Churchill, Exeter, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Thomas, Farmington, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Tufts, Salem, Mass., Mr. and Mrs. Garvin Beverly, Mass. (Farmington News, December 26, 1947).

The Teneriffe Sports Club’s annual winter carnival ball of 1948 is the last known local newspaper mention of the Silver Slipper being used as a dance hall.

WINTER SPORTS CARNIVAL AND BALL AT MILTON FEBRUARY 21 AND 22. Under the sponsorship of the Teneriffe Sports club, the 11th annual winter carnival and ball will be held in Milton, Saturday and Sunday, February 21 and 22. The carnival program has been arranged and will be as follows: Saturday February 21, children: ski races will be held at 1.30 p.m. Saturday night carnival ball at the Silver Slipper ballroom with dancing from eight to twelve to the music of Art Turner and his orchestra. Coronation of carnival queen will be held at 10.30 o’clock, during the ball, and awarding of prizes will be made. On Sunday February 22 men 8 and women s open downhill and slalom ski races will be held beginning at 1.30 o’clock. There will also be skiing for all and an electric rope tow will be put into service. This annual carnival is expected to attract many Farmington sports fans, as well as fans from other nearby communities, and it is hoped that the weatherman will provide good conditions for this headline event (Farmington News, February 20, 1948).

The storefronts, as well as meetings by various groups, may have continued for years beyond the dance hall and movie theatre. (The Strand building itself continued to be assessed for taxes under that name through at least 1967).

Daughter Norma Agnes Young married in New Durham, NH, May 28, 1948, Leston Elmer Gray, both of Farmington, NH. She was a store manager, aged twenty-seven years, and he was a shoe worker, aged twenty-one years. Rev. Charles H. Moorhouse performed the ceremony. Gray was born in Farmington, NH, circa 1927, son of Everett L. and Sadie G. (Dewhurst) Gray.

In the Milton valuation of 1949, Walter E. Young owned the “Strand building and land,” which was valued at $4,750.

Walter E. Young, a manager (theatre, real estate), aged sixty-two years (b. NH), headed a Farmington, NH, household at the time of the Seventeenth (1950) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Edna M. [(Olsen)] Young, aged sixty-two years (b. NH), and his lodger, Hazel M. Leighton, a ticket seller (theatre), aged forty-eight years (b. NH). They resided at 62 East Grove Street.

Leston E. Gray, a truck driver (bld’g contractor), aged twenty-five years (b. NH), headed a Farmington, NH, household at the time of the Seventeenth (1950) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Norma A. [(Young)] Gray, a stitcher (shoe factory), aged thirty-one years (b. NH).

Walter E. Young, owner of the Strand, Farmington, N.H., has returned from Florida (Box Office, 1956).

Walter E. Young died of ventricular fibrillation and circulatory collapse in Rochester, NH, May 15, 1956, aged sixty-eight years. He was a married theater operator. Robert E. Lord, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Walter Young, Motion Picture Dean, Succumbs After Attack. Funeral is scheduled this afternoon for Walter E. Young, one of New England’s leading motion picture exhibitors, who died in Frisbie hospital, Rochester, early Tuesday morning following a heart attack a week ago. Services at 2 p.m. were to be conducted in the Congregational church by Rev. Linwood C. Potter. Burial will be in the family lot in Farmington cemetery. A native of Rochester, Mr. Young had come to Farmington in 1912. He purchased the local theater in the then K. of P. Hall and has operated it since. In addition, he operated the Oak Birch Inn in Alton. From time to time, Mr. Young had operated motion picture houses in Somersworth, Pittsfield, Gilmanton, New Durham and Milton. The 50th anniversary of entry in the movies was this year. Mr. Young served in the military forces in World War I and later was commander of the Legion post here. He was a past chancellor of the Harmony Lodge, K. of P., and had been president of the Holding Corporation, the Businessmen’s association and served as senior warden at the Congregational church. A trumpeter, he played with the Henry Wilson band and also with other musical groups here and in Rochester. Mr Young was born 68 years ago, the only child of the late Walter and Alice (Tufts) Young. In 1907 he married Miss Edna Olsen of Rochester. The couple had two children, Norma, now Mrs. Leston Gray, and Walter H. of Boca Grande Fla., and Alton Bay. Three grandchildren also survive. Bearers at the rites were Sumner Jenness, John Callaghan, Howell Preston, Frederick Churchill, Laurent Ploude and Arthur Gray, all associates in theatrical activity. Otis funeral home handled arrangements (Farmington News, May 17, 1956).

In the Milton valuation of 1956, the heirs of Walter E. Young owned the “Strand land and bldg.,” which was valued at $7,300.

Mrs. Walter E. Young, widow of a long-time movie theatre owner in Farmington, has left for Boca Grande, Fla., where she will spend the rest of the winter with her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. Young (Box Office, 1960).

In the Milton valuation of 1960, Edna M. [(Olsen)] Young owned the “Strand land and bldg.,” which was valued at $7,300.

In the Milton valuation of 1965, Milton Garage, Inc., owned the “Strand land and bldg.,” which was valued at $5,000.

In the Milton valuation of 1967, Milton Garage, Inc., owned the “Strand land and bldg.,” which was valued at $5,000. The fate of the Strand building and land after the 1967 valuation remains unclear. (The building is not standing in the present day).

Edna M. (Olsen) Young died March 29, 1988, aged one hundred years.

Daughter Norma A. (Young) Gray died in Rochester, NH, April 5, 2011.


For Milton’s other dance venue see Milton and Frolic Haven – 1925-37


References:

Find a Grave. (2012, November 16). Norma Agnes Young Gray. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/100791655/norma_agnes_gray

Find a Grave. (2014, November 24). Walter Eugene Young. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/139179254/walter-eugene-young

Wikipedia (2023, September 30). Classified (1925 film). Retrieved from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classified_(1925_film)

Wikipedia (2024, February 8). Frontier of the Stars (film). Retrieved from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frontier_of_the_Stars

Wikipedia. (2024, February 5). Heliotrope (film). Retrieved from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heliotrope_(film)

Wikipedia. (2023, September 11). Right to Love (1920 film). Retrieved from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Right_to_Love_(1920_film)

Wikipedia (2023, July 16). Side Show (film). Retrieved from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Side_Show_(film)

Wikipedia. (2022, November 16). The White Desert. Retrieved from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_White_Desert

Milton Machinist Hazen Plummer (1866-1935)

By Muriel Bristol | February 18, 2024

Hazen Plummer was born in Milton, May 27, 1866, son of Daniel and Sarah E. (Clements) Plummer.

Father Daniel Plummer died of apoplexy in Milton, January 25, 1884, aged forty-eight years. He was a married farmer.

Hazen Plummer was one of the founding officers (guard or sergeant at arms) of the Milton lodge of the United Endowment League, when it was founded in January 1890.

MILTON. Teneriffe Lodge, No. 5, United Endowment League, was successfully launched on its career Tuesday evening, January 14, by Supreme Organizer, Benjamin Holt of Lowell, Mass., and an efficient corps of assistants. The following list of officers was publicly installed for the term ending Dec. 31: President, Henry R. Johnson; vice president, John W. Avery; counsellor, A.C. Willey; secretary, Irving W. Tuttle; financial secretary, Harry L. Avery; treasurer, Hattie L. Pinkham; chaplain, Rev. G. Frank Durgin; guide, F.P. Jones; sentinel, Charles D. Jones, M.D.; medical examiner, Charles D. Jones, M.D.; guard, Hazen Plummer; trustees, Charles E. Lord, J.D. Willey, S.M. Bragden. This new comer among the fraternal orders of Milton has our best wishes (Farmington News, January 31, 1890).

(The United Endowment League was “one of a number of short-term endowment benefit fraternals that were popular in the 1880s and 1890s and then went bankrupt”). The United Endowment League did not appear in the Farmington News after 1891.

Hazen Plummer married (1st) in Milton, March 14, 1891, Nettie E. Pike, both of Milton. He was a farmer, aged twenty-four years, and she was a shoe stitcher, aged twenty-seven years. Rev. John Manter performed the ceremony. She was born in Middleton, NH, August 26, 1863, daughter of John S. “Smith” and Mary M.C. (Cloutman) Pike.

(The children of Hazen and Nettie E. (Pike) Plummer were Alan E. Plummer (1892-1892), Marion Plummer (1893-1894), and Ray D. Plummer (1895-1968)).

MIDDLETON. Surprise parties have been numerous and the one at the residence of John S. Pike last Thursday night eclipsed anything of the kind that has yet come off. Quite a number from Farmington and also from Milton as well as all the young people of this town taking a part and all united in pronouncing it an enjoyable time (Farmington News, November 13, 1891).

Son Alan E. Plumer was born in Milton, April 18, 1892. He was the first child. His father was a butcher, aged twenty-six years, and his mother was a shoe stitcher, aged twenty-eight years. M.A.H. Hart, M.D., signed the birth certificate. He died of inanition, April 20, 1892, aged two days. His father was a butcher. M.A.H. Hart, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Daughter Marion M. Plummer was born in Milton, July 12, 1893. She was the second child. Her father was a McKay stitcher, aged twenty-seven years, and her mother was a housekeeper, aged twenty-nine years. M.A.H. Hart, M.D., signed the birth certificate. She died of “fitts” in Middleton, NH, April 26, 1894, aged nine months, fourteen days. Her father was a shoemaker. M. Hart, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Son Ray D. Plummer was born in Milton, August 2, 1895. He was the third child. His father was a traveling agent, aged twenty-nine years, and his mother was a housekeeper, aged thirty-one years. M.A.H. Hart, M.D., signed the birth certificate.

Father-in-law John S. Pike died of apoplexy in Middleton, NH, February 24, 1896, aged fifty-eight years, eight months, and seven days. He was a married farmer. P.J. Haskell signed the death certificate. (His widow, Mary M. (Cloutman) Pike, married (2nd), June 23, 1898, James H. Young).

Hazon Plummer, supt. of machinery (shoes), aged thirty-five years (b. NH), headed a Milton (“Milton Village”) household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of nine years), Nettie [(Pike)] Plummer, aged thirty-six years (b. NH), his son, Ray D. Plummer, aged four years (b. NH), his sister-in-law, Addie C. Edgerly, an assistant home keeper, aged thirty-five years (b. NH), and his niece, Helen P. Edgerly, at school, aged fourteen years (b. NH). Hazen Plummer owned their house, free-and-clear. Nettie Plummer was the mother of three children, of whom one was still living. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Lizzie L. Remick, a home keeper, aged sixty-seven years (b. NH), and Mary F. Bruce, a home keeper, aged fifty-eight years (b. NH).

MILTON. The nomination for Dr. M.A.H. Hart for representative by the republican caucus is conceded to be a strong one in all quarters. The natural republican majority in Milton is large and there can be no doubt but what the genial doctor will poll the full strength of his party vote. He is young, honest and able, and his friends in both parties will watch his legislative career with interest. The democratic nominee, Hazen Plumer, is also an excellent candidate, a bright, hustling business man and one who would creditably represent the town if elected. Mr. Plumer and Dr. Hart are friendly personally and have worked shoulder to shoulder for the good of Milton (Farmington News, November 2, 1900).

Malcolm A.H. Hart prevailed over Hazen Plummer, in the NH State Representative election of November 1900 (for the 1901-02 biennium), by 267 (66.3%) to 136 (33.7%) votes (NH Secretary of State, 1901).

LOCAL. Columbian Chapter of Free Masons welcomed guests from neighboring towns, in the meeting on Monday evening, among whom were the Hon. J. Frank Farnham and William Lord of Union; Percy S. Jones and C.H. McDuffee of Alton; B.B. Plumer and Hazen Plumer, J.D. Willey and Mr. Willey the druggist, of Milton (Farmington News, June 14, 1901).

Fred B. Roberts prevailed over Hazen Plummer, in the NH State Representative election of November 1904 (for the 1905-06 biennium), by 213 (54.1%) to 181 (45.9%) votes. Plummer was a Democrat, while Roberts was a Republican (NH Secretary of State, 1905).

Hazen Plummer of Milton had a driver’s license and an automobile (No. 902) in 1906. (See Milton Automobiles in 1906-07).

Mother-in-law Mary M. ((Cloutman) Pike) Young died of apoplexy in Farmington, NH, January 8, 1907, aged sixty-one years. She was a married housekeeper (wife of James H. Young). C.C. Rogers, M.D., signed the death certificate.

The Wachwannock Club met periodically for lectures, concerts, and other entertainments, either in members’ homes or at the A.O.U.W. Hall. Members mentioned in other articles include Dr. J.J. Buckley, S.F. Dawson, C.E. Kelly, and R.M. Kimball.

MILTON, N.H. The Wachwannock club met at the residence of Mr. Hazen Plummer on Silver street Monday night (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), March 1, 1907).

The Milton Selectmen of 1907 were B.B. Plummer, E.A. Wentworth, and H. Plummer.

MILTON, N.H. Town meeting Tuesday was largely attended. The check list was used in voting for selectmen. There was a close contest on the vote for first selectman, 138 votes being for B.B. Plummer and 136 for Hazen Plummer. For second selectman, E.A. Wentworth was elected by a large plurality over Charles Philbrick, and Hazen Plummer had practically no opposition for third place. Harry L. Avery continues as town clerk and Everett Fox as treasurer. The other officers were left to the selectmen to appoint. Two thousand five hundred dollars was voted for highways, which is considerably more than the law requires, it was also voted to raise the extra amount required to get state aid for permanent highway improvement. The other appropriations were about as usual. Fifty dollars was appropriated to exterminate brown-tail moths. The selectmen were instructed to sell such timber as may have attained its growth on the town farm and such money should be available for permanent improvements (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), March 22, 1907).

Dr. M.A.H. Hart aided the victim of Milton’s murderous lover in June 1907. He sent for Selectman Hazen Plummer and Chief of Police Fred Howard. (See Milton’s Murderous Lover – 1907).

The Milton Selectmen of 1908 were Edgar A. Wentworth, Hazen Plummer, and Charles A. Jones.

MILTON. The annual town meeting this year was an unusually quiet affair, no contest being made against any of the three candidates elected as selectmen. The only contest was on policeman, James H. Rines winning on the third ballot. The only matters outside the usual routine were the appropriation of $500 for a soldiers’ monument, of which there are already personal subscriptions and pledges of over $600. Five hundred dollars were appropriated toward the purchase of the machine for crushing rocks which they have been using this year. The officers elected are: Town Clerk – Harry L. Avery. Selectmen – Edgar A. Wentworth, Hazen Plummer, Charles A. Jones. Treasurer – Everett F. Fox. Constable – Hazen W. Downs. Police – James H. Rines, Hartley A. Nutter, C.L. Stevens. Member of School Board – Joseph Boyd (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), March 20, 1908).

MILTON. Mrs. Hanscom, who has been visiting at Hazen Plummer’s home on Silver street, returned to her home in Beverly, Mass., last Friday (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), September 9, 1909).

MILTON. John Schlenker and wife, of Rochester, made a short visit with Hazen Plummer and wife last week (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), October 22, 1909).

MILTON. Frank Plummer of Boston, Mass., has been visiting with brother Hazen Plummer, on Silver street (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), November 12, 1909).

In 1909 $132 (and an added percentage [7.1%] of $9.32) was raised for the Milton fire district. Hazen Plummer “and others” were paid $27, and B.B. Plummer was paid $44.85, for Fighting Fires “on mountain.” C.A. Jones “and others” were paid $34 for Fighting Fires “at West Milton.” The district schools at Milton and Milton Mills were equipped with fire extinguishers and fire escapes. (See Milton’s Tri-Echo Hand Tub Fire Engine, c1879-1941).

Hazen Plumer, a machinist (Un. Shoe Mach. Co.), aged forty-three years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Thirteenth (1910) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of twenty years), Nettie [(Pike)] Plumer, aged forty-six years (b. NH), and his son Ray Plumer, aged fourteen years (b. NH). Hazen Plummer owned their house, free-and-clear. Nettie Plummer was the mother of three children, of whom one was still living. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Ernest Dickson, a machinist (leatherboard mill), aged thirty years (b. MA), and George M. Corson, a laborer (odd jobs), aged sixty-nine years (b. ME).

MILTON. Last Sunday afternoon Hazen Plummer was seen riding up Church street in an automobile drawn by a horse. Although the pace was somewhat slow, we think by the expression of Mr. Plummer’s countenance he thoroughly enjoyed the ride (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), September 2, 1910).

Hazen Plummer of Milton had a driver’s license and a 6-hp. Stanley automobile (No. 3758) in 1912. (See Milton Automobiles in 1912).

Stepfather-in-law John H. Young died of carcinoma of the stomach in Middleton, NH, November 14, 1915, aged seventy-five years, eleven months, and fifteen days.

Mr. Young. John H. Young, aged 77 years, one of Middleton’s prominent citizens, passed away at his home in that town last Sunday morning after a brief illness. He was a native of Tuftonboro but had lived in Middleton about 50 years, gaining the respect and esteem of his fellow townsmen and many friends. He leaves a son and a daughter, Louis Young and Mrs. Etta Leighton, both of Middleton. Mr. Young had served his town faithfully in the capacity of selectman for several terms and was town clerk at the time of his death. Funeral was held from the home on Wednesday morning at 10 o’clock, Rev. E.P. Moulton officiating. The remains were conveyed to this village and interment was made in the family lot at Pine Grove cemetery (Farmington News, November 19, 1915).

Nettie E. (Pike) Plummer died “instantly” from a “Fracture [of the] Base of her Skull,” when her “automobile turned turtle,” on Main Street in Acton, ME, September 14, 1916, aged fifty-three years, and nineteen days. She was a married housekeeper. Roland S. Gove, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Milton, N.H., Woman’s Skull Is Crushed in Accident Near Acton Fair Ground Thursday. Mrs. Nettie E., wife of Hazen Plummer of Milton, N.H., was instantly killed Wednesday afternoon near the Acton and Shapleigh Fair grounds when the car in which she and her husband were riding turned turtle after crashing into another automobile. The accident happened at the junction of the roads into the towns of Acton, Me., and Milton, N.H., and as the Plummer car rounded the sharp turn it crashed nearly head on into an automobile owned and driven by John Wood of Springvale, Me. After striking the Wood car, Plummer’s vehicle swerved upon a ridge and turned turtle, pinning Mrs. Plummer beneath it and fracturing her skull. Both Mr. and Mrs. Wood and Mr. Plummer and two other occupants of his car escaped with only a few slight cuts and bruises. This is the first serious accident to happen in this vicinity this season. Mrs. Plummer was about 53 years old. Dr. R.S. Gove of Sanford and Dr. A.S. Davis of Springvale were rushed to the scene in an automobile, but the woman was dead before they arrived. The body was taken charge of by Undertaker L.A. Hurd and removed to his undertaking rooms in Sanford and after an investigation the body was removed to her home in Milton. Mr. Plummer is connected with the United Shoe & Machinery Co., and was bound for Springvale, where he had some business with the Sears, Roebuck Shoe Co. (Sanford Tribune (Biddeford, ME), September 15, 1916).

FATAL AUTO ACCIDENT. The auto accident, in which Mrs. Hazen Plummer of Milton met with death, at the junction of Milton Mills and Acton roads on Thursday afternoon of last week, cast a gloom over the homes of residents and many friends in Farmington. Mrs. Plummer was instantly killed when she was pinned under the heavy touring car, owned and driven by her husband, which overturned when it was struck by the large car in which Mr. and Mrs. George Wood of Springvale, Me., were riding. The tragedy occurred near Acton fair ground. Mr. and Mrs. Plummer, Edward Varney, a young man who lived with them, and Mrs. Edward Hodge were bound for Springvale for an afternoon ride. Mr. Plummer was making the turn in the road at a moderate speed and was on the right side when he was approached by the other car which was hugging the turn on the same side. It is said the driver of the oncoming car made no attempt to swerve his car to the outside of the turn, as he should, and in order to avert a head-on collision, Mr. Plummer started to cross the road when the rear wheel of the passing car locked the rear wheel of his own car and overturned it, crushing its victim and Mrs. Hodge beneath. Mrs. Hodge received broken ribs and probably internal injuries from which she is now suffering but is expected to recover. Mr. Plummer and Mr. Varney received bruises and cuts which will not prove serious. Mrs. Plummer was formerly Miss Nettie Pike, the second daughter of John S. and Mary (Cloutman) Pike of Middleton. She was highly esteemed, and the entire community mourns with the bereaved family. Beside the husband, she leaves a son Raymond, one sister, Mrs. John Schlenker of Rochester, and one brother, John C. Pike of this village. Funeral was held from the Free Baptist church in Milton Sunday afternoon at 2 o’clock. A large attendance of friends and relatives and a profusion of floral tributes marked the service (Farmington News, September 22, 1916).

Son Ray Plummer of Milton registered for the WW I military draft, June 5, 1917. He was a student, aged twenty-one years (b. Milton, August 2, 1895). He was of a short height, medium build, with blue eyes and brown hair.

Hazen Plummer married (2nd) in Dover, NH, March 17, 1919, Grace C. (Card) Fogg, he of Milton and she of Dover, NH. He was a machinist, aged fifty-two years, and she was a bookkeeper, aged thirty-six years. Both were widowers. Rev. Robert W. Coe performed the ceremony. She was born in Dover, NH, circa 1882, daughter of Edcil P. and Helen A. (Whittier) Card. (Her father was a dry goods merchant).

HAVERHILL HERALD. Hazen Plummer, of our Heeling Department, has been granted a leave of absence one week, and at this writing some of the boys say, “there’s a reason.” Judge Knight does not hesitate to say that Hazen will return with a bride (United Shoe Machinery Co., April 1919). 

Mother Sarah E. (Clements) Plummer died of chronic interstitial nephritis in Milton, February 23, 1920, aged eighty-three years, six months, and four days. She was a widowed housekeeper. John J. Topsham, M.D., signed the death certificate.

HAVERHILL HERALD. The employees of the Rochester Sub-Office [of the United Shoe Machinery Company], as well as those connected with the Haverhill Office proper, extend their sympathy to Hazen Plummer of the Heeling Department in the loss of his mother who recently passed away. She was eighty-three years old and was a woman of noble character and high ideals. Possessed of a charming personality, those who knew her considered an hour well spent with “Grandma Plummer.” She left three and two daughters to mourn her loss (United Shoe Machinery Co., April 1920). 

Hazen Plummer, a machine inspector (United Shoe Co.), aged fifty-three years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Grace F. [((Card) Fogg)] Plummer, a bookkeeper (dry goods), aged thirty-three years (b. NH), and his son, Ray Plummer, an electrician (navy yard), aged twenty-four years (b. NH). Hazen Plummer owned their house on Silver Street in Milton Village, free-and-clear. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Leon M. Cookson, an electrician (Twin State Gas Co.), aged twenty-five years (b. ME), and Lyle K. Moore, a laborer (ice company), aged twenty-nine years (b. NH).

ROCHESTER TAKES INTEREST IN CASE. ROCHESTER, N.H., July 17 (Special) – Hazen Plummer, administrator of the estate of the late Sarah Plummer of Milton, has filed a petition in Probate Court against John Quinlan, Annie Quinlan and Simon Kelley of this city, asking that an inventory of certain personal property, claimed to have belonged to the estate of Sarah Plummer, which was claimed by William H. Quinlan as administrator of the estate of the late Annie Quinlan, who was a sister of Hazen Plummer. This legal proceeding is to find out if the Quinlans and Mr. Kelley had any knowledge of what became of this property which was inventoried by William H. Quinlan as the property of his wife which had been sold or disposed of during his life time as an administrator of his wife’s estate. Mr. Quinlan has since died. Mathews & Stevens of Somersworth appear for the petitioner and Justin A. Emery of this city for the Quinlans and Mr. Kelley. One hearing has already been before Judge McCabe of the Strafford County Probate Court. Inasmuch as the parties interested in greater part reside here the case is of an interesting nature. (Portland Evening Express (Portland, ME), July 17, 1925).

Father-in-law Edcil P. Card died of arteriosclerosis at 200 Washington Street in Dover, NH, March 20, 1929, aged seventy-four years, ten months, and eighteen days. He was a married beltmaker. James J. Buckley, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Hazen Plummer, a shoemaker (shoe factory), aged sixty-three years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of eleven years), Grace [((Card) Fogg)] Plummer, a bookkeeper (dry goods store), aged forty-three years (b. NH). Hazen Plummer owned their house on Silver Street, which was valued at $1,600. They had a radio set. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Edgar Hodges, a commercial traveler (household goods), aged sixty years (b. NH), and John M. Corson, a farmer (general farming), aged fifty-seven years (b. NH).

Raymond R. Nichols, a grocer (retail grocery store), aged twenty-eight years (b. PA), headed an Opa Locka, FL, household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. His household included his lodger, Ray Plummer, a grocer (retail grocery store), aged thirty-two years (b. NH). Raymond R. Nichols rented their house at 751 Ali Baba Avenue, for $20 per month. They had a radio set.

Hazen M. Plummer died of coronary thrombosis on Silver Street in Milton, April 6, 1935, aged sixty-eight years, eleven months, and nine days. He was a married shoe factory foreman and lifelong resident. Walter J. Roberts, M.D., signed the death certificate.

IN MEMORIAM. Hazen Plummer. Last Saturday the community suffered the loss of one of its most highly respected citizens, when Hazen Plummer died at his home on Silver street, after a brief illness. Mr. Plummer was well known locally as a shoe factory foreman, having been employed recently at the Salem Shoe Co. factory. He was affiliated with the Masonic lodge and will be deeply missed by a host of Masonic friends. Born in Milton 68 years ago, a son of Daniel and Sarah Plummer, he continued residence here until his death. Funeral services were held at the brown church Tuesday afternoon and burial was in the family lot on the Plummer farm (Farmington News, April 12, 1935).

Son Ray D. Plummer married in Broward County, FL, January 2, 1937, Nina B. Heneks. She was born in Arlington, KS, September 17, 1891, daughter of Noah B. and Hattie A. Heneks.

Mother-in-law Helen A. (Whittier) Card died of lobar pneumonia at 100 Prospect Street in Passaic, NJ, March 5, 1939.

OBITUARIES. MRS. HELEN CARD. Mrs. Helen Whittier Card, mother of Miss Mary H. Card, Spanish teacher at Passaic High School, died at 3:15 yesterday afternoon at the home of her daughter, 100 Prospect Street, following an illness of six weeks. Death was due to lobar pneumonia and a complication of diseases. Mrs. Card was born in Dover, N.H, where she lived until six years ago, when she came to Passaic to make her home with her daughter. She was a member of the Eastern Star in Dover. Her husband, Edcil P. Card, died in Dover in 1929. Survivors besides Miss Card are two other daughters, Mrs. Hazel [Hazen] Plummer, of Milton, N.H., and Mrs. Leon King, of Dover, at whose home funeral services will be held at 2:30 Saturday afternoon, preceding burial in Pine Hill Cemetery in Dover (Passaic Herald News (Passaic, NJ), March 16, 1939).

Grace F. [((Card) Fogg)] Plummer, a bookkeeper (dry goods store), aged fifty-three years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Sixteenth (1940) Federal Census. She owned her house on Silver Street, which was valued at $1,000. Her household appeared in the enumeration between those of Edgar Hodges, a timekeeper (roads), aged seventy years (b. NH), and Alvin Newell, principal (public school), aged thirty-two years (b. ME).

Ray Plumber, a traffic director (airport), aged forty-four years (b. NJ [SIC]), headed a South Miami, FL. household at the time of the Sixteenth (1940) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Nina [(Heneks)] Plumber, a seamstress (drapery shop), aged forty-eight years (b. KS). Ray Plumber owned their house at 3100 Red Road, which was valued at $6,000. They had both resided in Miami, FL, in 1935.

Grace [(Card)] Fogg Plummer married (3rd) at 80 Silver Street in Dover, NH, June 7, 1941, Lincoln Kimball Ross, she of Silver Street, Milton, and he of 10 Arch Street, Dover, NH. He was retired, aged seventy-five years, and she was at home, aged fifty-four years. Rev. Ralph S. Huffer performed the ceremony. Lincoln K. Ross was born in Biddeford, ME, August 9, 1865, son of Benjamin K. and Luna (Perkins) Ross.

Air Line Worker Has Difficult Job. Tracing the ownership of the 1500 articles of personal belongings left annually by Pan American Airways’ passengers here is a real job for patient Ray Plummer, manager of the line’s lost and found department. Coats and cameras are the things most frequently left behind by hurrying passengers but the list includes a “little bit of everything” – from diapers to a jungle blow gun. The fact that travelers leave this largest of international gateways for all parts of the world makes Plummer’s task all the more difficult. Not only must he find the owners of belongings found at airports, he also has to try to locate articles lost “somewhere along the line” by passengers who may be half way around the world before they report their loss. About three-fourths of those who leave things behind return to claim them, some on the double-quick. The most relieved persons upon finding their property were a man who lost a brief case with $30,000 in cash and securities and a woman who left a five-pound package of Cuban sugar after rationing went into effect (Miami Herald (Miami, FL), June 23, 1942).

Ray Plummer, P.A.A. [Pan American Airlines], aged forty-eight years (b. NH), headed a Dade, FL, household at the time of the 1945 FL State Census. His household included his wife, Nina B. [(Heneks)] Plummer, a H.W., aged forty-nine years (b. KS). They resided at 5100 Red Road.

Stepmother Grace P. Ross’ third husband, Lincoln K. Ross, died of chronic myocarditis in the Wentworth Hospital in Dover, January 18, 1948, aged eighty-two years, five months, and nine days. Bernard J. Manning, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Grace P. [(((Card) Fogg) Plummer)] Ross, a widow, aged sixty-three years (b. NH), headed a Dover, NH, household at the time of the Seventeenth (1950) Federal Census. Her apartment was at 10 Arch Street.

Ray Plummer, a baggage supervisor (air lines), aged fifty-three years (b. NH), headed a Dade, FL, household at the time of the Seventeenth (1950) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Nina N. [(Heneks)] Plummer, drapery work (furniture store), aged fifty-four years (b. KS). They resided at 5100 Red Road.

Accident Report. A car operated by Grace P. Ross, 69, of Dover was in collision with a truck owned by Herman Winch of Exeter and parked on Islington street yesterday. The woman told police the accident occurred when she was temporarily blinded by the sun (Portsmouth Herald, December 28, 1955).

Grace F. (((Card) Fogg) Plummer) Ross died of a cerebral hemorrhage in the Wentworth-Douglas Hospital in Dover, NH, January 5, 1968, aged eighty-one years. Bernard J. Mannin, M.D., signed the death certificate. She was a widowed housewife.

Son Ray D. Plummer died in Miami, FL, September 25, 1968, aged seventy-three years.

Ray Plummer Retired Clerk. Funeral services for Ray (Duke) Plummer, 73, a Miami resident since 1924, will be held at 1:30 pm Friday at the Van Orsdel Coral Gables Chapel. Mr. Plummer, of 5100 Red Rd., died Wednesday. In 1965 he retired after 30 years as a clerk with Pan American Airways. He is survived by his wife, Nina (Miami Herald (Miami, FL), [Thursday,] September 26, 1968).

Daughter-in-law Nina B. (Heneks) Plummer died in Miami, FL, November 9, 1983.


References:

Find a Grave. (2013, August 6). Edcil Porter Card. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/115025840/edcil-porter-card

Find a Grave. (2018, April 26). John S. Pike. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/189190411/john-s.-pike

Find a Grave. (2021, April 14). Alan E. Plummer. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/225684104/alan-e-plummer

Find a Grave. (2021, April 14). Hazen Plummer. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/225665527/hazen-plummer

Find a Grave. (2021, April 14). Marian M. Plummer. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/225684160/marian-m-plummer

Find a Grave. (2016, November 21). Mary M. Cloutman Young. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/173008763/mary-m-young

Mcleish Communications. (1916, September 23). American Shoemaking. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=LuscAQAAMAAJ&pg=RA12-PA33

NH Secretary of State. (1901). New Hampshire Manual of Useful Information. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=hzktAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA239

NH Secretary of State. (1905). New Hampshire Manual of Useful Information. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=ZCk0AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA287

United Shoe Machinery Co. (1919). The Three Partners. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=L-VyQfJC4aMC&pg=RA1-PA18

United Shoe Machinery Co. (1920). The Three Partners. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=L-VyQfJC4aMC&pg=RA12-PA15

Milton Mills Farmer Edgar A. Wentworth (1856-1932)

By Muriel Bristol | February 11, 2024

Edgar A. Wentworth was born in Milton, January 8, 1856, son of Mary E. “Elizabeth” Wentworth.

Levi Wentworth, aged fifty-nine years (b. NH), headed a Milton (“Milton Mills”) household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household included Mary [(Witham)] Wentworth, aged sixty-four years (b. NH), Mary E. Wentworth, aged twenty-five years (b. NH), and Edgar Wentworth, aged four years (b. NH). Levi Wentworth had real estate valued at $500 and personal estate valued at $200. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of David Jewett, a farmer, aged thirty-five years, and E. Wentworth, Jr., a farmer, aged thirty years.

Grandfather Levi Wentworth died of consumption in Milton, June 18, 1866. He was a married farmer. Mother Mary E. Wentworth died of fever in Portsmouth, NH, September 26, 1866 (reported in Town Records for year ending March 31, 1867).

Mary [(Witham)] Wentworth, keeping house, aged seventy-five years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. Her household included Sarah E. Wentworth, aged thirty years (b. NH), and Edgar A. Wentworth, works in felt mill, aged fourteen years (b. NH). Sarah E. Wentworth had real estate valued at $325 and personal estate valued at $140. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of William Brierley, works in felt mill, aged forty-two years (b. England), and Joseph Coleman, a carpenter, aged seventy-nine years (b. NH).

Edgar A. Wentworth married (1st) in Wakefield, NH, March 24, 1873, Sarah H. Platt, both of Milton. He was a cloth finisher, aged eighteen years, and she was aged nineteen years. Rev. Joseph Spinney performed the ceremony. She was born in North Andover, MA, May 7, 1853, daughter of William and Mary N. (Newton) Platt.

Daughter Carrie Etta Wentworth was born in Milton, January 7, 1875.

Grandmother Mary (Witham) Wentworth died of apoplexy in Wakefield, NH, February 20, 1878, aged eighty-two years. She was a widowed housekeeper.

Edgar A. Wentworth, works in woolen mill, aged twenty-four years (b. NH), headed a Milton (“Milton Mills Village”) household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included Sarah H. [(Platt)] Wentworth, keeping house, aged twenty-six years (MA). They shared a two-family house with the household of Lucinda A. Ricker, keeping house, aged fifty-two years (b. ME). Their house appeared in the enumeration between the households of Levi W. Ladd, a carpenter, aged thirty-seven years (b. NH), and Alpheus Remick, a farmer, aged sixty-five years (b. NH).

William Platt, works in woolen mill, aged sixty years (b. England), headed a Leicester, MA, household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Mary [(Newton)] Platt, keeping house, aged fifty-eight years (b. England), his daughter, Sarah [(Platt)] Wentworth, aged twenty-seven years (b. MA), and his granddaughter, Carrie E. Wentworth, aged five years (b. NH). They resided “On Main Road in Cherry Valley.” Most of the neighbors on their page were also working in the woolen mill.

Sarah H. (Platt) Wentworth died November 13, 1888, aged thirty-three years.

Edgar A. Wentworth married (2nd) in Wakefield, NH, March 24, 1890, Cora A. Lord. She was born in Acton, ME, March 5, 1856, daughter of George W. and Dora (Perkins) Lord.

Daughter Dora May Wentworth was born in Milton, August 28, 1892. She was the second child. Her father was a carder. G.A. Allen, M.D., reported the birth.

Daughter Carrie E. Wentworth married in Milton Mills, June 20, 1895, Luther E. Wiggin, she of Milton and he of Wakefield, NH. She was a houseworker, aged twenty years, and he was a lumberman, aged twenty-nine years. Rev. E.N. Fernald performed the ceremony. Wiggin was born in Boston, MA, March 14, 1866, son of Luther P. and Margaret (McCully) Wiggin. (Her father, Edgar A. Wentworth, was a teamster and her mother, Sarah Platt, was deceased).

Father-in-law William Platt died of a cerebral hemorrhage in Leicester, MA, April 7, 1896, aged seventy-two years, two months. He was a farmer and native of Italy Bridge, Lancashire, England.

One of Milton’s town road agents, Moses G. Chamberlain, paid Edgar Wentworth $9.40 for performing road work (“Repairing Highways”) in 1897.

Milton town road agent Moses G. Chamberlain paid E.A. Wentworth $14.85 for performing snow work (“Breaking Roads”) in 1899. One might “roll,” i.e., pack or flatten down, snow to make way for sleighs. Other residents were paid 15¢ for one hour of such work, 45¢ for three hours of such work, 60¢ for four hours, etc. From which one might infer that E.A. Wentworth performed some ninety-nine hours work on “breaking” road snow in 1899.

Mother-in-law Mary N. (Newton) Platt died of gastro-enteritis in Leicester, MA, August 15, 1900, aged seventy-six years, eleven months. She was a native of Ashton, Lancashire, England.

Edgar A. Wentworth, a teamster, aged forty-four years (b. NH), headed a Milton (“Milton Mills Village”) household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of ten years), Cora A. Wentworth, aged forty-four years (b. ME), and his daughter, Dora M. Wentworth, at school, aged seven years (b. NH). Edgar A. Wentworth owned their farm, free-and-clear. Cora A. Wentworth was the mother of one child, of whom one was still living. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Llewellyn Robinson, a day laborer, aged twenty-eight years (b. Nova Scotia), and Hannah Stearns, a home keeper, aged sixty-eight years (b. NH).

Luther P. Wiggin, a farmer, aged sixty-seven years (b. NH), headed a Wakefield, NH, household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of forty-one years), Margarett [(McCully)] Wiggin, aged seventy years (b. Canada), his son, Luther E. Wiggin, a farm laborer, aged thirty-four years (b. MA), his daughter-in-law (of five years), Carrie E. [(Wentworth)] Wiggin, aged twenty-five years (b. NH), and his grandchildren, Margarett Wiggin, aged four years (b. NH), and Walter W. Wiggin, aged eight months (b. NH). Luther P. Wiggin owned their farm, free-and-clear. Margaret Wiggin was the mother of four children, of whom three were still living. Carrie E. Wiggin was the mother of two children, of whom two were still living.

E.A. Wentworth appeared in the Milton directories of 1901, and 1904, as a Milton Mills coal merchant.

The Milton Selectmen of 1906 were J.H. AveryB.B. Plummer, and E.A. Wentworth. The Milton Selectmen of 1907 were B.B. Plummer, E.A. Wentworth, and H. Plummer.

The Milton Selectmen of 1908 were Edgar A. Wentworth, Hazen Plummer, and Charles A. Jones.

MILTON. The annual town meeting this year was an unusually quiet affair, no contest being made against any of the three candidates elected as selectmen. The only contest was on policeman, James H. Rines winning on the third ballot. The only matters outside the usual routine were the appropriation of $500 for a soldiers’ monument, of which there are already personal subscriptions and pledges of over $600. Five hundred dollars were appropriated toward the purchase of the machine for crushing rocks which they have been using this year. The officers elected are: Town Clerk – Harry L. Avery. Selectmen – Edgar A Wentworth, Hazen Plummer, Charles A. Jones. Treasurer – Everett F. Fox. Constable – Hazen W. Downs. Police – James H. Rines, Hartley A. Nutter, C.L. Stevens. Member of School Board – Joseph Boyd (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), March 20, 1908).

Selectmen – Edgar A. Wentworth, Hazen Plummer, Chas. A. Jones. Town Clerk – Harry L. Avery. Treasurer – Everett F. Fox. School Board – Dr. M.A.H. Hart, E.W. Fox, Harry D. Coles. Postmasters – Joseph H. Avery, Milton; E.T. Libby, Milton Mills. Deputy Sheriff, Chas. E. Remick, Milton Mills. Constable – Hazen W. Downs (Milton Directory, 1909).

Town warrant articles for the March 1909 Town Meeting dealt with highway and bridge repairs, matching a potential State highway grant, winter road breaking, i.e., snow plowing, sidewalk building and repair, street lighting in Milton, Memorial Day expenses, Brown-tail and Gypsy moth control, $450 for road machinery, Milton town clock maintenance, and raising fees for second-, third- and fourth-class liquor licenses. (See Milton Under “Local Option” – 1903-18). Also, F.L. Marsh and twelve others filed a petition warrant article for the town to pay for street lighting in Milton Mills village.

Edger A. Wentworth, a farmer (general farm), aged fifty-seven years (b. NH), headed a Milton (“Milton Mills”) household at the time of the Thirteenth (1910) Federal Census. His household included his wife (if nineteen years), Cora Wentworth, aged fifty-four years (b. ME), and his daughter, Dora Wentworth, aged seventeen years (b. NH). Edgar A. Wentworth owned their farm, free-and-clear. Cora Wentworth was the mother of one child, of whom one was still living. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of H. Powers Robbins, own income, aged fifty-one years (b. NH), and George H. Pall, a laborer (odd jobs), aged forty-two years (b. NH).

L.E. Wiggin, a millman (saw mill), aged forty-four years (b. MA), headed a Wakefield, NH, household at the time of the Thirteenth (1910) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of fourteen years), Carrie E. [(Wentworth)] Wiggin, aged thirty-five years (b. NH), his children, Margaret Wiggin, aged fourteen years (b. NH), and Walter W. Wiggin, aged ten years (b. NH), his mother (his father’s wife of fifty-one years), Margaret [(McCully)] Wiggin, aged eighty years (b. Nova Scotia), and his father, L.P. Wiggin, retired (own income), aged seventy-seven years (b. NH). L.E. Wiggin owned their farm, free-and-clear. Carrie E. Wiggin was the mother of two children, of whom two were still living. Margaret Wiggin was the mother of four children, of whom three were still living.

Strafford County paid Edgar A. Wentworth $30.60 for petit jury service in September 1911.

John W. Avery prevailed over Edgar A. Wentworth, in the NH State Representative election of November 1912 (for the 1913-14 biennium), by 207 to 179 votes. Avery was a Democrat, while Wentworth was a Republican (NH Secretary of State, 1912).

E.A. Wentworth was said in 1914 to have been one of the efficient men employed by John E. Townsend as mill superintendents. (See Milton Mills’ Miltonia Mill – 1872-14

As superintendents he has men well-known for their efficiency, including F.H. Simms, A.T. Loud, J.F. Archbold and E.A. Wentworth. This mill is classed as a 4-set mill and is equipped with electricity, the plant site covering two acres (Scales, 1914).

Daughter Dora M. Wentworth married in Chelmsford, MA, in 1917, Alvin H. Fletcher. He was born in Tyngsboro, MA, July 29, 1888, son of Alvin C. and Helen (White) Fletcher. (His father had died of typhoid fever in Tyngsboro, MA, September 10, 1888, aged twenty-eight years).

Edgar A. Wentworth, a house carpenter, aged sixty-three years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Cora A. [(Lord)] Wentworth, aged sixty-three years (b. ME). Edgar A. Wentworth owned their house, free-and-clear. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Emma T. Lord, aged sixty-six years (b. ME), and Frank O. Googins, a laborer, aged seventy years (b. ME).

Luther A. Wiggin, a farmer (general farm), aged fifty-four years (b. MA), headed a Wakefield, NH, household at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census, His household included his wife, Carrie E. [(Wentworth)] Wiggin, aged forty-five years (b. NH), and his children, Martin W. Wiggin, aged twenty years (b. NH), and Marion Wiggin, aged nine years (b. NH). Luther A. Wiggin owned their farm, free-and-clear.

Alvin H. Fletcher, a salesman (furnace pumps, etc.), aged thirty-one years (b. MA), headed a Chelmsford, MA, household at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Dora M. [(Wentworth)] Fletcher, aged twenty-seven years (b. NH), and his son, Bernard A. Fletcher, aged one year, ten months (b. MA). Alvin H. Fletcher rented their house on Wildwood Street.

Daughter Carrie E. [(Wentworth)] Wiggin of Rochester, NH, divorced her husband, Luther E. Wiggin of Rochester, NH, in Strafford County court, April 26, 1926. She alleged extreme cruelty (one had to allege something).

Daughter Carrie E. [(Wentworth)] Wiggin married (2nd) in ME, April 29, 1926, Chester Nason Norton, both of South Portland, ME. He was born in York, ME, August 6, 1873, son of Josiah H. and Sarah M. (Shelburne) Norton. (This was her second marriage and his third marriage).

Edgar A. (Cora A.) Wentworth appeared in the Milton directory of 1930, as residing in the Sanbornville R.D. [Rural Delivery] area.

Edgar A. Wentworth, aged seventy-four years (b. NH), headed a Milton (“Milton Mills”) household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of forty years), Cora A. [(Lord)] Wentworth, aged seventy-four years (b. ME), and his sister [in-law], Emma T. Lord, aged seventy-six years (b. ME). Edgar A. Wentworth owned their house on Main Street, which was valued at $2,000. They had a radio set.

Chester N. Norton, an engineer (steam railroad), aged fifty-six years, headed a Scarborough, ME, household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Carrie E. [((Wentworth) Wiggin)] Norton, aged fifty-four years (b. NH), and his stepdaughter, Marion Wiggin, a stenographer (auto sales room), aged nineteen years (b. NH). Chester N. Norton owned their house on the Portland-Biddeford Road, which was valued at $5,700. They had a radio set.

Alvin H. Fletcher, a traveling salesman (oil burner factory), aged forty-one years (b. MA), headed a Stow, MA, household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of fourteen years), Dora W. [(Wentworth)] Fletcher, aged thirty-seven years (b. NH), his children, Bernard A. Fletcher, aged twelve years (b. MA), W. Malcom Fletcher, aged ten years (b. MA), and Miriam L. Fletcher, aged eight years (b. MA), and his mother-in-law, Cora A. [(Lord)] Wentworth, aged seventy-three years (b. ME). Alvin H. Fletcher owned their house on Crescent Street, which was valued at $8,000. They had a radio set.

Edgar A. Wentworth died of aortic regurgitation in Milton Mills, December 9, 1932, aged seventy-six years, eleven months, and two days. Frank S. Weeks, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Chester N. Norton, a locomotive engineer (steam railroad), aged sixty-three years (b. ME), headed a Dover, NH, household at the time of the Sixteenth (1940) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Carrie E. [((Wentworth) Wiggin)] Norton, aged sixty-three years (b. NH). Chester N. Norton rented their house, for $51 per month. They had resided in Scarboro, ME, in 1935. (He had “refused” to give information about his income).

Alvin Fletcher, a realtor (real estate office), aged fifty-one years (b. MA), headed a Stow, MA, household at the time of the Sixteenth (1940) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Dora M. [(Wentworth)] Fletcher, aged forty-seven years (b. NH), his children, Bernard A. Fletcher, a machinist (machine factory), aged twenty-two years (b. MA), Malcolm Fletcher, aged twenty years (b. MA), and Miriam Fletcher, aged eighteen years (b. MA), and his mother-in-law, Cora [(Lord)] Wentworth, aged eighty-four years (b. NH). Alvin Fletcher owned their house on the Great Road, which was valued at $2,200. They had all resided in the same place, i.e., Stow, MA, in 1935.

Cora A. (Lord) Wentworth died of mitral insufficiency and Bright’s Disease in Stow, MA, November 11, 1940, aged eighty-four years, eight months, and six days. She was a widowed housewife.

Son-in-law Chester Nason Norton died in Scarboro, ME, October 19, 1943, aged seventy years.

DEATHS. CHESTER A. NORTON. Private funeral services were conducted at 749 Congress street, Portland, this afternoon for Chester A. Norton, 70, widely known Boston and Maine railroad engineer, who died Tuesday while visiting at the home of his step-daughter, Mrs. Louis E. Larrabee, Black Point, Scarboro. Burial was the family lot in the Black Point cemetery. Mr. Norton, known to many officials and employes of the Boston and Maine Railroad company and among regular patrons of the road, was a native of York. He resided in that town for many years. For the past 17 years he had made his home at Green Acres, Scarboro. After being employed by the Boston and Maine Railroad company for over 40 years, he retired two years ago from active service. He was member of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and of the Ancient Landmark Lodge of Masons, Portland. Besides his widow he leaves a step-son, Professor Walter W. Wiggin of the University of Ohio and two step-daughters, Mrs. Louis Larrabee of Scarboro and Mrs. Wilmath Jacobs of Mercersburg, Pa. (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), [Thursday,] October 21, 1943).

Daughter Carrie E. ((Wentworth) Wiggin) Norton died Portland, ME, November 6, 1949.

Obituary. Carrie Etta Norton. Scarborough, Nov 7 – Funeral services will be held at 1.30 p.m. Tuesday at 749 Congress Street, Portland, for Carrie Etta Norton, widow of Chester N. Norton, of Black Point Road, who died Sunday in a Portland hospital after a short illness. Interment will be in Black Point Cemetery, Scarborough. Mrs. Norton was born at Newton [Milton] Mills, N.H., Jan. 7, 1875, daughter of Edgar and Sarah Platt Wentworth. She had lived here for three years. She is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Marion Larrabee, Scarborough; a son, Walter W. Wiggin, Athens, Ohio; three grand-daughters, a grandson and a great-granddaughter (Evening Express (Portland, ME), [Monday,] November 7, 1949).

Alvin H. Fletcher, a salesman (own real estate), aged sixty-two years (b. MA), headed a Stow, MA, household at the time of the Seventeenth (1950) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Dora W. [(Wentworth)] Fletcher, a commercial teacher (public school), aged fifty-seven years (b. NH), his son, Wallace M. Fletcher, a builder (contractor), aged thirty years (b. MA), and his daughter-in-law, Marion M. [(Wetherbee)] Fletcher, a maid (private home), aged twenty-two years (b. MA). Their house was in Stow Center on the “Great Road going East towards Maynard line.”

Son-in-law Alvin H. Fletcher died in Stow, MA, May 31, 1967, aged seventy-eight years.

DEATHS. FLETCHER – Of Stow, suddenly, May 31st, Alvin H. in his 79th year, husband of Dora (Wentworth) Fletcher, father of Bernard A. and Wallace M. of Stow and Miriam Engebretson of West Concord. Funeral Friday at 2 p.m. from the Fowler Funeral Home, 42 Concord st., Maynard. In lieu of flowers memorials to the Heart Fund would be most appreciated. There are no calling hours (Boston Globe, June 1, 1967).

Daughter Dora M. (Wentworth) Fletcher died in Stow, MA, March 10, 1985, aged ninety-two years.

DEATHS. FLETCHER – Of Stow, March 10, Dora (Wentworth) in her 93d year. Widow of the late Alvin H. Fletcher. Mother of Miriam Engebretson of Concord, Bernard A. Fletcher of Hudson and Wallace M. Fletcher of Stow. Memorial service Sun., March 17 at 2 p.m. in the First Parish Church of Stow & Acton, Great Rd., STOW. Arrangements by the Fowler-Kennedy Funeral Home, Maynard. In lieu of flowers memorial contributions may be made to the First Parish Church (Boston Globe, March 12, 1985).


References:

Find a Grave. (2014, September 26). William Platt. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/136461904/william-platt

Find a Grave. (2020, August 20). Dora May Wentworth Fletcher. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/214619024/dora-may-fletcher

Find a Grave. (2013, April 11). Carrie Etta Wentworth Norton. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/108351927/carrie-etta-norton

Find a Grave. (2013, August 16). Edgar A. Wentworth. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/115565651/edgar-a-wentworth

Find a Grave. (2020, May 25). Luther E. Wiggin. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/210438119/luther-e.-wiggin

NH Secretary of State (1912). Manual for the General Court. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=WDktAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA311

Milton Mills Finisher Oscar F. Marsh (1846-1928)

By Muriel Bristol | February 4, 2023

Oscar Fitzon Marsh was born in Milton Mills, January 23, 1846, son of John and Asenath I. (Runnells) Marsh.

John Marsh, a farmer, aged fifty-eight years (b. NH), headed a Milton (“Milton Mills P.O.”) household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household included Asenath [(Runnells)] Marsh, aged forty-eight years (b. NH), J.E. [John E.] Marsh, a farmer, aged twenty-one years (b. NH), Hannah E. Marsh, aged nineteen years (b. NH), Thomas D. Marsh, a farmer, aged seventeen years (b. NH), Oscar F. Marsh, aged fourteen years (b. NH), A.A. [Asenath A.] Marsh, aged eleven years (b. NH), L.R. [Letitia R.] Marsh, aged nine years (b. NH), and L.R. [Lucretia R.] Marsh, aged nine years (b. NH). Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Noah Robinson, a farmer, aged fifty years (b. NH), and Albert Robertson, a farmer, aged forty-nine years (b. NH).

Father John Marsh died of dropsy in Milton, April 19, 1867, aged sixty-eight years, three months.

Oscar F. Marsh married in Wakefield, NH, January 22, 1868, Georgia W. Reed, he of Milton and she of Acton, ME. Rev. Joel A. Steel performed the ceremony. She was born in Somersworth, NH, October 28, 1845, daughter of Lewis D. and Annette W. (Randall) Reed.

Father-in-law Lewis D. Reed died of delirium tremens in Milton, NH, March 31, 1870, aged fifty-one years.

Oscar F. Marsh, a finisher in woolen mill, aged twenty-four years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. His household included Georgia W. [(Reed)] Marsh, keeping house, aged twenty-four years (b. NH), and Annette W. [(Randall)] Reed, aged forty [forty-three] years (b. ME). They shared a two-family residence with the household of Fanny Robinson, keeping house, aged fifty-four years (b. ME). (His widowed mother, Asenath [(Runnells)] Marsh, keeping house, aged fifty-seven years (b. ME), had her household on the prior page).

Oscar F. Marsh was a charter member of the I.O.O.F. Miltonia Lodge, No. 52, when it was founded at Milton Mills, October 5, 1871.

The first officers were Noble Grand, Asa A. Fox; Vice Grand, Oscar Marsh; Permanent Secretary, Oliver Titcomb. All the charter members at different times have passed through the chairs with one exception whose modesty prevented his accepting the office of Noble Grand though repeatedly pressed upon him (Sanford Tribune (Biddeford, ME), October 13, 1911).

Oscar F. Marsh appeared in a list of subordinate Odd Fellows lodges for the year 1877.

MILTONIA LODGE, No. 52, Milton Mills: (Tuesday). First term – Oscar F. Marsh, N.G.; William B. Townsend, V.G.; John E. Leach, R. Sec.; Freeman H. Lowd, Treas.; J.L. Pike, P. Sec. Last term – Asa A. Fox, N.G.; John F. Hurd, V.G.; John E. Leach, Sec; Freeman H. Lowd, Treas. (Grand Lodge, 1872).

Son Forrest Leonard Marsh was born in Milton, September 12, 1872.

Oscar F. Marsh, works in felt mill, aged thirty-three years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Georgiana W. [(Reed)] Marsh, keeping house, aged thirty-three years (b. NH), and his son, Forrest L. Marsh, at home, aged seven years (b. NH). Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of John W. Prescott, a stable keeper, aged thirty-two years (b. NH), and Daniel D. Stevens, a farmer, aged fifty-seven years (b. NH).

Mother Asenath I. (Runnells) Marsh died of pneumonia in Milton, January 28, 1882, aged seventy years.

The Milton Selectmen of 1890 were O.F. Marsh, L.F. Corson, and C.A. Jones. In a General Court Manual, Oscar F. Marsh and Charles A. Jones were identified as Republicans, while Leroy F. Corson was identified as a Democrat (NH Secretary of State, 1891).

The Milton Selectmen of 1891 were O.F. Marsh, L.F. Corson, and F.P. Jones.

Mother-in-law Annette W. ((Randall) [Reed]) Newhall died of heart disease in Haverhill, MA, April 2, 1895, aged sixty-eight years, six months, and twenty-five days.

Son Forrest Linwood Marsh married (1st) in Newfield, ME, December 19, 1899, Mildred J. Tebbetts, he of Milton Mills and she of Newfield, ME. He was an attorney, aged twenty-seven years, and she was a lady, aged twenty-two years. Rev. W.A. Nottage performed the ceremony. She was born in Newfield, ME, December 15, 1877, daughter of William N. and Mary J. (Wyatt) Tebbetts. (Her father was a carriage manufacturer).

Oscar F. Marsh, a blanket finisher, aged fifty-four years (b. NH), headed a Milton (“Milton Mills Village”) household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of thirty-two years), Georgia [(Reed)] Marsh, aged fifty-four years (b. NH), his son, Forrest L. Marsh, an attorney, aged twenty-seven years (b. NH), and his daughter-in-law, Mildred J. [(Tebbetts)] Marsh, aged twenty-two years (b. ME). Oscar F. Marsh rented their house. Georgia Marsh was the mother of one child, of whom one was still living. Their house appeared in the enumeration between those of George E. Simes, a carpenter, aged sixty-seven years (b. NH), and Calvin S. Haines, a hostler, aged thirty-eight years (b. NH).

Oscar F. Marsh appeared in the Milton directories of 1902, and 1905, as a boss finisher, W. [Waumbeck Mill], with his house at 30 Main street, Milton Mills. (Forrest L. Marsh, a lawyer and insurance agent, had his house also at 30 Main street].

MILTON MILLS, N.H. Oscar F. Marsh is enjoying a well-earned vacation at York beach (Sanford Tribune (Biddeford, ME), August 3, 1906).

MILTON MILLS, N.H. Oscar F. Marsh is still quite ill (Sanford Tribune (Biddeford, ME), October 19, 1906).

Oscar F. Marsh of Milton appeared in a January 1907 list of State Road Patrolmen that had been appointed also as Forest Fire Wardens in Division Seven. James J. Ham and Fred M. Chamberlain, both of Milton, were also so appointed (NH College, 1907).

MILTON MILLS, N.H. Oscar F. Marsh is thought to be gaining strength (Sanford Tribune (Biddeford, ME), March 29, 1907).

MILTON MILLS, N.H. Oscar F. Marsh, who has been taken to a private sanitarium at Nashua, is reported as much better, and it is hoped may come home fully recovered (Sanford Tribune (Biddeford, ME), September 27, 1907).

Oscar F. Marsh appeared in the Milton directories of 1909, as a boss finisher, W. [Waumbeck] Mills, with his house at 30 Main street, Milton Mills. (Forrest L. Marsh, a lawyer and insurance agent, had his house also at 30 Main street].

Oscar F. Marsh appeared in the Milton directories of 1912, as being retired, with his house at 30 Main street, Milton Mills. (Forrest L. Marsh, a lawyer, insurance agent, and notary public, had his house also at 30 Main street].

Oscar F. Marsh appeared in the Milton directories of 1917, as being retired, with his house at 30 Main street, Milton Mills. (Forrest L. Marsh, a lawyer, insurance agent, and notary public, had his house also at 30 Main street].

Georgia W. (Reed) Marsh died of an unknown chronic disease (and aortic insufficiency) in Milton Mills, December 29, 1918, aged seventy-three years, two months, and one day. She had been resident in Milton Mills for fifty-nine years, having come there from Somersworth, NH. Frank S. Weeks, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Oscar F. Marsh, a state road patrolman, aged seventy-two years (b. NH), headed a Milton (“Milton Mills Village”) household at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census. His household included his son, Forrest L. Marsh, aged forty-seven years (b. NH), his daughter-in-law, Mildred T. [(Tebbetts)] Marsh, aged forty-two years (b. ME), and his grandchildren, Doris L. Marsh, aged eighteen years (b. NH), and Ronald T. Marsh, aged ten years (b. NH). Oscar F. Marsh owned their house on Main Street, free-and-clear. Their house appeared in the enumeration between those of Frederick H. Simes, a woolen mill superintendent, aged fifty-one years (b. NH), and Eugene W. Emerson, a druggist (owner), aged sixty-three years (b. NH).

Daughter-in-law Mildred J. (Tebbetts) Marsh died of a goitre (and a contracted heart blockage) in Milton Mills, November 11, 1921, aged forty-three years, ten years, and twenty-six days. Frank S. Weeks, M.D., signed the death certificate.

ACTON. Oscar F. Marsh was in Acton this week after wood (Sanford Tribune & Advocate (Biddeford, ME), December 13, 1923).

Oscar F. Marsh died of a cerebral hemorrhage in the Hayes Hospital on Summer Street in Dover, NH, December 13, 1928, aged eighty-two years. He had been there for six months. James J. Buckley, M.D., signed the death certificate.

ACTON. The funeral of Oscar Marsh was held at the Free Baptist Church last Sunday (Sanford Tribune & Advocate (Biddeford, ME), [Thursday,] December 20, 1928).

Forrest L. Marsh married (2nd), probably in New Jersey, circa 1928, Anna M. (Hopkins) Martin. She was born in Bergen, NJ, June 19, 1885, daughter of Andrew J. and Winifred (Casey) Hopkins. (She had married (1st), in 1905, James A. Martin, who had died in 1917).

Forrest L. Marsh, a general lawyer, aged fifty-six years (b. NH), headed an East Orange, NJ, household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Anna M. Marsh, aged forty-three years (b. NJ), and his [step-] son, James A. Martin, a school teacher, aged twenty-one years (b. NJ). Forrest L. Marsh rented their apartment, for $55 per month. They had a radio set.

Forrest L Marsh, a gas and electric co. agent, aged sixty-seven years (b. NH), headed a Kaylad, NJ, household at the time of the Sixteenth (1940) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Anne M Marsh, aged fifty-three years (b. Kaylad), his son, Martin Marsh, a real estate agent, aged thirty-one years (b. Arlington, NJ), his daughter-in-law, Vivian Marsh, a doctor’s nurse, aged twenty-eight years (b. Irvington, NJ), his lodgers, Vera Bianco, a restaurant waitress, aged twenty-eight years (b. NY), and Francis Griffin, a restaurant waitress, aged twenty-one years (b. NY), and his aunt, Betty Lemacina, aged thirty-one years (b. Unknown). Forrest L Marsh rented their house at 258 Highland Avenue, for $75 per month. The family had resided in the “same place,” in 1935, while Vera Bianco had resided in NY City and Frances Griffin had resided in Wilkes-Barre, PA.

Son Forrest L. Marsh died in Bloomfield, NJ, July 17, 1945, aged seventy-two years.

James J. Martin, a brewery co. salesman, aged forty-one years (b. NJ), headed a Bellevue, NJ, household at the time of the Seventeenth (1950) Federal Census. His household included his mother, Anne M. Marsh, a widow, aged sixty-three years (b. NJ). They resided at 31B Broad Street.

Daughter-in-law Anne M. ((Hopkins) Martin) Marsh died in October 1976.


References:

Find a Grave. (2013, August 14). Oscar F. Marsh. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/115493700/oscar-f-marsh

Grand Lodge. (1872). Journal of Proceedings of the R.W. Grand Lodge of the State of New Hampshire. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=GcuVn6tKSTAC&pg=PA949

NH College [UNH]. (1907). Pamphlets on Forestry in New Hampshire. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=uNdDAAAAIAAJ&pg=RA1-PA92

NH Secretary of State. (1891). New Hampshire Manual for the General Court. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=0jdAAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA279

West Milton Farmer Ichabod Hayes (1770-1830)

By Muriel Bristol | January 28, 2024

Ichabod Hayes was born in Madbury, NH, June 5, 1770, son of Daniel and Sarah (Plummer) Hayes. He was a namesake for his paternal grandfather, Ichabod Hayes (1691-1734), who had signed the Rochester “Assocation Test” in 1776. His maternal grandmother was the “Beard” for whom Sen. Beard Plummer and others would be named in the years to follow.

Ichabod Hayes, born and reared in Madbury, this [Strafford] county, and familiar from boyhood with the pioneer labor of clearing and improving the land, removed to Milton, where he was engaged as a tiller of the soil for most of his life (Biographical Review, 1897).

Hayes, Ichabod - Homestead - Per RichmondIchabod received the land on which he lived in Rochester, N.H., by deed of gift from his father. It was situated in what is now West Milton adjoining the homesteads of his brothers, Daniel and Ezekiel. It has never passed out of the family and the old colonial house built by Ichabod is occupied in 1935 by his great-grandson Charles Thurston Hayes and his mother. The original house, built about 1796 to 1798, was divided, and a part of it forms the present kitchen and rear of the house, the front of which was built about 1818 to 1820. The present shed was a part of the original barn. In the present barn may be seen a small room which was fitted up by Mr. Hayes for a school room, and in it for a time Mrs. Hayes taught the neighborhood children for the munificent sum of twenty-five cents a week (Richmond, 1936).

Ichabod Hayes married (1st) in Rochester, NH, March 20, 1803, Lydia Wentworth, he of Milton and she of Rochester, NH. Rev. Joseph Haven performed the ceremony. She was born in Rochester, NH, July 2, 1785, daughter of Ephraim and Phebe (Wentworth) Wentworth.

(The children of Ichabod and Lydia (Wentworth) Hayes were: Ephraim Hayes (1804–1861), Sarah P. Hayes (1806–1891), and Lydia Hayes (1808–1882)).

Ichabod Hayes and his brothers, Daniel Hayes, Jr., and Ezekiel Hayes signed the Rochester Division Petition of May 1802.

Son Ephraim Hayes was born in Milton, December 10, 1804. He was a namesake for his maternal grandfather, Ephraim Wentworth. Daughter Sarah Plummer Hayes was born in Milton, July 8, 1806. She was a namesake for her paternal grandmother, Sarah (Plummer) Hayes.

Father Daniel Hayes died in Madbury, NH, February 26, 1807.

Daughter Lydia Hayes was born in Milton, April 27, 1808. Her mother, Lydia (Wentworth) Hayes, died in Milton, April 30, 1808, aged twenty-two years.

His first wife, in maidenhood Miss Wentworth of New Castle, N.H., died a few years after their union, leaving three children – Ephraim, Sarah, and Lydia (Biographical Review, 1897).

Her wedding ring, inscribed with the words: “Love and live happy,” was kept for the daughter Lydia, whose wedding ring it became when she married … (Richmond, 1936).

Ichabod Hayes headed a Milton household at the time of the Third (1810) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 45-plus [himself], one male aged under-10 years [Ephraim Hayes], two females aged under-10 years [Sarah P. Hayes and Lydia Hayes], and one female aged 26-44 years. His household appeared in the enumeration between those of James Varne, Jr., and Wm. Matthews.

Icobod Hayes married (2nd) in Madbury, NH, Sally Card, October 31, 1810, he of Milton and she of Dover, NH. Rev. William Hooper performed the ceremony. She was born in New Castle, NH, November 26, 1778, daughter of Thomas and Abigail (Neal) Card.

He afterward married Miss Sally Card, and of their eight children, but two survive [in 1897] (Biographical Review, 1897).

(The children of Ichabod and Sally (Card) Hayes were: Ichabod Hayes, Jr. (1811–1876), Abigail Hayes (1813–1896), Thomas Hayes (1814–1887), Israel Hayes (1816–1898), William Hayes (1818–1908), Phebe Hayes (1820–1827), Eliza Hayes (1825–1861), and Richard Hayes (1827–1894)).

Son Ichabod Hayes [Jr.] was born in Milton, June 28, 1811.

Mother Sally (Plummer) Hayes died in Madbury, NH, February 9, 1812.

The Milton Selectmen of 1812-13 were Ichabod Hayes, Jas. Roberts, and Josiah Witham.

Ichabod Hayes and his brothers, Ezekiel Hayes and Daniel Hayes, contracted with the U.S. Government to provide ship timbers during the War of 1812.

In partnership with his brothers Ichabod and Ezekiel, he [Daniel Hayes] furnished ship timbers and masts by contract with the U.S. Government for the navy at the time of the War of 1812. The records of this partnership with the details of ship dimensions are preserved (Richmond, 1936).

Daughter Abigail Hayes was born in Milton, January 24, 1813. She was a namesake for her maternal grandmother, Abigail (Neal) Card.

Daughter Lydia Hayes was said to have suffered from a childhood bout of St. Vitus Dance (Sydenham’s Chorea), which can follow rheumatic fever. It most often afflicts children of between five and fifteen years, in which age range Lydia Hayes would have been between 1813 and 1823.

Among Ichabod’s papers is an early medical prescription for St. Vitus Dance furnished by the distinguished Dr. Ammi R. Cutter [(1735-1820)] of Portsmouth, presumably for Ichabod’s daughter Lydia, who was said to have had this trouble for a short time when she was a child. As soon as she recovered, she appears to have been an example of the effectiveness of Dr. Cutter’s remedy: “For the Nervous Disorder called St. Vitus Dance I have found cold bathing by plunging the Patient naked into Cold Water every Day, then [w]rapping them in warm woolen & giving half a glass of warm Wine when put to bed, this method has been the most successful of any & in my Opinion the most to be relied on. A.R. Cutter” (Richmond, 1936).

Son Thomas Hayes was born in Milton, July 27, 1814. He was a namesake for his maternal grandfather, Thomas Card.

Ichabod Hayes signed the Milton Road Weight Petition of 1816. (See Milton Road Weight Petition – 1816).

Son Israel Hayes was born in Milton, May 19, 1816. Son William Hayes was born in West Milton, in 1818.

Ichabod Hayes signed the Milton Anti-Division Remonstrance of June 1820. The petitioners opposed the proposal to divide Milton in order to divide its militia company. (See also Milton Militia Dispute – 1820).

Daughter Phebe Hayes born in Milton, October 16, 1820. She may have been a namesake for Phebe (Wentworth) Wentworth.

Hayes, Ichabod - Signature - Nov 1820Ichabod Hayes signed one of the Milton Militia Division petitions of November 1820. (See Milton Militia Division Petitions – November 1820 and Milton Militia Dispute – 1820).

Ichabod Hayes was said to be one of the organizers of the Milton Social Library, in and after 1822. He left behind among his papers a list of books contained then in the library (with his opinions of their literary merit in quotes) (Richmond, 1936). (See also Milton Social Library – 1822).

Daughter Eliza Hayes was born in Milton, July 23, 1825.

Daughter Sarah P. Hayes married in Milton, June 8, 1826, Enoch M. “Moody” Clark. He was born in Greenland, NH, April 12, 1802, son of Joseph and Comfort (Weeks) Clark.

Mother-in-law Abigail (Neal) Card died in Milton, July 2, 1827, aged seventy-nine years.

[Her husband,] Thomas Card was lost in a storm at sea, 7 Oct. 1805. His wife, Abigail Neal, spent her last days in the home of her daughter Sally, and is buried in the Hayes cemetery in Milton. The following receipt, found among the Ichabod Hayes papers, suggests comparison with current prices: “Received of Ichabod Hayes two Dollars and fifty cents in full for coffin maid [made] for Widow Card” (Richmond, 1936).

Son Richard Hayes was born in Milton, August 14, 1827.

Daughter Phebe Hayes died in Milton, October 29, 1827, aged seven months, and thirteen days.

Daughter Lydia Hayes married, March 20, 1828, Simon French Hayes. He was born in Farmington, NH, February 13, 1802, son of Ichabod and Deborah (French) Hayes. (His father was the contemporary “other” Ichabod Hayes (1775-1833) of neighboring Farmington, NH).

Ichabod Hayes died in Dunn’s Tavern, near Sawyer’s Mills, in Dover, NH, July 8, 1830, aged sixty years. His accidental death resulted from injuries sustained when his horse was frightened by a clap of thunder. (In the following account, he was thrown from his wagon, when a frightened horse caused a wagon collision).

In 1830, at the age of three-score years, he [Ichabod Hayes] was accidentally killed on the [Libby’s] drawbridge at Sawyer’s Mills in Dover, as a result of being thrown out of a wagon by the collision of another (Biographical Review, 1897).

1830. July 8. – Mr. Ichabod Hayes, a respectable citizen of Milton, was thrown from his wagon in Dover, and so much injured as to occasion his death in a few hours. Weather unusually warm, the thermometer for three days in succession (July 16, 17, 18,) ranging from 92 to 98 in the shade (Wadleigh, 1913).

Ichabod Hayes died intestate, i.e., he left no will. His estate was divided as follows.

Ichabod Hayes having left no will, the estate was divided as follows: To son Ephraim, 26 acres in Alton, lower side of Lot 5, and 15 acres in Milton in Lot 101 of Second Division, and payment to Abigail of $24.75; to dau. Sarah Clark, 100 acres in Peeling, Lot 2 in Range 10; to dau. Lydia Hayes, ½ of Lot 8, Range 11 in Peeling and 15½ acres in Milton in Lot 95, Third Division, and payment to Abigail of $7.25; to dau. Abigail Hayes, 26 acres in Alton in Lot 5, Range 2 and 85½ rods in Alton near mills, plus $ 42.75; to son Ichabod, the upper half of the homestead farm, and half the buildings except widow’s dower and payment to Abigail of $11.25; to Israel $137.75, to William $212.75 and to Richard $31.87; to son Israel, 50 acres in Alton in Lot 11, 3rd Range plus $137.75; to son William, $212.75 [This was remitted to the grandson Charles Hayes, who inherited the homestead ]; to dau. Eliza $212.75; to son Thomas, lower half of homestead and half of buildings, except dower, and payment to Eliza of $212.75 and Richard $180.88; to son Richard, $212.75 (This was remitted to the grandson Charles Hayes, who inherited the homestead). The appraisal also shows that in the Milton “meeting house” he had one-half pew on the lower floor, and one-half pew in the gallery. His daughter Lydia’s husband, Simon F. Hayes, was appointed guardian of estates of minor children Ichabod, Abigail, Thomas and Israel; wife Sally, guardian of William, Eliza and Richard (Strafford County Probate, 30:175, 176) (Richmond, 1936).

Milton Town House - 1803The Milton Congregational church meeting house, which doubled also as the Milton town house, then had two stories, i.e., a lower floor and an upper floor. The “Divisions” referred to successive divisions of common land into separate private lots. An original Rochester grantee would have received a house or home farm lot, but also future rights to commonly held land. Portions of that common land might be subdivided over time amongst the “commoners,” i.e., those that held original grants and the attendant division rights, which might be sold separately. Successive divisions over time might be numbered, such as First, Second, or Third Division, etc., until most of the common land was disbursed. “Peeling” was the original name for what is now Woodstock, NH.

Sally [(Card)] Hayes headed a Milton household at the time of the Fifth (1830) Federal Census. Her household included one female aged 50-59 years [herself], one male aged 20-29 years [Ephraim Hayes], two males aged 15-19 years [Ichabod Hayes and Thomas Hayes], one female aged 15-19 years [Abigail Hayes], two males aged 10-14 years [Israel Hayes and William Hayes], one female aged 5-9 years [Eliza Hayes], and one male aged under-5 years [Richard Hayes]. Her household appeared in the enumeration between those of Jos. Hayes and Keziah Varney.

Enoch M. Clark headed a Wolfeboro, NH, household at the time of the Fifth (1830) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 20-29 years [himself], one female aged 20-29 years [Sarah P. (Hayes) Clark], one male aged 15-19 years, one female aged 15-19 years, one female aged 5-9 years, one male aged under-5 years, and one female aged under-5 years [Sarah E. Clark]. His household appeared in the enumeration just before that of [his father,] Jos. Clark.

Simon F. Hayes headed a Farmington, NH, household at the time of the Fifth (1830) Federal Census. His household included two males aged 20-29 years [himself], one female aged 20-29 years [Lydia (Hayes) Hayes], and one female aged under-5 years [Clarissa Hayes]. Their household appeared in the enumeration just after that of his father, the “other” Ichabod Hayes.

Daughter Abigail Hayes married in New Durham, NH, November 20, 1831, Levi Hayes, she of Milton and he of Farmington, NH. Rev. Nathaniel Berry performed the ceremony. He was born in Farmington, NH, January 11, 1806, son of Ichabod and Deborah (French) Hayes.

Son Ephraim Hayes married, in September 1834, Rosamond Furber Dame. She was born in Farmington, NH, June 7, 1803, daughter of Moses and Deborah (Furber) Dame.

Until he was about twenty years old [circa 1836], [son] Israel Hayes worked on the farm in the summer season, and attended the district schools of Milton or Alton in the winter. He was afterward employed for a short time at the shoemaker’s trade in Alton, and then went to Natick, Mass., for a short stay (Biographical Review, 1897).

Son Ichabod Hayes married, March 3, 1836, Hannah Rogers Jenkins. She was born in Milton, July 28, 1814, daughter of John and Nancy (Patten) Jenkins.

[Ichabod Hayes [Jr.] lived on the eastern half of his father’s homestead in Milton. … He was a selectman of Milton and prominent in town affairs. He was an officer of the 4th Co., 39th Reg’t, 2nd Brigade, 2nd Division of N.H. Militia; appointed sergeant; 5 Au. 1837; ensign, 18 Apr. 1839; lieutenant, 29 Apr. 1841; captain, 10 May 1842 (Richmond, 1936).

In early manhood [son] Thomas went to Natick, Mass., and learned the shoe business as many young men of neighboring New Hampshire towns were doing. The first shoe manufacturing plant was established in Natick in 1828. A letter of Thomas Hayes written from Natick 30 July 1836 proves that he and his brother Israel were there at that time. He says: “Have made 388 pair and averaged 50 pair a week for 3 last weeks, and Israel has made 436 pr. and averaged 57 for 3 weeks.” Thomas returned to the farm, but [son] Israel returned to establish one of the successful shoe factories of Farmington (Richmond, 1936).

Son-in-law Levi Hayes died in Farmington, NH, September 5, 1838, aged thirty-two years.

The Milton Selectmen of 1840 were J.M. TwomblyChas. Swasey, and Ephm. Hayes.

Ephraim Hayes lived in West Milton on the farm that had previously belonged to his cousin Bidfield Hayes and his uncle Daniel. The house, reduced in size by fire, still [1936] stands. The house was inherited by his son John. … Ephraim served Milton as selectman and surveyor. His account ledger is preserved among Hayes papers (Richmond, 1936).

Ephraim Hayes headed a Milton household at the time of the Sixth (1840) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 30-39 years [himself], one female aged 30-39 years [Rosamond F. [(Dame)] Hayes, and two females aged under-5 years [Sarah Hayes and Emily A. Hayes]. One member of his household was engaged in Agriculture. His household appeared in the enumeration between those of Daniel Hayes and James Hayes.

Enoch M. Clark headed a Wolfeboro, NH, household at the time of the Sixth (1840) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 30-39 years [himself], one female aged 30-39 years [Sarah P. (Hayes) Clark], one male aged 15-19 years, one female aged 10-14 years [Sarah E. Clark], one male aged 10-14 years [Brackett Clark], two males aged 5-9 years [Charles I. Clark and George A. Clark], two females aged under-5 years [Ann A. Clark and Mary F. Clark], and one male aged under-5 years [Henry Clark]. Two members of his household were engaged in Agriculture. His household appeared in the enumeration just after that of [his father,] Joseph Clark.

Simon F. Hayes headed a Farmington, NH, household at the time of the Sixth (1840) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 30-39 years [himself], one female aged 30-39 years [Lydia [(Hayes)] Hayes, one female aged 10-14 years [Clarissa Hayes], one male aged 5-9 years [Seth Hayes], one female aged 5-9 years [Lydia Hayes], and one female aged under-5 years [Phebe Hayes]. One member of his household was engaged in Agriculture.

Ichabod Hayes headed a Milton household at the time of the Sixth (1840) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 20-29 years [himself], one female aged 20-29 years [Hannah R. (Jenkins) Hayes], one male aged under-5 years [George Hayes], and one female aged under-5 years [Hannah F. Hayes]. One member of his household was engaged in Agriculture. His household appeared in the enumeration between those of Calvin S. Horne and Thomas Hayes.

Abigail [(Hayes)] Hayes headed a Farmington, NH, household at the time of the Sixth (1840) Federal Census. Her household included one female, aged 20-29 years [herself], one female aged 5-9 years [Abigail Hayes], one male aged under-5 years [Levi W. Hayes], and one male aged 20-29 years. One member of her household was engaged in Manufacture and Trade.

Thomas Hayes headed a Milton household at the time of the Sixth (1840) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 20-29 years [himself], one male aged 15-19 years [William Hayes], one female aged 15-19 years [Eliza Hayes], and one female aged 60-69 years [Sally (Card) Hayes]. One member of his household was engaged in Agriculture. His household appeared in the enumeration between those of Ichabod Hayes and Moses Nute.

In 1840, he [son Israel Hayes] established himself in business in Farmington as a manufacturer of custom shoes, continuing for some years on a rather modest scale (Biographical Review, 1897).

The Milton Selectmen of 1841 were J.M. Twombly, R.J. Witham, and Ephm. Hayes.

Son Israel Hayes married (1st) in Dover, NH, February 28, 1844, Sarah E. Richards. She was born in Dover, NH, September 23, 1820.

Mr. [Israel] Hayes has been twice married. His first marriage was contracted with Sarah Richards, of Dover, who died soon after, leaving a daughter named Sarah (Biographical Review, 1897).

Daughter-in-law Sarah E. (Richards) Hayes died in Farmington, NH, May 23, 1844, aged twenty-three years.

Son Richard Hayes studied law and worked as a law clerk, with district court lawyer Harvey Jewell (1815-1881) in Boston, MA, in 1844. (Jewell would become a three-term MA State Representative and judge). Hayes would next study law and work with another district court lawyer, Arthur F.L. Norris (1821-1889), at Pittsfield, NH, circa 1845-46, and was principal of the Pittsfield Academy. He would study further at Dartmouth College in Hanover, NH.

Son Israel Hayes married (2nd), February 28, 1847, Anne Freeman Edgerly. She was born in Farmington, NH, November 26, 1815, daughter of Josiah and Mary (Tash) Edgerly.

In 1848 [SIC] Mr. Hayes was married to Miss Ann F. Edgerly, who died November 12, 1889. Five children were born of this union, four of whom are now [1897] living; namely, Edward W., Martha A., Frank C., and Mary E. Martha is the wife of J.F. Safford of this town and Mary is the wife of E.F. Cummings of Beachmont, Mass. Mr. Hayes and his family attend and support the Congregational church of which he has been a Deacon for twenty years (Biographical Review, 1897). 

Daughter Eliza Hayes married, March 11, 1849, John Elkins Goodwin. He was born in Milton, September 14, 1820, son of Joseph and Anna (Hanson) Goodwin.

Son Thomas Hayes married, June 26, 1849, Abigail Varney Nute. She was born in Milton, May 3, 1826, daughter of Moses T. and Eunice (Varney) Nute.

Sally [(Card)] Hayes, aged seventy-two years, headed a Milton household at the time of the Seventh (1850) Federal Census. Sally Hayes owned real estate valued at $1,500. Her household appeared in the enumeration between those of Calvin S. Horn, a farmer, aged fifty years (b. NH), and Ichabod Hayes, a farmer, aged thirty-nine years (b. NH).

Ephraim Hayes, a farmer, aged forty-six years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Seventh (1850) Federal Census. His household included Rosamond F. [(Dame)] Hayes, aged forty-five years (b. NH), Sarah Hayes, aged twelve years (b. NH), Emily A. Hayes, aged ten years (b. NH), William H. Hayes, aged nine years (b. NH), Mary P. Hayes, aged seven years (b. NH), and John Hayes, aged three years (b. NH). Ephraim Hayes had real estate valued at $2,000. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of David M.C. Goodwin, a shoemaker, aged twenty-nine years (b. NH), and John J. Plumer, a farmer, aged fifty years (b. NH).

Moody Clark, a farmer, aged forty-eight years, headed a Wolfeboro, NH, household at the time of the Seventh (1850) Federal Census. His household included Sarah [(Hayes)] Clark, aged forty-four years (b. NH), Brackett Clark, a farmer, aged twenty years (b. NH), Charles I. Clark, a farmer, aged nineteen years, George A. Clark, a farmer, aged seventeen years, Ann A. Clark, aged fifteen years, Mary F. Clark, aged thirteen years, Henry M. Clark, aged ten years, Ellen E. Clark, aged seven years, and Greenlief Clark, aged four years (b. NH). Moddy Clark had real estate valued at $4,000. (The entry for Ann A. Clark had an unusual “V” mark in the column for occupation).

Hayes, Simon F - Farmhouse - Per RichmondSimon F. Hayes, a farmer, aged forty-seven years, headed a Farmington, NH, household at the time of the Seventh (1850) Federal Census. His household included Lydia [(Hayes)] Hayes, aged forty-two years (b. NH), Seth Hayes, a farmer, aged eighteen years (b. NH), Lydia Hayes, aged seventeen years (b. NH), Phebe Hayes, aged fifteen years (b. NH), and Mary A. Hayes, aged five years (b. NH). Simon F. Hayes had real estate valued at $12,000.

Ichabod Hayes, a farmer, aged thirty-nine years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Seventh (1850) Federal Census. His household included Hannah R. [(Jenkins)] Hayes, aged thirty-six years (b. NH), George Hayes, aged twelve years (b. NH), Hannah F. Hayes, aged ten years (b. NH), and Charles Hayes, aged five years (b. NH). Her household appeared in the enumeration between those of Sally [(Card)] Hayes, aged seventy-two years (b. NH), and Thomas Hayes, a farmer, aged thirty-six years (b. NH).

Abigail [(Hayes)] Hayes, aged thirty-six years (b. NH), headed a Boston, MA, household at the time of the Seventh (1850) Federal Census. Her household included Abby Hayes, aged sixteen years. They lived in a three-family dwelling, in which her younger brothers, Wm Hayes, a shoemaker, aged thirty-two years (b. NH), and Richard Hayes, a student aged twenty-three years (b. NH), occupied one of the other apartments.

Thomas Hayes, aged thirty-six years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Seventh (1850) Federal Census. His household included Abigail [(Nute)] Hayes, aged twenty-four years (b. NH), and Melvin Hayes, aged one month (b. NH). Their household appear in the enumeration between those of Ichabod Hayes, a farmer, aged thirty-nine years (b. NH), and Eunice Nute, aged fifty-one years (b. NH).

Israel Hayes, a shoemaker, aged thirty-four years (b. NH), headed a Farmington, NH, household at the time of the Seventh (1850) Federal Census. His household included Ann F. [(Edgerly)] Hayes, aged thirty-four years (b. NH), Sarah E. Hayes, aged six years (b. NH), Edward W. Hayes, aged two years (b. NH), and Martha A. Hayes, aged two months (b. NH). Isaac Hayes had real estate valued at $2,000. Their household appeared in the enumeration just after the hotel headed by Jonathan P. Baker, aged forty-two years (b. NH).

Ann Norris, aged fifty-five years (b. MA), headed a Boston, MA, household at the time of the Seventh (1850) Federal Census. Her household included Wm Hayes, a shoemaker, aged thirty-two years (b. NH), and Richard Hayes, a student, aged twenty-three years (b. NH). They lived in a three-family dwelling, in which their elder sister, Abigail [(Hayes)] Hayes, aged thirty-six years (b. NH), occupied one of the other apartments. (Richard Hayes was enumerated also in Hanover, NH, where he was a student at Dartmouth University).

John E. Goodwin, a shoe manufacturer, aged thirty years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Seventh (1850) Federal Census. His household included Eliza [(Hayes)] Goodwin, aged twenty-five years (b. NH), Joseph H. Goodwin, aged three years (b. NH), and Leah H. Goodwin, aged two years (b. NH). John E. Goodwin had real estate valued at $3,000. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Charles H. Goodwin, a trader, aged twenty-five years (b. NH), and Shepherd Goodwin, a shoemaker, aged twenty-even years (b. NH).

Richard Hayes, a student, aged twenty-three years (b. NH), was one of thirty students boarding the Hanover, NH, household of William Tenney, a farmer, aged fifty-three years (b. NH), at the time of the Seventh (1850) Federal Census. Hanover, NH, is the location of Dartmouth University.

The Milton Selectmen of 1851 were Asa FoxD.P. Warren, and Ichabod Hayes [Jr.]. The Milton Selectmen of 1852 were Asa FoxEli Wentworth, and Ichabod Hayes [Jr.].

Wm Hayes, a miner, aged thirty-four years (b. NH), appeared in Sierra County, CA, in the CA State Census of [August 19,] 1852. (Sierra County is in the Sierra Mountains, for which it is named, northeast of Sacramento, CA). His last prior residence had been in Massachusetts.

The gold excitement of 1849-50 took him [son William Hayes] to California by the overland route. His gains seemed to be summed up in the few nuggets and grains of gold dust he brought back as souvenirs, samples of which are still treasured by the family (Richmond, 1936).

Son Israel Hayes erected his shoe factory in Farmington, NH, in 1853. For a short time, he manufactured shoes with trader Hosea B. Edgerly (1823-1892).

In 1853, encouraged by the success he [son Israel Hayes] had met with, he erected a factory, and for a year manufactured shoes in company with H.B. Edgerly. Since that time he has continued the business in company with his son, making a specialty of manufacturing brogan shoes of a medium grade, and has built up an extensive and flourishing trade (Biographical Review, 1897).

William Hayes married in Boston, MA, June 16, 1856, Lucy Lauvilla Crawford, he of Milton and she of Carroll, NH. He was a shoe cutter, aged thirty-eight years, and she was aged thirty-four years. Rev. Thomas Worcester performed the ceremony. She was born in [Hart’s Location,] Carroll, NH, July 11, 1821, daughter of Ethan A. and Lucy A. (Howe) Crawford.

[Lucy L. Crawford was a] daughter of the famous White Mtn. guide Ethan Allen Crawford and Lucy Rosebrook [Howe], and granddaughter of Abel Crawford, the family from which Crawford Notch derives its name (Richmond, 1936).

Salley [(Card)] Hayes, aged eighty-one years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. Salley Hayes had personal estate valued at $1,000. Her household appeared in the enumeration between those of Ichabod Hayes, a farmer, aged forty-eight years (b. NH), and Eunice Nute, aged sixty-three years (b. NH).

Ephraim Hayes, a farmer, aged fifty-five years (b. NH), headed a Milton (“West Milton P.O.”) household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household included Rosamond F. [(Dame)] Hayes, aged fifty-seven years (b. NH), Emily A. Hayes, aged twenty-one years (b. NH), William H. Hayes, a farm laborer, aged nineteen years (b. NH), Mary P. Hayes, aged seventeen years (b. NH), and John Hayes, aged thirteen years (b. NH). Ephraim Hayes had real estate valued at $3,000 and personal estate valued at $325. His household appeared in the enumeration between those of Joseph Pearl, a farmer, aged seventy-three years (b. NH), and William Town, a farmer, aged forty-eight years (b. NH).

Enoch M. Clark, a farmer, aged fifty-eight years (b. NH), headed a Wolfeboro, NH, household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household included Sarah [(Hayes)] Clark, aged fifty-four years (b. NH), Henry M. Clark, a farmer, aged twenty years (b. NH), Ellen E. Clark, housework, aged sixteen years (b. NH), and Greenleaf B. Clark, aged fourteen years (b. NH). Enoch M. Clark had real estate valued at $6,500 and personal estate valued at $1,500. His household appeared in the enumeration just before that of [his mother,] Comfort [(Weeks)] Clark, housekeeping, aged eighty-six years (b. NH).

Simon F. Hayes, aged fifty-two years (b. NH), headed a Farmington, NH, household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household included Lydia [(Hayes)] Hayes, aged fourteen [fifty-two] years (b. NH), Mary A. Hayes, aged twenty years (b. NH), Henry H. Hayes, aged twenty-four years (b. NH), and Phebe [(Hayes)] Cate, aged twenty-eight years (b. NH). Simon F. Hayes had real estate valued at $1,400 and personal estate valued at $1,500.

Ichabod Hayes, a farmer, aged forty-eight years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household included Hannah R. [(Jenkins)] Hayes, aged forty-four years (b. NH), George Hayes, a shoemaker, aged twenty-two years (b. NH), Hannah F. Hayes, aged twenty years (b. NH), Charles Hayes, aged fifteen years (b. NH), and Laura A. Hayes, aged seven years (b. NH). Ichabod Hayes had real estate valued at $4,000 and personal estate valued at $500. His household appeared in the enumeration between those of Thomas Hayes, a farmer, aged forty-five years (b. NH), and Salley [(Card)] Hayes, aged eighty-one years (b. NH).

Hayes - Hare Rd - 1871Thomas Hayes … built his house in 1857 on the west half of his father’s homestead [farm], which had been divided equally between him and his brother Ichabod (Richmond, 1936).

Abigail [(Hayes)] Hayes, a dressmaker, aged forty-seven years (b. NH), headed a Boston, MA, household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. Her household included H. Francis Hayes, aged twenty years (b. NH), Leander R. Morse, a physician, aged twenty-four years (b. Nova Scotia), Frank Lincoln, a carpenter (journeyman), aged twenty-seven years (b. MA), and Mr. Quinn, aged twenty-one years (b. MA). Abigail Hayes had personal estate valued at $500.

Thomas Hayes, a farmer, aged forty-five years (b. NH), headed a Milton (“West Milton P.O.”) household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household included Abigail [(Nute)] Hayes, aged thirty-four years (b. NH), Ira W. Hayes, aged ten years (b. NH), Byron F. Hayes, aged five years (b. NH), and Anna E. Hayes, aged eleven months (b. NH). Thomas Hayes had real estate valued at $2,500 and personal estate valued at $660. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Calvin S. Horne, a farmer, aged sixty years (b. NH), and Ichabod Hayes, a farmer, aged forty-eight years (b. NH).

Israel Hayes, a shoe manufacturer, aged forty-four years (b. NH), headed a Farmington, NH, household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household included Ann F. [(Edgerly)] Hayes, aged forty-four years (b. NH), Edward W. Hayes, aged eleven years (b. NH), Martha A. Hayes (b. NH), aged nine years (b. NH), Frank C. Hayes, aged four years (b. NH), and Mary E. Hayes, aged one year (b. NH). Israel Hayes had real estate valued at $2,500 and personal estate valued at $300.

William Hayes, a sole leather cutter, aged forty-two years (b. Newfoundland [NH]), headed a Stoneham, MA, household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household included Lucy L. [(Crawford)] Hayes, a housewife, aged thirty-nine years (b. NH [Newfoundland]), Leonard F. Verrill, a cordwainer, aged twenty-three years (b. ME), Francis M. Verrill, a seamstress, aged twenty-five years (b. ME), Emeline L. Clement, a seamstress, aged twenty-three years (b. ME), Caroline E. Austin, a seamstress, aged twenty-on years (b. ME), John Leavitt, a sole leather cutter, aged twenty-eight years (b. MA). William Hayes had personal estate valued at $1,000.

John E. Goodwin, a shoe manufacturer, aged forty years (b. NH), headed a Milton (“West Milton P.O.”) household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household included Eliza [(Hayes)] Goodwin, aged thirty-five years (b. NH), J.H. [Joseph H.] Goodwin, aged fourteen years (b. NH), L.H. [Leah H.] Goodwin, aged twelve years (b. NH), L.M. [Laura M.] Goodwin, aged nine years (b. NH), A.B. [Alice E.] Goodwin, aged seven years (b. NH), and J.F. [John F.] Goodwin, aged three years (b. NH). John E. Goodwin had real estate valued at $7,000 and personal estate valued at $5,000. His household appeared in the enumeration between those of George F. Nute, a shoe cutter, aged thirty-two years (b. NH), and [his brother,] Daniel B. Goodwin, a farmer, aged forty-nine years (b. NH).

Son Ephraim Hayes died in Milton, February 19, 1861, age fifty-six years, two months, and nine days.

Daughter Eliza (Hayes) Goodwin died of consumption in Milton, October 15, 1861, aged thirty-eight years. She was married.

PROCEEDINGS OF THE BOARD OF PUBLIC SCHOOLS. … On motion of Dr. Porz, the action of the High School and Teachers’ Committee, in transferring the Normal School to the High School building and nominating Mr. Richard Edwards to be principal of the conjoint schools, and Mr. Richard Hayes, to be assistant, at a salary of $700 per annum, was confirmed (Daily Missouri Democrat, January 16, 1862).

Rev. Enoch Hayes Place (1786-1865) of Strafford, NH, and his wife, Sally (Demeritt) Place (1789-1880), visited their relations on Hare Road in West Milton, on Saturday, October 11, 1862, as he recorded in his diary, and they spent the night there.

[Sat. Oct 11. -] We then called at Mr. Horn’s, whose wife was uncle Daniel Hayes‘ daughter Polly & a cousin to Mrs. Place. They treated us with some rich Isabella grapes, grown in their garden. Thence to Mr. Ichabod Hayes’, a son of our uncle Ichabod Hayes, who was killed 32 years ago last July, on Libby’s bridge in Dover, his horse being frightened by a clap of thunder. Uncle’s widow still lives, a Smart Sensible woman is Mrs. Sally Hayes, Aged 84 yrs., the 25 of next November. We had only traveled some one fourth of a mile, and as it began to rain, and my wife was ill of a severe cold, we put up at one of the most romantic and pleasent Situations in Milton.
Sun. Oct. 12. – After Solemn prayer we left our excellent friends at Cousin Ichabod Hayes, Esqr.’s, and went to Alton, 14 miles, just in time to attend meeting with Bro. Caverno, Who preached well (NEHGS, 1998).

If one came away from visiting Ichabod Hayes’ West Milton farm with some Isabella grapes, one might use them make some Grape Pudding Sauce:

Grape Pudding Sauce – Pick, wash, and steam for one half hour Concord or Isabella grapes, (in any dish not metallic). with water sufficient to cover them, then run through a colander, rubbing through as much of the pulp as possible, (either with hand or a pestle), return the liquid to the stew kettle, and when it boils thicken with about one spoonful of corn starch, or of sifted Graham flour braided with a water. Boil up once to each pint of pulp, sweeten to the taste, and serve as a sauce for boiled rice, apple dumplings, or any plain pudding that may require a sauce. Two or three spoonfuls of this makes a fine addition to apple pie as flavor before baking (Clark, 1883).

Sally (Card) Hayes of Milton made her last will, April 21, 1863. She devised her large bible, and her featherbed, bedstead, and bed cords to her daughter, Abigail Hayes. She bequeathed her wearing apparel to her daughter, Abigail Hayes, and her granddaughters, Laura May Goodwin and Alice Eliza Goodwin, to be equally divided among them. She bequeathed her bedding, table linen, and crockery to her daughter, Abigail Hayes and her daughter-in-law Hannah P. Hayes, to be equally divided between them. She bequeathed $5 each to her grandchildren, John Freemont Goodwin, Laura May Goodwin, and Alice Eliza Goodwin. She bequeathed her six oldest dining chairs and chest of drawers to her son, Thomas Hayes; her wool quilt and bureau to her son, Israel Hayes; a cotton and wool coverlet to her son, William Hayes; $5 in money to her son, Richard Hayes; her silver teaspoons and one large Britannia spoon to her granddaughter, Sarah Hayes. (“Britannia” is an alloy of silver (95.8%) and copper (4.2%)). She devised all the rest and residue of her estate to her son Ichabod Hayes, whom she also named as executor. Simon F. Hayes, Calvin S. Horne, and Betty P. Towne signed as witnesses (Strafford County Probate, 80:457).

Son Ichabod Hayes of West Milton paid $1 in U.S. Excise Tax in 1864, for his carriage, which was valued at $75.

Son Richard Hayes appeared in the St. Louis, MO, directory of 1864, as a school teacher, boarding at 202 Locust street.

[Dartmouth] CLASS OF 1850. RICHARD HAYES, the son of Ichabod and Sallie (Card) Hayes, was born at Milton Aug. 14, 1827. He read law with Harvey Jewell, D.C., 1844, at Boston, Ms., 1 year, and at Pittsfield with Arthur Fitzroy Livermore Norris, D.C., 1845, 2 years, was in practice at Pittsfield, 4 years, then removed to St. Louis, Missouri, and has been engaged in the High School teaching Calculus, civil and mechanical Engineering, Astronomy, and Physicks between 8 and 9 years (Chapman, 1867).

Son-in-law Enoch M. Clark died August 7, 1865.

Son Richard Hayes appeared in the St. Louis, MO, directory of 1865, as a teacher, High School, with his residence on Washington av., at its corner with 17th street.

Son-in-law Simon F. Hayes died in Farmington, July 17, 1866.

Rosemon F. [(Dame)] Hayes, aged sixty-seven years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. Her household included Mary P. Hayes, a teacher, aged twenty-six years (b. NH), and John P.H. Hayes, a farm laborer, aged twenty-three years (b. NH). Rosemon F. Hayes had personal estate valued at $545. John P.H. Hayes had real estate valued at $1600. Her household appeared in the enumeration between those of William Wentworth, a carpenter, aged seventy-two years (b. NH), and George Blake, a farm laborer, aged fifty-six years (b. NH).

Clark, Sarah P - Wofeboro House - Per RichmondSarah P. [(Hayes) Clark, keeping house, aged sixty-four years (b. NH), headed a Wolfeboro, NH, household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. Her household included Greenleaf B. Clark, a farmer, aged twenty-four years (b. NH). Sarah P. Clark had real estate valued at $10,000 and personal estate valued at $3,000.

Annie M. Hayes, keeping house, aged twenty-four years (b. NH), headed a Farmington (“Gonic P.O.”), NH, household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. Her household included Henry C. Fall, at home, aged seven years (b. NH), Katy A. Fall, aged four years (b. NH), Lydia [(Hayes)] Hayes, aged sixty-two years (b. NH), Fredrick Dixon, works for shoe shop, aged twenty-one years (b. NH), Mary E. Dixon, aged twenty-four years (b. NH), Kitiage Nute, aged twenty-one years (b. NH), George Barnard, a bookkeeper, aged twenty-two years (b. NH). Annie M. Hayes had real estate valued at $1,000 and personal estate valued at $200.

Ichabod Hayes, a farmer, aged fifty-eight years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. His household included Hannah R. [(Jenkins)] Hayes, keeping house, aged fifty-four years (b. NH), Charles Hayes, a farm laborer, aged twenty-five years (b. NH), Maria Hayes, a housekeeper, aged twenty years (b. NH), Laura A. Hayes, aged sixteen years (b. NH), Sally [(Card)] Hayes, aged ninety-one years (b. NH), and Charles M. Hurd, aged twelve years (b. NH). Ichabod Hayes had real estate valued at $2,500 and personal estate valued at $1,152. Charles Hayes had personal estate valued at $300. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Calvin S. Horne, a farm laborer, aged seventy years (b. NH) and Thomas Hayes, a farmer, aged fifty-five years (b. NH).

When over 90 years old Sally [(Card) Hayes] finely knitted baby mittens and socks for her great-granddaughter (Richmond, 1936).

Abby [(Hayes)] Hayes, keeping house, aged fifty-seven years (b. NH), headed a Boston, MA, household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. Her household included Frances Lincoln, a carpenter, aged thirty-eight years (b. MA), Thomas Kinney, furnishing store, aged thirty years (b. [MA]), William Rollins, a printer, aged nineteen years (b. ME), Frank Sawtell, a clerk in store, aged twenty-one years (b. MA), and William Sawtell, a clerk in store, aged twenty-five years (b. [MA]). Abby Hayes had personal estate valued at $2,000. Thomas Kinney had personal estate valued at $1,000.

Thomas Hayes, a farmer, aged fifty-five years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. His household included Abagail V. [(Nute)] Hayes, keeping house, aged forty-four years (b. NH), Ira W. Hayes, a farm laborer, aged twenty years (b. NH), Byron F. Hayes, at school, aged fifteen years (b. NH), and Anna L. Hayes, at school, aged ten years. Thomas Hayes had real estate valued at $2,000 and personal estate valued at $825. His household appeared in the enumeration between those of Ichabod Hayes, a farmer, aged fifty-eight years (b. NH), and John Steuben, a farmer, aged forty-eight years (b. NH).

Israel Hayes, shoe mfty., aged fifty-four years (b. NH), headed a Farmington, NH, household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. His household included Ann F. [(Edgerly)] Hayes, keeping house, aged fifty-five years (b. NH), Edward W. Hayes, aged twenty-two years (b. NH), Frank C. Hayes, aged fourteen years (b. NH), and Mary E. Hayes, aged eleven years (b. NH). Israel Hayes had real estate valued at $2,000 and personal estate valued at $1,000.

William Hayes, works in shoe factory, aged fifty-two years (b. NH), headed a Stoneham, MA, household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. His household included Lucy L. [(Crawford)] Hayes, keeping house, aged forty-nine years (b. NH), Laura L. Goodwin, works in shoe factory, aged nineteen years (b. NH), Richard Hayes, a schoolteacher, aged forty-two years (b. NH), and Jefferson Hayes, operates pegging machine, aged thirty-seven years (b. NH). William Hayes owned real estate valued at $4,000 and personal estate valued at $300.

[William and Lucy L. (Crawford) Hayes] had no children but brought up the daughter, Laura M. Goodwin, of his deceased sister Eliza, and she inherited the house at 17 Hancock St., Stoneham (Richmond, 1936).

Sally (Card) Hayes died of consumption in Milton, August 21, 1871, aged ninety-two years, nine months. She was a widow. He last will was proved in a Strafford County Probate court held in Farmington, NH, September 1871 (Strafford County Probate, 80:459).

Daughter-in-law Rosamond F. (Dame) Hayes died of paralysis in Milton, November 29, 1874, aged seventy-five [seventy-one] years, five months, and twenty-one days. She was a widow.

Son Richard Hayes returned home from St. Louis, MO, for a month’s vacation, in July 1876.

LOCAL PERSONALS. Prof. Richard Hayes, teacher of mathematics in the St. Louis High School, left last night for a month’s vacation at his old home in the White Mountains of New Hampshire (St. Louis Republican (St. Louis, MO), July 11, 1876).

Son Ichabod Hayes died of consumption in Milton, August 23, 1876, aged sixty-five years. He was a married farmer.

The Farmington News published a list of Farmington residents that paid a tax of more than $50, in July 1879. Their list included shoe manufacturer Israel Hayes, who paid $84.67. Some fifty-nine residents paid more than he, with the largest paying $872.60 (Farmington News, July 4, 1879).

SOCIETY NEWS. Prof. Richard Hayes, of the High School, has returned from a month’s visit to New Hampshire (St. Louis Post Dispatch (St. Louis, MO), August 2, 1879).

Greenleaf B. Clark, a farmer, aged thirty-four years (b. NH), headed a Wolfeboro, NH, household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his servant, Winnie Morrill, keeping house, aged twenty-four years (b. NH), his mother, Sarah P. [(Hayes) Clark, at home, aged seventy-four years (b. NH), and his help, Joseph Blond, a laborer, aged twenty-five years (b. Canada).

Annie M. Hayes, works in shoe shop, aged thirty-four years (b. NH), headed a Farmington, NH, household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. Her household included her daughter, Katie A. Fall, attending school, aged fourteen years (b. NH), and her mother, Lydia [(Hayes)] Hayes, at home, aged seventy-two years (b. NH).

Jefferson Hayes, works in shoe factory, aged forty-seven years, headed a Stoneham, MA, household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Emily J. [(Berry)] Hayes, keeping house, aged twenty-eight years (b. New Brunswick), his daughter, Gracie B. Hayes, aged sixteen years (b. NH), and his mother, Abigail [(Hayes)] Hayes, a housekeeper, aged sixty-six years (b. NH).

Thomas Hayes, a farmer, aged sixty-five years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Abigail B. [(Nute)] Hayes, keeping house, aged fifty-four years (b. NH), and his children, Ira W. Hayes, works on farm, aged thirty years (b. NH), and Annie L. Hayes, at home, aged twenty-one years (b. NH). Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Eri F. Tibbetts, a farmer, aged fifty-four years (b. NH), and Charles Hayes, a farmer, aged thirty-five years (b. NH).

Israel Hayes, a shoe manufacturer, aged sixty-four years (b. NH), headed a Farmington, NH, household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Ann S. [(Edgerly)] Hayes, keeping house, aged sixty-four years (b. NH), and his son, Frank C. Hayes, works in shoe shop, aged twenty-four years (b. NH).

Wm. Hayes, works in shoe factory, aged sixty-three years (b. NH), headed a Stoneham, MA, household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Lucy L. [(Crawford)] Hayes, keeping house, aged fifty-nine years (b. NH), his niece, Laura Goodwin, works in shoe factory, aged twenty-nine years (b. NH), and his lodgers, Eunice Coy, works in shoe factory, aged forty-seven years (b. ME), and James Whipley, a farm laborer, aged twenty-three years (b. New Brunswick).

Richard Hayes, a professor in public school, aged fifty-four years (b. NH), headed a St. Louis, MO, household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census.

Son Richard Hayes “… was the author of several monographs on Earthquakes, their Causes and Periodicity” (Richmond, 1936). At a meeting of the Saint Louis Academy of Science, on February 7, 1881,

Mr. Richard Hayes made a few remarks on the periodicity of earthquakes, in which he stated that the present year would be one of maximum frequency  (Academy of Science, 1881).

Daughter-in-law Hannah R. (Jenkins) Hayes died of paralysis in Milton, September 21, 1881, aged sixty-seven years. She was a widowed housekeeper. Herbert F. Pitcher, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Daughter Lydia (Hayes) Hayes died of paralysis in Farmington, NH, February 3, 1882, aged seventy-three years, nine months. She was a widow.

DEATHS. In Farmington, Feb. 3, of paralysis, Mrs. Lydia Hayes, widow of Simon F. Hayes, aged 73 years and 9 months (Farmington News, February 10, 1882).

Educational Doings. Prof. Richard Hayes, of the branch high school, will seek recreation in his customary Eastern trip and divide the vacation between Boston and the mountains of New Hampshire (St. Louis Globe-Democrat (St. Louis, MO), June 29, 1882).

Son Richard Hayes appeared in the St. Louis, MO, directory of 1883, as a teacher, resident at 610 Olive street.

Shoe lasters employed in the John F. Cloutman shoe factory in Farmington, NH, went on strike for higher Lynn-level wages in May 1883. Replacement “scab” workers were brought in, many from Massachusetts, to replace the strikers. There were “hard words” one night between some twenty strikers and four “scabs” at Henry Dolby’s Farmington saloon and, in a scuffle, William Burrows, who was not involved, received a pistol wound.

The wounded man was conveyed home and a surgeon probed for the ball unsuccessfully, and reported the wound as fatal. Burrows’s age is twenty-five. He is single, and has been a total abstainer for two years, and although in the crowd of strikers is not one of them, working every day in Israel Hayes’s shoe shop (Boston Evening Transcript, June 5, 1883).

Son Thomas Hayes died in Milton, June 7, 1887, aged seventy-two years, ten months, and twenty days. He was a married farmer.

Daughter-in-law Anne F. (Edgerly) Hayes died in Farmington, NH, November 12, 1889, aged seventy-three years.

GONE BEFORE. It takes but a few words to give the intelligence of the death of Mrs. Israel Hayes, but what words can express the anguish which the loss of this wife and mother brings to the stricken and broken home circle, and not only the home circle; but all who knew her, share in a measure, the great sorrow which has come upon this household. Mrs. Hayes died Tuesday, Nov. 12, about 7 o’clock, a.m. For several years she has been in delicate health, yet able to a considerable extent, to mingle in society and always constant for church service when strength permitted. Several weeks since disease developed itself to such an extent that her family were much troubled and her daughter, Mrs. Safford, left her own home and devoted herself to the care of her mother during her entire illness, watching over her with untiring devotion, trying to sustain her life with every possible nourishment, and her efforts were ably seconded by the whole family, hoping that nature would rally and resume its work. But, Alas’ the vitality was gone, human means were of no avail. The time had come when husband, children and friends must give her up. This Christian woman who has made this world better by her presence, is needed and eminently fitted for the other home across the river. Inexpressibly dear was this wife to her devoted husband, who is in feeble health. Remarkably affectionate have been the family relations in this household. She combined the mother and sister in her association with her children, for she kept herself young and companionable, always cheerful, always responsive. Hard indeed is the severing of the tie which bound her to her family, and they may well mourn for long and sadly, yet whatever of comfort there is in human sympathy, it is accorded to the sorrowing ones by their many friends. Mrs. Ann Edgerly Hayes was the daughter of Josiah and Mary Tash Edgerly. She was born in what is known as the Josiah B. Edgerly house opposite the Congregational church and has always lived in the village. She was one of twelve children, ten daughters and two sons. All but one have preceded her to the spirit world. Mrs. John Barker, the youngest sister, is the sole survivor of a once large family. Mrs. Hayes’ death is the first break in her own family circle. She leaves a husband, two sons and two daughters, Mr. E.W. Hayes, Mrs. J.F. Safford Mr. F.O. Hayes, who resides here, Mrs. Dr. Cummings, whose home is in Beechmont, Mass., and a step daughter Miss Sarah Hayes, now occupying a position in the state house, Boston. She was familiarly known in this community, thoroughly devoted to her home circle, her husband and children were her life and happiness, yet when her health would permit, she particularly enjoyed the social circle and her presence was always a sunshine. She was a member of the Congregational church and connected herself with the Ladies Aid Society at its first formation, and when feeble health prevented her from taking an active part in the work of the Society she always manifested a strong interest in all they were doing and never forgot to help financially not waiting to be asked but often anticipated the treasurers needs. Only a week since the treasurer called to see her and she asked “Is it not time for mv yearly contribution?” It was one of her bright days and she was so bright so cheerful and happy that hope gained the ascendency and we thought surely she will be spared. But with blinding tears we have to accept the sad truth that the dearly loved and true friend of our girlhood, womanhood and riper years is gone. “Yet those we truly love, will never die.” The pleasant memories contained in two score years of faithful friendship will always be a present blessing. Before and in their earlier married life Mr. and Mrs. Hayes were prominent in sustaining the service of song in the Little Old Church around the corner. Our choir meetings were never quite ready for work until Israel and Ann had arrived. Their interest in singing has continued to the present time. Much comfort is mingled with the sorrow for the loved one who has gone before, by thoughts of the peaceful ending of her life, full of resignation to the Divine will. She loved everything that was beautiful, and exquisitely beautiful and fragrant flowers, the offering of a friend, were placed where her tired eyes could feast upon all their beauty and fragrance, and so she passed away. We shall miss her sadly yet for her “Life’s work is well done, Heaven’s crown well won, She hath entered rest.” The funeral services will be held at the house Friday afternoon at 2 o’clock. Rev. W.I. Sweet officiates, assisted by Rev. O.L. White (Farmington News, November 15, 1889).

Daughter Sarah P. (Hayes) Clark died of old age in Wolfeboro, NH, December 28, 1891, aged eighty-five years, five months, and twenty days. She was a widowed housekeeper. R.H. King signed the death certificate.

Son-in-law John E. Goodwin died in Malden, MA, May 11, 1893.

Son Richard Hayes was seriously injured when he was assaulted and robbed in his St. Louis, MO, apartment, on the evening of January 14, 1894.

Dying from His Wounds. Richard Hayes, the old man assaulted and robbed in his room, 610 Olive street, on the night of the 14th. inst., is dying. Dr. I.N. Love, his attending physician, announced last night that his condition was hopeless, and that he did not believe he would survive until this morning. Hayes was assaulted by some unknown thief on the evening of 14th and robbed of almost all he possessed, including his hat and coat (St. Louis Globe-Democrat (St. Louis, MO), June 26, 1894).

MISS WANEY’S APPOINTMENT. Only Temporarily in Charge of Prof. Hayes’ Class – The Injured Man. Miss Annie R. Waney, late of the Hodgen School, has been appointed temporarily to take charge of the class of which Prof. Richard Hayes had control. Prof. Hayes, it will be remembered, was some three weeks ago brutally assaulted in his room at 610 Olive street by two men who called upon him to solicit alms. When he refused to assist them, they assaulted him, beating him with an empty bottle and inflicting such injuries that his recovery is regarded as extremely doubtful. Prof. Hayes is being treated at the St. Louis Mullanphy Hospital. It is not thought that he can ultimately recover, though he is making a gallant fight for life. Already more than once has his ease been pronounced hopeless by the physicians in attendance, he is now said to be again unconscious and his doctors do not believe that he has enough strength left to enable him to make another rally. Superintendent of Schools Long was seen this morning and asked the POST-DISPATCH reporter to contradict the published statement that Prof. Hayes had been dropped from the pay roll. “We should never think of doing such an unjust thing as discharging a sick man,” he said. “As a matter of fact, we fear that Prof. Hayes will never recover. The last we heard of his condition was that he was again unconscious and could hardly recover, but even were bis death certain we should not appoint a successor to him until the worst fears had been realized. The appointment of Miss Waney is entirely a temporary one, and she will at once vacate the position should Prof. Hayes recover, as we hope he will. Should he die further action will be necessary in the appointment of his permanent successor.” Inquiry at the Mullanphy Hospital was answered by the information that Prof. Hayes was still in a very precarious condition. The attendants refused to hazard any opinion as to the probability of his future recovery (St. Louis Post-Dispatch (St. Louis, MO), February 6, 1894).

Son Richard Hayes died of erysipelas (as a result of traumatism) in the Mullanphy Hospital St. Louis, MO, February 14, 1894, aged seventy-one years. He was a teacher and [incorrectly] said to be a native of Massachusetts.

A Victim of Tough Gratitude. St. Louis, Mo, Feb. 13 — Professor Richard Hayes, one of the leading educators of the west and one of the principal officers of the high school of this city, died here from injuries received some weeks ago at the hands of roughs whom he had assisted financially and who beat him because he declined to continue his alms, Professor Hayes was 60 [71] years of age (Champaign Daily Gazette (Champaign, IL), February 13, 1894).

Daughter Abigail (Hayes) Hayes died of pneumonia in Stoneham, MA, March 28, 1896, aged eighty-three years, one month, and four days. She was the widow of Levi Hayes.

At the present time [1897], however, only a part of the [Israel Hayes shoe factory] building is occupied. In politics he is a firm supporter of the principles of the Republican party. He has never cared for public office, although he did serve for one year as Chairman of the [Farmington, NH,] Board of Selectmen (Biographical Review).

Son Israel Hayes died of senectus in Farmington, NH, March 27, 1898, aged eighty-one years, ten months, and sixteen days. He was a widowed shoe manufacturer.

Hayes, Israel, c1897IN MEMORIAM. 1816 – ISRAEL HAYES – 1898. “I put on righteousness, and it clothed me.” It is this verse from the Bible which one associates quickly with the memory of Mr. Israel Hayes, the loved senior officer of the First church of Farmington, who parted away from our mortal ken on Sunday evening, March 27. Mr. Hayes was a son of the late Ichabod and Sarah (Card) Hayes of Milton in which town he was born on May 9, 1816. After the death of the father in 1830, Mr. Hayes went to Alton to learn with the late Mr. Durrell Stevens certain methods of tanning leather and the sister industry of shoemaking. He came subsequently to Farmington and in 1850 he began to manufacture shoes, continuing to pursue that business until a few years ago. In 1843 he was married to Miss Sarah Richards of Massachusetts, by whom he had one child, Sarah Elizabeth, whose death took place a short time ago. Some time after the decease of his wife, Mr. Hayes, in 1847, married Miss Anne F. Edgerly, one of the sisters of the late Hon J.B. Edgerly of this village. Of their five children, four survive their parents, being Edward Winslow and Frank Clifton Hayes, and Mrs. J.F. Safford, and Mrs. Edwin E. Cumming, the latter resident in Beachmont, Mass., while the others are well known townspeople. Mr. Hayes never lost sight of the higher life, in the cares incidental to business, but kept always awake and responsive to the voices that accord with the more spiritual thought and aspirations of existence. He was so musical [in] temperament that in 1843 he went to Boston and profited by the instruction of George F. Root and Lowell Mason, and was a member of the choir of the Park street church. After returning to the familiar villages in this vicinity he “passed on” the help and good which he had received, in the teaching of several terms of singing school, and not even advancing age took from his voice the deep and mellow organ tone which characterized it, and could not be mistaken for any other by them who ever had heard it in the hymns of the church, ancient or modern. In 1869 be became a member of the Congregational church in this village, and upon the decease of the Hon. G.M. Herring in 1875, Mr. Hayes succeeded him in the diaconate, and at the death of Mr. Richard R. Hayes he had as associates in office the late Hosea B. Edgerly and J.P. Tibbetts, with Joseph Breckenridge as his only companion in that relation, since the death of the elder men. The church laments the loss of an officer whose years, whose experience, and whose dignity with his sincere piety, gave value and stability to its gathering and its deliberations. The community is bereaved of one whose conduct was conscientious and straightforward and whose influence was directed toward the providing of the right thing for the public, on every occasion. And in his death, there is removed still another of them who gave stamina and character to say nothing of reputation, to the town of Farmington. Alas, we can count only too easily, today, the elders who sit in the gates. They who are of the present generation will miss the cordial handclasp and the cheering word with which Mr. Hayes never failed to greet them, and his heart always was young, so that there seemed nothing incongruous in the friendliness between him and them. Yet, in the high seat of his fourscore years there must have been sometimes, in spite of the tender love of his children and grandchildren, with only one brother remaining, Mr. William Hayes of Stoneham, Mass., of his own generation, there must have been some yearning to hear
Dear voices that long have been silenced,
Come clear from their peaceable land,
Come toned with unspeakable sweetness,
From the presence with which they stand.
He has heard those loving voices, and has gone, one of Nature’s noblemen, to his rest and joy in the world beyond. It seems a cold office “to speak patience to those that wring under a load of sorrow,” but in the memory of his long and good life, and in the faith which was his, there shall wait a sweet consolation for his best beloved and for all others who were honored by the friendship of Israel Hayes. A.G.W. (Farmington News, April 1, 1898).

Ira W. Heyes, a farmer, aged fifty years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household included his mother, Abigail B. [(Nute) Heyes, a widow, aged seventy-four years (b. NH). Abigail B. Heyes was the mother of three children, of whom two were still living. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Nellie M. Hayes, aged fifty-four years (b. NH), and Lewis Peterson, a farmer, aged fifty-four years (b. NY).

William Hayes, aged eighty-two years (b. NH), headed a Stoneham, MA, household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of forty-four years), Lucy L. [(Crawford)] Hayes, aged seventy-seven years (b. NH), and his niece, Laura M. Goodwin, a shoe factory stitcher, aged forty-nine years (b. NH). William Hayes owned their house at 17 Hancock Street, free-and-clear.

Daughter-in-law Abigail V. (Nute) Hayes died of a cerebral hemorrhage in West Milton, June 4, 1904, aged seventy-eight years, one month, and one day. James J. Buckley, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Daughter-in-law Lucy L. (Crawford) Hayes died of old age at 17 Hancock Street in Stoneham, MA, February 28, 1905, aged eighty-three years, seven months, and sixteen days. A.B. Jenney, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Son William Hayes died of apoplexy at 17 Hancock Street in Stoneham, MA, February 5, 1908, aged eighty-nine years, ten months, and twenty-five days. He was a retired widower. G.W. Nickerson, M.D., signed the death certificate.

DEATHS. HAYES – At Stoneham, Feb. 5, William Hayes, 89 yrs. 10 mos. 25 dys. Funeral on Saturday at 2.30 P.M., at late home, No. 17 Hancock street, Stoneham, Mass. Friends are invited. Kindly omit flowers. Train from North Station at 1.13 P.M. (Poston Evening Transcript, February 7, 1908).


References:

Academy of Science. (1881). Transactions of the Academy of Science of Saint Louis. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=pLQWAQAAIAAJ&pg=PR63

Biographical Review. (1897). Biographical Review: Containing Life Sketches of Leading Citizens of Strafford and Belknap Countries, New Hampshire. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=C2sjAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA77

Chapman, George T. (1867). Sketches of the Alumni of Dartmouth College: From the First Graduation in 1771 to the Present Time, with a Brief History of the Institution. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=sju7AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA384

Clark Brothers. (1883). Dio Lewis’s Monthly. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=o20BAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA334

Find a Grave. (2020, May 12). Abigail Neal Card. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/210011525/abigail-card

Find a Grave. (2015, February 15). Sarah P. Clark. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/142661737/sarah-p-clark

Find a Grave. (2008, August 25). Eliza Hayes Goodwin. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/29302977/eliza-goodwin

Find a Grave. (2017, June 22). Abigail Hayes Hayes. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/180617181/abigail-hayes

Find a Grave. (2015, February 18). Ephraim Hayes. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/142785044/ephraim-hayes

Find a Grave. (2011, December 31). Ichabod Hayes. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/82754137/ichabod-hayes

Find a Grave. (2016, September 14). Ichabod Hayes [Jr.]. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/169908663/ichabod-hayes

Find a Grave. (2015, June 2). Deacon Israel Hayes. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/147334540/israel-hayes

Find a Grave. (2017, June 23). Lydia Hayes Hayes. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/180640298/lydia-hayes

Find a Grave. (2011, December 31). Lydia Wentworth Hayes. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/82754175/lydia-hayes

Find a Grave. (2020, May 14). Phebe Hayes. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/210083504/phebe-hayes

Find a Grave. (2017, May 15). Richard Hayes. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/179364277/richard-hayes

Find a Grave. (2016, September 20). Thomas Hayes. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/170254812/thomas-hayes

Find a Grave. (2015, April 29). William Hayes. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/145760462/william-hayes

NEHGS. (1998). Journals of Enoch Hayes Place, 1849-1865. Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society

Richmond, Katherine F. (1936). John Hayes, of Dover, New Hampshire: A Book of His Family. Tyngsboro, MA.

Wadleigh, George. (1913). Notable Events in the History of Dover, New Hampshire: From the First Settlement in 1623 to 1865. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=A3ywiDfSrY8C&pg=PA230.

Wikipedia. (2023, December 27). Sydenham’s Chorea. Retrieved from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sydenham%27s_chorea

Milton Mills Trader Asa Jewett (1815-1883)

By Muriel Bristol | January 21, 2024

Asa Jewett was born in Milton, in 1815, son of Gilman and Sally (Mead) Jewett. Mother Sally (Mead) Jewett died circa 1815.

Father Gilman Jewett married (2nd) in Milton, circa 1820, Ann S. Nutter. She was born in Newington, NH, in December 1790, daughter of Hatevil and Susanna (Shackford) Nutter. (Note her father’s male Puritan “virtue” name: “Hate-Evil.” It is of a kind with more familiar female ones, such as Constance, Faith, Hope, Charity, Chastity, Prudence, etc.).

Grandfather Paul Jewett owned a Milton Mills sawmill, operated by sons, Gilman Jewett and Nathaniel Jewett, and grandson, Asa Jewett.

Paul Jewett (1744-1835) owned an early sawmill known as the Jewett Mill, which was operated by Asa, his father, Gilman Jewett, and uncle, Nathaniel Jewett. They incorporated the Milton Mills Manufacturing Company in 1837, transforming the mill into a lathe and turning mill where they produced wood products (NHHS, 2022).

Asa Jewett married in Wakefield, NH, October 31, 1837, Mary Ann Richards, he of Milton and she of Wakefield, NH. Rev. Nathaniel Barker performed the ceremony. She was born in Wakefield, NH, April 20, 1813, daughter of Col. Ichabod and Annie (Hurd) Richards. (Ichabod Richards signed the Wakefield Anti-Division Remonstrance of June 1820).

(The kn0wn children of Asa and Mary A. (Richards) Jewett were: Nancy R. Jewett (1839–1904), and Lydia M. Jewett (1842–1922)).

Asa Jewett succeeded John S. Nutter as parish clerk of the Acton & Milton Mills Baptist Church, in 1837; and he would be succeeded in his turn by David Farnham, in 1850 (Scales, 1914).

Daughter Nancy R. Jewett was born in Milton, January 13, 1839.

Asa Jewett headed a Milton [Milton Mills] household at the time of the Sixth (1840) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 20-29 years [himself], one female aged 20-29 years [Mary A. (Richards) Jewett], and one female aged under-5 years [Nancy R. Jewett]. One member of his household was engaged in agriculture. His household appeared in the enumeration between those of Ezekiel Merrow and Thomas Butter. (The household of father Gilman Jewett appeared further up the same page).

Daughter Lydia M. Jewett was born in Milton Mills, September 22, 1842.

Fire at Milton Mills, N.H. About one o’clock on the morning of the 19th ult. the shingle and clapboard mill of Mr. Asa H. Jewett, was discovered to be in flames, and before aid could be had, the fire had progressed so far that all effort was useless, and the mill, with its contents, were burned to ashes. The loss is estimated at about $1200, insurance $550, in the Strafford Mutual Insurance Fire Insurance Co. Credit is due to the fire company who with their engine succeeded in saving other buildings and property. – Dover Gazette (North Star (Danville, VT), August 4, 1845).

FIRES. From the Boston Post. Asa H. Jewett’s shingle mill at Milton, N.H., was burnt 0n the 19th; loss $1200; insured $550 (Greenfield Democrat (Greenfield, MA), August 12, 1845).

Sawmill partner (and uncle) Nathaniel Jewett died June 2, 1847, aged sixty-six years, ten months, and nine days.

Gilman Jewett, Nathaniel Jewett, Asa Jewett and a Mr. Wedgewood transformed the old woolen mill into a lathe and turning mill about sixty-five or seventy years ago [1837-42], after which it was operated more or less irregularly up to the year 1847, when it was purchased by John Townsend, who used the machinery for the manufacture of fine flannels, until 1861, when the mill was burned (Mitchell-Cony, 1907).

The Milton Selectmen of 1848 were Asa Jewett, Jos. Cook and Jos. Mathes.

Jewett, Asa - Sturtevant (1848)
Asa Jewett in August 1848 (MutualArt, 2020).

Son Asa Jewett had his portrait painted by Sturtevant J. Hamblin (1816-1884) in August 1848. Note the “attributes” over Jewett’s left shoulder: woods verging on a body of water, not unlike Milton’s Town Seal. This sitting may have taken place at Hamblin’s studio in East Boston, MA (MutualArt, 2020; National Gallery of Art, 2022; NH Historical Society, 2022).

Asa Jewett appeared in the New England Mercantile Union directory of 1849, as a Milton lumber manufacturer and dealer (Pratt & Co., 1849).

Asa Jewett, a lumber dealer, aged thirty-five years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Seventh (1850) Federal Census. His household included Mary A. [(Rogers)] Jewett, aged thirty-five years (b. NH), Nancy R. Jewett, aged eleven years (b. NH), and Lydia M. Jewett, aged nine years (b. NH). He had real estate valued at $11,000. His household appeared in the enumeration between those of Josiah N. Witham, a farmer, aged thirty-four years (b. NH), and Charles Swasey, a baker, aged fifty-one years (b. NH).

Father Gilman Jewett died in Milton, May 24, 1856, aged seventy-nine years.

Jewett, Asa, House of - c1790
Jug Hill Road in Milton Mills. The Asa Jewett house depicted in the 1856 Milton Mills map as it appears today. A sign above the front door reads “c1790, Asa Jewett” (Google Maps). Having been built before he was born, and when his father was still quite young, it may have belonged originally to his paternal grandfather, Paul Jewett.

Cousin John R. Jewett died in 1858. Clara Alberta Jewett was born in Milton Mills, November 27, 1858, daughter of John R. and Clara H. (Page) Jewett. (Haven R. Jewett was one of her siblings). She was adopted by Asa and Mary A. (Richards) Jewett.

Asa Jewett, a farmer, aged forty-five years (b. NH), headed a Milton (“Milton Mills P.O.”) household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household included Mary A. [(Richards)] Jewett, aged forty-five years (b. NH), Nancy R. Jewett, aged twenty years (b. NH), L.M. [Lydia M.] Jewett, aged eighteen years (b. NH), and C.A. [Clara A.] Jewett, aged one year (b. NH). Asa Jewett had real estate valued at $2,500 and personal estate valued at $6,000. His household appeared between those of S.S. Hart, a farmer, aged forty-seven years (b. NH), and Amos Witham, a sawyer, aged fifty-nine years (b. NH).

Asa Jewett received an initial five-year appointment as a Milton justice-of-the-peace, December 8, 1860.

Asa Jewett of Milton paid a $10 tax on his retail dealer’s license, in the U.S. Excise Tax of 1862.

Daughter Lydia M. Jewett married in Milton, September 23, 1863, Thomas Jefferson Cutts. He was a farmer, aged twenty-one years, and she was aged twenty-three years. Rev. James Doldt performed the ceremony. He was born in North Berwick, ME, July 6, 1839, son of Thomas J. and Huldah (Chadbourne) Cutts.

Daughter Nancy R. Jewett married in Dover, NH, October 1, 1863, John U. Simes, both of Milton. He was a trader, aged twenty-seven years, and she was aged twenty-four years. Rev. B.F. Eaton performed the ceremony. Simes was born in Milton, June 7, 1836, son of Bray U. and Martha (Spinney) Simes.

Adopted daughter [Clara] “Alberta” Jewett died of diphtheria in Milton Mills, December 1, 1863, aged five years and three days. (Her death certificate listed her parents as having been John R. and Clara H. [(Page)] Jewett. However, the name and dates on her gravestone are the same as the birth and death certificates, but with identified her as having been the adopted daughter of Asa and Mary A. Jewett).

Asa Jewett was mentioned in the Vulpes Letter of 1864, as having one of the four regular stores at Milton Mills.

Asa Jewett received a five-year renewal appointment as a Milton justice-of-the-peace, October 31, 1865.

MILTON. JusticesCharles Jones, State; Elbridge W. Fox, Joseph Plummer, Luther Hayes, Ebenezer Wentworth, Ezra H. Twombly, Joseph Mathes, Charles A. Cloutman, Asa Jewett, Elias S. Cook, Lewis Berry, Joseph Cook, Robert Mathes (McFarland & Jenks, 1866).

Clara H. (Page) Jewett’s aunt, Mary A. Page (1819-1902), sued Asa Jewett over his lien in his own suit against his late cousin, John R. Jewett, or his estate. The issue had to do with conflicts arising from claims by different plaintiffs against a single defendant. Asa Jewett had filed a lien to satisfy his claim. The case proceeded to the NH Supreme Court, in June 1866, which dismissed her case (NH Supreme Judicial Court, 1867).

Asa Jewett of Milton Mills paid a $10 tax on his retail dealer’s license, and a $10 tax on his stallion (for a total tax of $20), in the U.S. Excise Tax of 1866.

Justices. Milton. Charles Jones, Luther Hayes, Elbridge W. Fox, Joseph Plumer, Ebenezer Wentworth, Ezra H. Twombly, Joseph Mathes, Charles A. Cloutman, Asa Jewett, Elias S. Cook, Joseph Cook, Robert Mathes, Eli Fernald, Asa Jewett, Daniel S. Burley, Ira C. Varney, George Lyman, George W. Peavey (Briggs & Co., 1868).

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).

Milton - 1871 (Detail) - A Jewett (2)Asa Jewett, a farmer, aged fifty-five years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. His household included Mary A. [(Richards)] Jewett, aged fifty-six years (b. NH). Asa Jewett had real estate valued at $5,000 and personal estate valued at $585. His household appeared in the enumeration between those of Ira Miller, a hotel keeper, aged forty-three years (b. ME), and Asenath Marsh, keeping house, aged fifty-seven years (b. ME).

John U. Simes, a retail grocer, aged thirty-four years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. His household included Nancy R. [(Jewett)] Simes, keeping house, aged thirty-one years (b. NH), Ida Simes, aged six years (b. NH), and Walter Simes, aged eleven months (b. NH (July)). John U. Simes had personal estate valued at $1,200. They shared a two-family residence with the household of Hiram Wentworth, a carpenter, aged twenty-six years (b. NH). Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of George W. Olney, agent for the woolen mill, aged twenty-nine years (b. KY), and Ann S. Jewett, keeping house, aged seventy-eight years (b. NH).

Thomas J. Cutts, works in woolen mill, aged thirty-one years (b. ME), headed a Milton household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. His household included Lydia M. [(Jewett)] Cutts, keeping house, aged twenty-eight years (b. NH), and Alberta J. Cutts, at school, aged seven years (b. NH). Thomas J. Cutts and personal estate valued at $200. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Elizabeth Hubbard, keeping house, aged fifty-four years (b. ME), and George W. Merrill, works in shoe factory, aged forty-seven years (b. ME).

Stepmother Ann S. (Nutter) Jewett died in Milton, November 28, 1870, aged seventy-nine years, eleven months.

MILTON. Justices – Charles Jones, Luther Hayes, State; E.W. Fox, Joseph Plumer, Ebenezer Wentworth, E.H. Twombly, Joseph Mathes, C.A. Cloutman, Asa Jewett, Joseph Cook, Robert Mathes, I.C. Varney, George Lyman, G.W. Peavey, J.S. Hersey, G.W. Tasker, E.W. Foss, M.V.B. Cook, T.H. Roberts, H.H. Wentworth, J.N. Simes, L.A. Lang (Claremont Manufacturing Co., 1871).

New Hampshire. The house known as the Nathan Jewett House at Milton Mills was destroyed by fire on the 11th inst. Loss not reported. Insured (Boston Globe, October 23, 1873).

Son-in-law Thomas J. Cutts was Treasurer of the I.O.O.F.’s Miltonia Lodge, No. 52, under Noble Grands Moses Rankin (1874) and John G. Titcomb (1875).

MILTONIA LODGE, No. 52, Milton Mills: (Tuesday). Moses Rankin, N.G.; John E. Leach, V.G.; ; Joseph Sheard, R. Sec.; Thomas J. Cutts, Treas.; O.C. Titcomb, P. Sec. (R.W. Grand Lodge, 1872). 

MILTONIA LODGE, No. 52, Milton Mills: (Tuesday). John F. Titcomb, N.G.; William B. Townsend, V.G.; Joseph Sheard, R. Sec.; Thomas J. Cutts, Treas.; J.L. Pike, P. Sec. 71. (R.W. Grand Lodge, 1872).

Asa Jewett, a trader & farmer, aged sixty-five years (b. NH), headed a Milton (“Milton Mills Village”) household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Mary A. [(Richards)] Jewett, keeping house, aged sixty-five years (b. NH). His household was enumerated between those of Jeremiah C. Buck, a physician, aged fifty-eight years (b. ME), and George Hoyt, works in felt mill, aged forty-two years (b. ME).

John U. Simes, a trader, aged forty-three years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included Nancy R. [(Jewett)] Simes, a housekeeper, aged forty-one years (b. NH), Edee Simes, at school, aged eleven years (b. NH), Walter Simes, at school, aged ten years (b. NH), Florence Simes, at school, aged eight years (b. NH), Harvey Simes, at school, aged six months (b. NH), and Raymond U. Simes, at house, aged three months (b. NH (February)). Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of [his brothers,] George E. Simes, a carpenter, aged forty-seven years (b. NH), and Edward S. Simes, a carpenter, aged thirty-seven years (b. NH). (John U. Simes was also the census enumerator).

Thomas J. Cutts, works in felt mill, aged forty years (b. ME), headed a Milton household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included Lydia M. [(Jewett)] Cutts, keeping house, aged thirty-eight years (b. NH), and Alberta J. Cutts, at home, aged seventeen years (b. NH). Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Surrell Flint, a woolen mill carder, aged forty-seven years (b. MA), and John E. Marsh, a stone mason, aged forty-one years (b. NH).

Asa Jewett appeared in the Milton business directory of 1882, as a manufacturer of clothing.

MILTON MILLS. … Manufacturers – carriages and wheelwrights, John Brackett, A.O. Prescott; clothing, Asa Jewett; flannels, Waumbeck Manuf’g Co.; cloth piano and table covers, D.H. Buffum & Co.; picture frames, E.A. Hargraves; plows, W.F. Cutts; saddle housings, L.B. Roberts, S.G. Chamberlain; rubber linings, table and piano covers, Townsend & Co.; washing powder, E.J. Brierley (F.L. Towers Co., 1882). 

Asa Jewett died in Dover, NH, April 17, 1883, aged sixty-seven years.

Mary A. [(Richards)] Jewett, a widowed home-keeper, aged eighty-seven years (b. NH), headed a Milton (“Milton Mills Village”) household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. She owned her house free-and-clear. She was the mother of two children, of whom two were still living. Her household appeared in the enumeration between those of Mary A. Merron, a home keeper, aged eight-four years (b. NH), and Arthur Hurd, a woolen mill carder, aged twenty-nine years (b. ME).

John U. Simes, a dealer in wood, aged sixty-three years (b. NH), headed a Milton (“Milton Mills Village”) household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of thirty-seven years), Nancy R. [(Jewett)] Simes, aged sixty-one years (b. NH), and his children, Hervey Simes, runs McKay stitcher, aged thirty-six [twenty-six] years (b. NH), Florence Simes, aged twenty-eight years (b. NH), and Chester Simes, aged seventeen years (b. NH). Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of [his brothers,] Edward S. Simes, a carpenter, aged fifty-seven years (b. NH), and George E. Simes, a carpenter, aged sixty-seven years (b. NH). (John U. Simes was also the census enumerator).

Thomas J Cutts, a woolen mill rigger, aged sixty-years (b. ME), headed a Milton (“Milton Mills Village”) household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of thirty-eight years), Lydia M. [(Jewett)] Cutts, aged fifty-eight years (b. NH). Thomas J. Cutts owned their farm, free-and-clear. Lydia M. Cutts was the mother of one child, of one was still living. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Arthur Hurd, a woolen mill carder, aged twenty-nine years (b. ME), and William S. Curry, a puller-over, aged twenty-three (b. NH).

Thomas J. Cutts appeared in the Milton directories of 1900, 1902, and 1905, as an employee of the W. [Woolen] Mills, with his house at 49 Main Street in Milton Mills.

Daughter Nancy R. (Jewett) Simes died of pulmonary tuberculosis in Milton Mills, April 4, 1904, aged sixty-five years, two months, and four days. She was a housewife and lifelong resident of Milton Mills. Charles W. Gross, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Thomas J. Cutts appeared in the Milton directory of 1909, as a farmer, with his house at 49 Main Street in Milton Mills.

John U. Sims, a farmer (home farm), aged seventy-three years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Thirteenth (1910) Federal Census. His household included his daughter, Florence Sims, aged thirty-eight years (b. NH). John U. Sims owned their farm, with a mortgage. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Charles Langley, a general store clerk, aged thirty-two years (b. ME), and Elizabeth Simes, aged eighty years (b. NH).

Thomas Cutts, a farmer (general farm), aged seventy years (b. ME), headed a Milton (“Milton Mills”) household at the time of the Thirteenth (1910) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of forty-eight years), Lydia [(Jewett)] Cutts, aged sixty-six years (b. NH), his mother-in-law, Mary A. [(Richards)] Jewett, aged ninety-seven years (b. NH), his son-in-law, William L. Hargraves, a retired barber, aged fifty-one years (b. ME), and his daughter, Alberta [(Cutts)] Hargraves, aged forty-seven years (b. NH). Thomas Cutts owned their farm free-and-clear. Lydia Cutts was the mother of one child of whom one was still living. Mary A. Jewett was the mother of two children of whom one was still living. Alberta Hargraves was the mother of one child of whom one was still living.

Mary A. (Richards) Jewett died of nephritis in Milton Mills, August 7, 1910, aged ninety-seven years, three months, and seventeen days. Frank S. Weeks, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Thomas J. Cutts appeared in the Milton directory of 1912, and 1917, as a farmer, with his house at 49 Main Street in Milton Mills.

Elizabeth E. Simes, aged ninety-one years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census. Her household included her brother, John U. Simes, aged eighty-three years (b. NH). Elizabeth E. Simes owned their house on Main Street, in Milton Mills Village, free-and-clear. Their household appeared in the enumeration between the two-family residence of Calvin S. Haines, an assistant to undertaker, aged fifty-eight years (b. NH), and Hattie M. [(Fox)] Fox, a widow, aged sixty years (b. NH), and Charles A. Langley, a retail grocery manager, aged forty-three years (b. ME).

Thomas J. Cutts, aged eighty-one years (b. ME), headed a Milton (“Milton Mills”) household at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Lydia M. [(Jewett)] Cutts, aged seventy-seven years (b. NH), and his son-in-law, William F. Hargraves, a barber, aged sixty-one years (b. ME). Thomas J. Cutts owned their farm on Main Street, Milton Mills, free-and-clear. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Everett J. Witham, a teamster laborer, aged sixty-seven years (b. ME), and Charles H. Rines, a home shoemaker, aged fifty-nine years (b. NH).

Daughter Lydia M. (Jewett) Cutts died of chronic interstitial nephritis on Main Street in Milton Mills, May 19, 1922, aged seventy-nine years, seven months, and twenty-seven days. She was a lifelong resident. Frank S. Weeks, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Son-in-law John U. Simes died in Milton, September 28, 1927.

Albert Hale, a box shop machinist, aged fifty-five years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of five years), Mamie Hale, aged forty years (b. ME), his daughter, Margaret R. Hale, aged three years, eight months (b. NH), and his boarder, Thomas Cutts, aged ninety years (b. ME). Albert Hale owned their house on Main Street, which was valued at $2,000. They did not have a radio set. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Sumner Merrill, aged eighty-three years (b. NH), and George Buzzell, aged fifty-three years (b. ME).

Son-in-law Thomas J. Cutts died of senile pneumonia on Main Street in Milton Mills, March 15, 1933, aged ninety-three years, eight months, and nine days. He was a retired mill operative, resident in Milton for seventy years, i.e., since circa 1863 (the time of his marriage), with his prior residence in Berwick, ME. Walter J. Roberts, M.D., signed the death certificate.

MILTON MILLS. Odd Fellows services were held for Thomas J. Cutts here Saturday with Rev. E.H. Young of Rochester officiating. Mr. Cutts was born in North Berwick, Me., July 6, 1839, the son of Thomas J. and Hulda (Chadman) Cutts. He was a twin and the next youngest of twelve children. In 1862 he married Minnie M. Jewett, and there was one child Alberta who died about 15 years ago. He had lived in this town 7[5?] years. When he first came to Milton Mills from Berwick, Me., he began work in the woolen mills as a blanket napper. He owned a large farm and when out of work at the mill worked on his farm which afterwards was the home of the late Henry Townsend. He will be greatly missed, not only in the I.O.O.F. lodge of which he was the only remaining charter member, but in the town where many enjoyed dropping in to visit with him or when the weather was good to sit with him on the piazza at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hale, his home of late years. He was of a cheerful disposition and his motto was “Don’t Worry.” He is survived by great great grandchildren, a [great] granddaughter, Miss Juanita Hargreaves of Boston, who took the best care of him in his last illness, and a niece, Mrs. J. Frank Farnham of Milton. He was laid to rest in Milton Mills (Farmington News, March 24, 1933).


References:

Find a Grave. (2013, July 31). Lydia M. Jewett Cutts. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/114673349/lydia-m-cutts

Find a Grave. (2013, July 29). Thomas Jefferson Cutts. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/114553563/thomas-jefferson-cutts

Find a Grave. (2013, August 14). Asa Jewett. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/115418840/asa-jewett

Find a Grave. (2013, August 14). Clara Alberta Jewett. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/115418898/clara-alberta-jewett

Find a Grave. (2013, August 14). Nathaniel Jewett. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/115419072/nathaniel-jewett

Find a Grave. (2013, August 17). Nancy R. Jewett Simes. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/115612594/nancy-r-simes

Mitchell-Cony. (1908). Town Register Farmington, Milton, Wakefield, Middleton, Brookfield, 1907-8. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=qXwUAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA108

MutualArt. (2020). Portrait of Asa Jewett. Retrieved from www.mutualart.com/Artwork/Portrait-of-Asa-Jewett/CA91E0388921E0A7

National Gallery of Art. (2022). Sturtevant J. Hamblin. Retrieved from www.nga.gov/collection/artist-info.5518.html

NH Historical Society. (2022). Portrait of Asa Jewett. Retrieved from www.nhhistory.org/object/1295227/painting

NH Supreme Judicial Court. (1867). Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Supreme Judicial Court of New Hampshire. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=TdYaAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA448

Pratt & Co. (1849). New England Mercantile Union Directory. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=H2woAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA87

R.W. Grand Lodge. (1872). Journal of Proceedings of the R.W. Grand Lodge of the State of New Hampshire. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=GcuVn6tKSTAC&pg=PA581

Milton Automobiles in 1912

By Muriel Bristol | January 14, 2024

Continued from Milton Automobiles in 1909-10.

New Hampshire had 5,697 automobiles registered to NH residents in 1912; 32 of those 5,697 automobiles were registered to Milton residents. (An additional 935 automobiles were registered to non-residents of New Hampshire).

Milton’s 16 automobile owners of 1912 were Hugh A. Beaton, Samuel G. Blaisdell, Edward M. Bodwell, James J. Buckley, Fred M. Carter, Herbert D. Corson, William A. Dickson, M.A.H. Hart, John E. Horne, George E. Jordan, Wilbur C. Knight, James G. O’Laughlin, Carl E. Pinkham, Hazen Plummer, John F. Quinlan, and J. Eugene Willey.

The 16 automobile owners of Milton Mills were Eugene W. Emerson, Asa A. Fox, Edward C. Heath, Forrest L. Marsh, Joseph Laporte, Charles S. Philbrick, Robert S. Pike, Willis L. Reynolds, H. Powers Robbins, Fred Rowe, Frederick H. Simes, Charles L. Stevens, John C. Townsend, John E. Townsend, Harry H. Trufant, and Allie F. Walker.

Automobile Registrations, January 1 to August 31, 1912

526. James J. Buckley, Milton, 22.5 h.p. Overland.
637. William A. Dickson, Milton 32.4 Oakland.
680. Eugene W. Emerson, Milton, 25.6 Oakland.
1145. Herbert D. Corson, Milton, 22.5 h.p. Courier.
1186. Wilbur C. Knight, Milton, 28.9 h.p. Overland.
1235. John E. Horne, Milton, 16.2 h.p. Buick.
1278. Samuel G. Blaisdell, Milton, 22.5 h.p. Ford.
1289. Edward C. Heath, Milton Mills, 16.2 h.p. Ford.
1464. Asa A. Fox, Milton Mills, 24.3 h.p. Elmore.
1654. Herbert H. Trufant, Milton Mills, 10 h.p. Cadillac.
1778. M.A.H. Hart, Milton, 25.6 h.p. Maxwell.
1892. Edward M. Bodwell, Milton, 22.5 h.p. Locomobile.
1940. Carl E. Pinkham, Milton, 27.2 Nyburg.
1945. Frederick H. Simes, Milton Mills, 27.2 h.p. Pope-Hartford.
2141. Robert S. Pike, Milton Mills, 22.5 h.p. Buick.
2182. Hugh A. Beaton, Milton, 22.5 h.p. Ford.
2398. Charles S. Philbrick, Milton Mills, 25.6 h.p. Reo.
2593. Charles L. Stevens, Milton Mills, 9 h.p. Reo.
3045. Forrest L. Marsh, Milton Mills, 16.2 h.p. Buick.
3100. John E. Townsend, Milton Mills, 46 h.p. Marmon.
3142. Fred Rowe, Milton Mills, 27.2 h.p. Overland.
3352. Joseph Laporte, Milton Mills, 22.5 h.p. Buick.
3381. J. Eugene Willey, Milton, 28.9 h.p. Overland.
3526. George E. Jordan, Milton, 18 h.p. Reo.
3758. Hazen Plummer, Milton, 6 h.p. Stanley.
3848. John F. Quinlan, Milton, 22.5 Ford.
3974. Fred M. Carter, Milton, 28.9 h.p. Overland.
4027. John C. Townsend, Milton Mills, 38 h.p., Prentiss.
4470. James G. O’Laughlin, Milton, 22.5 h.p. Ford.
4802. H. Powers Robbins, Milton Mills, 22.5 h.p. Buick.
5108. Willis L. Reynolds, Milton Mills, 22.5 h.p. Ford.
5670. Allie F. Walker, Milton Mills, 25.6 h.p. Hudson.

[Automobile] Dealers

Moses B. Plummer, Milton.


AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE. 1911, 1910 Cadillac touring cars, $1200 and $1100; neither car has been run 5000 miles. 1909 Maxwell touring car, $450, in excellent order. 1909 Overland, 4 passenger, run about 5000 miles, $400. 1910 touring car, $800. If you like Overlands, here are good trades. Single cylinder Cadillac runabout, $175, touring cars, $350, $375 and $400. These are in good order and guarantied same as on a new car. One ton truck used about 200 miles, $1250, Buick, $150. I have delivered 8 1912 Cadillacs, making 2 trades. I have 6 more orders and two trades. I have over 20 more chances to trade. Can you use a good second hand car? Let us know what you want. CHAS. E. WOODS, Bow street. hlw (Portsmouth Herald, January 9, 1912).

LOCALS. Harry E. Thayer has recently purchased the gasoline tank and pump, together with the automobile accessories and supplies, from the garage formerly conducted by the late John R. Hayes. Mr. Thayer is fitting up his father’s stable on South Main street, where he will run a garage and do a general repair and supply business the coming season (Farmington News, April 26, 1912).


For a rather brief description of the main route through Milton in this period (1917-18), see also Milton, Straight Thru (North), in 1918.


References:

NH General Court. (1913). Reports to the Legislature of the State of New Hampshire. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=lqk0AQAAMAAJ&pg=RA2-PA141

Milton Selectmen, 1908-1953

By Muriel Bristol | January 7, 2024

Continued from Milton Selectmen, 1802-1907

This list of Milton Selectmen for this period has been compiled from Milton annual Town Reports. (The bolded ones were identified as being the Chairman of that particular year).

1908 – Edgar A. Wentworth, Hazen Plummer, Charles A. Jones Kidnapping
1909 – Charles A. Jones, Samuel E. Drew, Haven R. Jewett
1910 – Charles A. Jones, Samuel E. Drew, Haven R. Jewett 
1911 – S.E. Drew, B.B. Plummer, C.S. Philbrick
1912 – S.E. Drew, B.B. Plummer, C.S. Philbrick
1912 – B.B. Plummer, C.S. Philbrick, R.M. Kimball
1913 – C.S. Philbrick, R.M. Kimball, B.B. Plummer
1914 – C.S. Philbrick, R.M. Kimball, G.E. Nute Grammar School burned
1915 – R.M. Kimball, Forrest L. Marsh, Fred B. Roberts Hotel Milton burned
1916 – Forrest L. Marsh, Fred B. Roberts, George E. Jordan
1917 – Forrest L. Marsh, Bard B. Plummer, James F. Reynolds – WW I
1918 – Forrest L. Marsh, Bard B. Plummer, James F. Reynolds “Spanish” Flu
1919 – Forrest L. Marsh, B.B. Plummer, Fred M. Chamberlin
1920 – Fred M. Chamberlin, Charles S. Philbrick, Joseph H. Avery
1921 – Fred M. Chamberlin, Charles S. Philbrick, Joseph H. Avery
1922 – Charles S. Philbrick, Fred M. Chamberlin, Joseph H. Avery
1923 – Charles S. Philbrick, Joseph H. Avery, Fred M. Chamberlin
1924 – Joseph H. Avery, Fred M. Chamberlin, Charles S. Philbrick
1925 – Fred M. Chamberlin, Charles S. Philbrick, Hervey W. Dorr
1926 – Charles S. Philbrick, Hervey W. Dorr, Fred M. Chamberlin
1927 – Hervey W. Dorr, Charles S. Philbrick, Fred M. Chamberlin
1928 – Fred M. Chamberlin, Charles S. Philbrick, Hervey W. Dorr
1929 – Charles S. Philbrick, Hervey W. Dorr, Fred M. Chamberlin – Depression
1930 – Hervey W. Dorr, Fred M. Chamberlin, Charles S. Philbrick
1931 – Fred M. Chamberlin, Charles S. Philbrick, Louis E. Tibbetts
1932 – Charles S. Philbrick, Louis E. Tibbetts, Leroy J. Ford Firemen strike
1933 – Louis E. Tibbetts, Leroy J. Ford, Charles S. Philbrick* (“*Deceased December 2, 1933”) – Prohibition repealed
1934 – Leroy J. Ford, Frank F. Spencer, Louis E. Tibbetts
1935 – Frank F. Spencer, Louis E. Tibbetts, Leroy J. Ford
1936 – Louis E. Tibbetts, Leroy J. Ford, Phillip G. Hayes Town Clerk died
1937 – Leroy J. Ford, Phillip G. Hayes, Frank F. Spencer
1938 – Phillip G. Hayes, Frank F. Spencer, Stanley C. Tanner – Great Hurricane
1939 – Frank F. Spencer, Stanley C. Tanner, Leroy J. FordHorne murder
1940 – Stanley C. Tanner, Leroy J. Ford, Edward R. Stone
1941 – Leroy J. Ford, Edward R. Stone, Porter J. Durkee – WW II
1942 – Report not yet found
1943 – George E. Jordan, Leroy J. Ford, Arthur M. Flye
1944 – Leroy J. Ford, Arthur M. Flye, John G. Gilman
1945 – John G. Gilman, Ralph W. Pugh, Halton R. Hayes
1946 – John G. Gilman, Ralph W. Pugh, Halton R. Hayes
1947 – Ralph W. Pugh, Robert P. Laskey, John G. Gilman
1948 – Robert P. Laskey, John G. Gilman, Ralph W. Pugh
1949 – John G. Gilman, Ralph W. Pugh, Robert P. Laskey
1950 – Ralph W. Pugh, Robert P. Laskey, John G. Gilman – Korean War
1951 – Robert P. Laskey, John G. Gilman, Leroy J. Ford
1952 – John G. Gilman, Leroy J. Ford, Robert P. Laskey – Sesquicentennial
1953 – Leroy J. Ford, Robert P. Laskey, John G. Gilman

LINE PERAMBULATED. Middleton and Milton selectmen spent three days last week walking the town line – a chore performed every 7 years. John Gilman and Stanley Tanner were the Milton selectmen and Donald Francoeur represented Middleton (Farmington News, January 9, 1958).

References:

Milton Farmer Samuel S. Wentworth (1756-1850)

By Muriel Bristol | January 6, 2024

Samuel Shackford Wentworth was born in Somersworth, NH, August 12, 1756, son of Benjamin and Rebecca (Hodgdon) Wentworth.

Beginning at nineteen years of age, Samuel S. Wentworth served several enlistment terms as a private soldier in the Revolutionary War. He served first in defending Portsmouth harbor from positions in Kittery (Seavey’s Island), ME, and New Castle (Great Island), NH; then as a part of the Continental forces besieging the British at Boston, MA, from Somerville (Winter Hill), MA; then defending Portsmouth harbor again; and finally at Fort Ticonderoga on Lake Champlain in upstate New York. (Barker’s Location was an early name for what is now a part of Lancaster, NH).

… I, Samuel Wentworth, late of Somersworth in the County of Strafford & State of New Hampshire, now [1818] a resident of Barker’s Location in the County of Coos & State aforesaid, on oath do testify & declare that sometime in the month of October, A.D. 1775, I enlisted as a volunteer soldier in the militia, as I believe of New Hampshire, for the term of fifteen days, under Capt. John Waldron, stationed at the harbour, Portsmouth, N.H., which said term of fifteen days I served out faithfully, & then immediately after enlisted again for the term of one month under Capt. David Copp, and was stationed on Seavey Island (so called) near said Portsmouth harbour, which term of one month I also served out (as I believe) faithfully, under said Copp. And at the expiration of said month I then enlisted for the term of three months under Capt. John Brewster. I was stationed on the great Island near new Castle, near Portsmouth Harbour, at which place & under said Brewster, I served out about one half of said term of three months, when I was honourably discharged from any further service at that time by said Brewster, as commanding Officer of said company. That some time in the month of January, A.D. 1776, I enlisted again as a private Soldier on the Continental Establishment in the Company Commanded by Capt. John Drew, attached to Col. John Waldron’s regiment of the N.H. Continental line, for the term of two months, & was marched from New Hampshire to Winter Hill (so called) near Boston & soon after the expiration of which, I enlisted again under Capt. Caleb Hodgdon, attached to Lieut. Col. Pierce Long’s Regiment, for the term of nine months, and as stationed again at New Castle, on Great Island (so called) near Portsmouth harbour. When I served out five or six months of said term faithfully, and then enlisted anew under Capt. Abraham Perkins attached to Colonel Pierce Long’s Regiment, for another term of one year. I was marched to Ticonderoga, in which said company, commanded by said Abraham Perkins I continued & served out my term of enlistment faithfully. And the morning after my said term of One Year’s enlistment expired, the Company to which I belonged was paraded. Our discharge was read by the Adjutant, Michael McClure. Making in the whole term which I served my Country in the War of the Revolution, about one year & ten months…

Samuel S. Wentworth married in Rochester, NH, August 16, 1781, Mary Berry. She was born in Rochester, NH, April 10, 1755, daughter of Stephen Jr. and Mary (Allen) Berry.

(The children of Samuel S. and Mary (Berry) Wentworth were: Rebecca Wentworth (1782–1857), Stephen Wentworth (1784–1854), Olive Wentworth (1786–1875), Benjamin Wentworth (1789–1854), Rosamond Wentworth (1792–1814), Shackford Wentworth (1794–1872), Joseph Wentworth (1798–1877), and Mary E.A. Wentworth (1802–186?)).

Daughter Rebecca Wentworth was born in Rochester, NH, February 3, 1782. She was a namesake for her paternal grandmother, Rebecca (Hodgdon) Wentworth.

Son Stephen Wentworth was born in Rochester, NH, June 28, 1784. He was a namesake for his maternal grandfather, Stephen Berry [Jr.].

Daughter Olive Wentworth was born in Rochester, NH, October 24, 1786. Son Benjamin Wentworth was born in Rochester, NH, September 13, 1789. He was a namesake for his paternal grandfather, Benjamin Wentworth.

Saml S. Wentworth headed a Rochester, NH, household at the time of the First (1790) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 16-plus years [himself], two males aged under-16 years [Stephen Wentworth and Benjamin Wentworth], and three females [Mary (Berry) Wentworth, Rebecca Wentworth and Olive Wentworth]. His household appeared in the enumeration between those of Timothy Ricker and John Wentworth. (See also Northeast Parish in the First (1790) Federal Census).

Daughter Rosamond Wentworth was born in Rochester, NH, June 20, 1792. Son Shackford Wentworth was born in Rochester, NH, July 24, 1794. Son Joseph Wentworth was born in Rochester, NH, May 17, 1798.

Samuel S. Wentworth headed a Rochester, NH, household at the time of the Second (1800) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 26-44 years [himself], one female aged 26-44 years (Mary (Berry) Wentworth), one female aged 10-15 years [Olive Wentworth], one male aged 10-15 years [Benjamin Wentworth], one female aged under-10 years [Rosamond Wentworth], two males aged under-10 years [Shackford Wentworth and Joseph Wentworth]. (There was another Saml S. Shackford household in Rochester, NH, in this same enumeration]. (See also Northeast Parish in the Second (1800) Federal Census).

Daughter Mary E.A. Wentworth was born in Rochester, NH, May 22, 1802.

Wentworth, Samuel S - Signature - 1802Samuel S. Wentworth signed the Rochester Division petition of May 28, 1802. (See Rochester Division Petition – May 1802).

Milton assessed the property of Samuel S. Wentworth for its first tax in 1803. He had one poll, two oxen, three cows, one 2-year-old, one 1-year-old, three acres of mowing land, four acres of pasturage land, eighty-four acres of unimproved land, for a total value of $30½. He was to pay $3.50 in county & town tax, $0.91 in parish tax, and $3.81 in road tax, for a total tax of $8.22. (Note that, regardless of modern notions regarding church and state, compulsory parish taxation for the support of the established Congregational church was still operative at this time).

Daughter Rebecca Wentworth married in Rochester, NH, February 19, 1806, Benaiah Colby [Jr.], both of Milton. Rev. Joseph Haven performed the ceremony. Colby was born in Chester, NH, September 21, 1783, son of Benaiah and Abigail (Emerson) Colby.

The Milton Selectmen of 1806 were Levi Jones, S.S. Wentworth, and Lt. Jotham Nute. (They were all Revolutionary War veterans).

Mother Rebecca (Hodgson) Wentworth died Somersworth, NH, in April 1806.

Daughter Olive Wentworth married in Rochester, NH, May 21, 1807, Thomas Wentworth, both of Milton. Rev. Joseph Haven performed the ceremony. Thomas Wentworth was born in Milton, September 14, 1780, son of Elihu and Lois (Pinkham) Wentworth.

Saml S. Wentworth headed a Milton household at the time of the Third (1810) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 45-plus years [himself], one female aged 45-plus years [Mary (Berry) Wentworth], one male aged 26-44 years [Stephen Wentworth], one male aged 16-25 years [Benjamin Wentworth], one female aged 16-25 years [Rosamond Wentworth], one male aged 10-15 years [Joseph Wentworth], and one female aged under-10 years [Mary E.A. Wentworth]. His household appeared in the enumeration between those of Stephen Hendersn and Timo Roberts.

Benair Colby headed a Milton household at the time of the Third (1810) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 16-25 years [himself], one female aged 16-25 years [Rebecca (Wentworth) Colby], and one male aged under-10 years [Benaiah Colby, Jr.]. His household appeared in the enumeration between those of Wm Palmer and Thos Nutter.

Thomas Wentworth headed a Milton household at the time of the Third (1810) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 26-44 years [himself], one female aged 26-44 years [Olive (Wentworth) Wentworth], and two females aged under-10 years [Lavina B. Wentworth and Eliza Wentworth]. His household appeared in the enumeration between those of Gilman Jewett and Pelatiah Hanson.

Father Benjamin Wentworth died in Somersworth, NH, November 4, 1813.

Samuel S. Wentworth and most of his family left Milton and moved to Lancaster, NH, around 1813, although they retained some connections with their former residences, family members and neighbors. (Milton would be described later, in June 1823, as being on “the great main road leading from Portsmouth to Lancaster”).

Daughter Rosamond Wentworth died in Lancaster, NH, in January 1814.

Son Benjamin Wentworth married in Lancaster, NH, August 23, 1815, Lucinda Hayes, he of Barker’s Location and she of Lancaster, NH. William Lovejoy, J.P., performed the ceremony. She was born in Milton, September 10, 1796, daughter of Clement and Joanna (Wentworth) Hayes. She was a sister of Joanna Hayes and Hiram W. Hayes.

Mother-in-law Mary (Allen) Berry died in New Durham, NH, July 22, 1816.

Samuel Wentworth of “Barker’s Location” in Lancaster, NH, was entered on the Revolutionary War pension roll at the rate of $8 per month, to commence on April 1, 1818. His pension certificate was sent to the postmaster of Lancaster, NH, April 29, 1819. He had served as a private in the regiment commanded by Col. Long of the N.H. line, for the term of one year. He served in Capt. Perkins’ company. In his declaration (quoted above) he stated that he and his wife were aged sixty-four years of age. His wife was “all the time sickly and a great Bill of expense to me,” son Stephen, aged thirty-six years, is “has had fits & much out of health,” son Shackford, aged twenty-five years, is “not very healthy,” son Joseph, aged twenty-two years, is healthy but has no property, and another, aged eighteen years, was healthy.

Samuel S. Wentworth, Stephen Wentworth, Benjamin Wentworth, Shackford Wentworth, Benaiah Colby, and Clement Hayes, were among the thirty-five inhabitants of Barker’s Location that petitioned the NH legislature for a five percent land tax on non-resident owners for making and maintaining roads in June 1818.

Wentworth, Saml S & SIL - Signatures - 1819Saml S. Wentworth, Benjn Wentworth, Shackford Wentworth, Joseph Wentworth, and Benaiah Colby were among the nine inhabitants of Barker’s Location that petitioned the NH legislature, April 7, 1819, for annexation of their unincorporated “Gore” of Barker’s Location by the neighboring Town of Lancaster, NH.

Wentworth, Sons - Signatures - 1819AN ACT to annex Barker’s Location, in the county of Coos, to Lancaster, in the same county. SECTION 1. BE it enacted by the senate and house of representatives in general court convened, That the tract of territory in the county of Coos and state aforesaid, known by the name of Barker’s Location, and the inhabitants residing within said territory, be and the same hereby are, annexed to the town of Lancaster, in said county of Coos; and the inhabitants of the said annexed territory shall be henceforth entitled to the same privileges and immunities, and subject to the same liabilities which the present inhabitants of said Lancaster are liable to or enjoy. SECTION 2. And be it further enacted, That the present amount of valuation. in the proportion of state taxes, at which the said territory called Barker’s Location now stands shall be added to the present valuation of the said town of Lancaster; and the state and county treasurers shall govern themselves accordingly in making out their precepts against the town of Lancaster. Approved June 22, 1819.

Father-in-law Stephen Berry, Jr., died in Nottingham, NH, April 4, 1820.

TAKE NOTICE. DELIVERED to me at Lancaster, N.H., a bundle of mens’ Clothes, some time the fore part of last winter, to carry to the west. The owner is requested to prove property, pay charges, and take them away. June 16, 1820. ORANGE SMITH, Mail Carrier (North Star (Danville, VT), July 6, 1820).

Samuel S. Wentworth headed a Lancaster, NH, household at the time of the Fourth (1820) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 45-plus years [himself], one female aged 45-plus years [Mary (Berry) Wentworth], one male aged 26-44 years [Stephen Wentworth], two males aged 16-25 years [Shackford Wentworth and Joseph Wentworth], and one female aged 16-25 years [Mary E.A. Wentworth]. Four members of his household were engaged in Agriculture. His household appeared in the enumeration between those of Clement Hayes and Benaiah Colby. (Son Benjamin Wentworth was enumerated on the same page).

Benaiah Colby headed a Lancaster, NH, household at the time of the Fourth (1820) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 26-44 years [himself], one female aged 26-44 years [Rebecca (Wentworth) Colby], one male aged 10-16 years [Benaiah Colby, Jr.], one male aged under-10 years [Jonathan Colby], and two females aged under-10 years [Mary Colby and Rebecca Colby]. Two members of his household were engaged in Agriculture.

Benjamin Wentworth headed a Lancaster, NH, household at the time of the Fourth (1820) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 26-44 years [himself], one female aged 26-44 years [Lucinda (Hayes) Wentworth], and one male aged under-10 years. One member of his household was engaged in Agriculture (Father Samuel S. Wentworth was enumerated on the same page).

Son Joseph Wentworth married in New Durham, NH, September 14, 1820, Joanna Hayes. She was born in Milton, November 15, 1796, daughter of Clement and Joanna (Wentworth) Hayes. She was a sister of Lucinda (Hayes) Wentworth and Hiram W. Hayes.

Son Shackford Wentworth married in Lancaster, NH, March 18, 1821, Hannah Smith.

Benjn Wentworth, Stephen Wentworth, Joseph Wentworth, and [their cousin] Alexander Wentworth were among the twenty-five Lancaster, NH, residents that petitioned, June 7, 1825, that John W. Weeks, Esq., should be appointed as Coös County Sheriff, for the term of five years.

There was a mountain avalanche in Crawford Notch (valley) of the White Mountains on the evening of August 28, 1826. The Willey family, hearing the noise, sought shelter away from their house. Seven family members and two others were killed by the avalanche, which, ironically, spared their house. It can still be seen today.

SUMMARY. A letter from Lancaster, N.H., in giving an account of the late calamity at the White Hills, mentions, that Mr. Willey’s dog, after leaving the house with the unfortunate family, returned to it and saved his life. He was much bruised, but assisted in finding the bodies of the family which were discovered (Vermont Watchman & State Journal (Montpelier, VT), October 3, 1826).

Daughter Mary E.A. Wentworth married in Milton, circa 1827, Hiram Ward Hayes. He was born in Milton, August 7, 1803, son of Clement and Joanna (Wentworth) Hayes. He was a brother of Lucinda (Hayes) Wentworth and Joanna (Hayes) Wentworth.

Mary (Berry) Wentworth died in Lancaster, NH, in 1827.

Samuel S. Wentworth headed a Lancaster, NH, household at the time of the Fifth (1830) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 70-79 years [himself], and one male aged 50-59 years [Stephen Wentworth].

Benaiah Colby headed a Lancaster, NH, household at the time of the Fifth (1830) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 40-49 years [himself], one female aged 30-39 years (Rebecca (Wentworth) Colby], one male aged 20-29 years [Benaiah Colby, Jr.], one female aged 15-19 years [Mary Colby], one male aged 15-19 years [Jonathan E. Colby], one female aged 10-14 years [Rebecca Colby], one male aged 10-14 years [Joseph Colby], one female aged under-5 years [Abigail Colby], and one male aged under-5 years [John W. Colby].

Thos Wentworth headed a Milton household at the time of the Fifth (1830) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 40-49 years [himself], one female aged 40-49 years [Olive (Wentworth) Wentworth], one female aged 15-19 years [Eliza Wentworth], one female aged 5-9 years [Mary A. Wentworth], one male aged 5-9 years [Samuel S. Wentworth], one male aged under-5 years [Thomas M. Wentworth], and one female aged under-5 years [Rebecca R. Wentworth]. His household appeared in the enumeration between those of Elizabeth Gerrish and Jose. Rinds.

Benjamin Wentworth headed a Lancaster, NH, household at the time of the Fifth (1830) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 30-39 years [himself], one female aged 30-39 years [Lucinda (Hayes) Wentworth], and one male aged 5-9 years [Orlando H. Wentworth], and one female aged 5-9 years [Lucette B. Wentworth].

Shackford Wentworth headed a Lancaster, NH, household at the time of the Fifth (1830) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 30-39 years [himself], one female aged 40-49 years [Hannah (Smith) Wentworth], and two males aged 5-9 years [Othniel Wentworth and Royal J. Wentworth].

Joseph Wentworth headed a Lancaster, NH, household at the time of the Fifth (1830) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 30-39 years [himself], one female aged 30-39 years [Joanna (Hayes) Wentworth], and two males aged 5-9 years [Ira Wentworth and Samuel S. Wentworth], two females aged under-5 years [Olive Wentworth and Evelyn Wentworth], and one male aged under-5 years [Joseph Wentworth].

Hiram W. Hayes headed a Lancaster, NH, household at the time of the Fifth (1830) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 20-29 years [himself], one female aged 20-29 years [Mary E.A. (Wentworth) Hayes], one female aged under-5 years [Mary R. Hayes], and one male aged under-5 years.

The First Methodist Episcopal Society of Lancaster, N.H., was organized in July 1831. The following names are attached to the constitution in the record book in the hand writing of the subscribers: Wm W. Chapman, Harvey Adams, Abel Leavens, Jr., Joseph Howe, Allen Smith, John Aspenwall, David Stockwell, Samuel F. Spaulding, William Peck, Ezra Kenison, Samuel McIntire, S.P. Williams, G.C. Philbrook, Alvah Twombly, Isaac N. Cotton, Benjamin Adams, John Stockwell, James Mardin, John Smith, Benj. Wentworth, Benaiah Colby, Joseph Wentworth, Shackford Wentworth, Frederick Fisk, Daniel Field, George Howe, William Pearson, Shepard Knights, John H. Meserve (Somers, 1899). 

Daughter-in-law Hannah (Smith) Wentworth died in Lancaster, NH, May 13, 1835, aged forty-four years.

Son Shackford Wentworth married (2nd) in Lancaster, NH, June 3, 1838, Almira Moulton, he of Lancaster, NH, and she of Jefferson, NH. James Stephenson, J.P., performed the ceremony. She was born in Jefferson, NH, May 9, 1805.

Benaiah Colby headed a Lancaster, NH, household at the time of the Sixth (1840) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 50-59 years [himself], one female aged 50-59 years [Rebecca (Wentworth) Colby)], one male aged 30-39 years [Benaiah Colby, Jr.], one male aged 20-29 years [Jonathan E. Colby], one female aged 20-29 years [Rebecca Colby], one male aged 15-19 years [John W. Colby], and one female aged 10-14 years [Abigail Colby]. Seven members of his household were engaged in Agriculture.

Olive [(Wentworth)] Wentworth headed a Somersworth, NH, household at the time of the Sixth (1840) Federal Census. Her household included one female aged 50-59 years [herself], one female aged 20-29 years [Eliza Wentworth], one female aged 15-19 years [Mary A. Wentworth], one male aged 15-19 years [Samuel S. Wentworth], and one female aged 10-14 years [Rebecca R. Wentworth]. Three members of her household were engaged in Manufacture and Trade.

Benjamin Wentworth headed a Lancaster, NH, household at the time of the Sixth (1840) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 50-59 years [himself], one female aged 40-49 years [Lucinda (Hayes) Wentworth], and one male aged under-5 years. Their household appeared in the enumeration just after that of Joseph Wentworth. Three [two] members of their household were engaged in Agriculture.

Shackford Wentworth headed a Lancaster, NH, household at the time of the Sixth (1840) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 40-49 years [himself], one female aged 30-39 years [Almira (Moulton) Wentworth], one male aged 15-19 years [Othniel Wentworth], and one male aged 10-14 years [Royal J. Wentworth]. Three members of their household were engaged in Manufacture and the Trades.

Joseph Wentworth headed a Lancaster, NH, household at the time of the Sixth (1840) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 40-49 years [himself], one female aged 40-49 years [Joanna (Hayes) Wentworth], one male aged 15-19 years [Samuel S. Wentworth], one female aged 15-19 years [Olive Wentworth], one female aged 10-14 years [Evelyn Wentworth], two females aged 5-9 years [Lucinda Wentworth and Mary B. Wentworth], one female aged under-5 years [Amanda Wentworth], one male aged under-5 years [Amiel Wentworth], one male aged 80-90 years [Samuel S. Wentworth], and one male aged 50-59 years [Stephen Wentworth]. Eleven members of their household were engaged in Agriculture. Their household appeared in the enumeration just before that of Benjamin Wentworth. Samuel S. Wentworth, aged eighty-three years, appeared as a “Pensioner for Revolutionary or Military Services, Included in the Foregoing.”

Hiram W. Hayes headed a Lancaster, NH, household at the time of the Sixth (1840) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 30-39 years [himself], one female aged 30-39 years [Mary E.A. (Wentworth) Hayes], one female aged 10-15 years [Mary R. Hayes], two females aged 5-9 years [Isabelle Hayes and Melissa Hayes], two males aged under-5 years [Eldred Hayes and Edwin Hayes], and one female aged 70-79 years. Eight members of their household were engaged in Agriculture. Their household appeared on the same page as those of Joseph Wentworth and Benjamin Wentworth.

Son-in-law Thomas Wentworth died of lung fever in Somersworth, NH, March 25, 1850, aged sixty-nine years. He was a laborer.

Benaiah Colby, a cooper, aged sixty-six years, headed a Lancaster, NH, household at the time of the Seventh (1850) Federal Census. His household included Rebecca [(Wentworth)] Colby, aged sixty-eight years, Mary Colby, aged forty years, Jonathan E. Colby, aged thirty-five years, Rebeccah Colby, aged thirty-four years, Joseph Colby, aged thirty-three years, John W. Colby, aged twenty-eight years, and Abigail Colby, aged twenty years.

Olive [(Wentworth)] Wentworth, aged sixty-two years (b. NH), headed a Somersworth, NH, household at the time of the Seventh (1850) Federal Census. Her household included Eliza Wentworth, aged thirty-seven years (b. NH), Betsey Gerrish, aged twenty-five years (b. ME), Mary Gerrish, aged twenty years (b. ME), Hannah Brown, aged thirty-eight years (b. NH), Mary A. Allen, aged nineteen years, Harriet Allen, aged seventeen years (b. NH), Sarah Gerrish, aged twenty years (b. NH), Laurian Gerrish, aged seventeen years (b. NH), Nancy Pugsley, aged twenty-two years (b. ME), and Katharine Hulin, aged seventeen years (b. RI). Olive Wentworth had real estate valued at $1,500.

Benj. Wentworth, a cooper, aged sixty years (b. NH), headed a Lancaster, NH, household at the time of the Seventh (1850) Federal Census. His household included Lucinda [(Hayes)] Wentworth, aged fifty-eight years (b. NH), Eliza E. Hays, aged thirteen years, and Elizabeth M. Lindsey, aged twenty years. The entry for Elizabeth M. Lindsay bears the additional notation that she “belongs to Family 162,” which was the household of Isaac and Mary [(Bailey)] Lindsay, both aged fifty-two years.

Shackford Wentworth, a laborer, aged fifty-six years (b. NH), headed a Lancaster, NH, household at the time of the Seventh (1850) Federal Census. His household included Almira [(Moulton)] Wentworth, aged forty-five years (b. NH), George Wentworth, aged seven years, and Julia A. Wentworth, aged four years.

Joseph Wentworth, a carpenter, aged fifty-two years (b. NH), headed a Lancaster, NH, household at the time of the Seventh (1850) Federal Census. His household included Joanna [(Hayes)] Wentworth, aged fifty-three years (b. NH), Mary B. Wentworth, aged eighteen years (b. NH), Lucinda Wentworth, aged sixteen years (b. NH), Amanda Wentworth, aged fourteen years (b. NH), Amial Wentworth, aged eleven years (b. NH), Samuel S. Wentworth, a farmer, aged ninety-three years (b. NH), and Stephen Wentworth, a farmer, aged sixty-six years (b. NH). Joseph Wentworth had real estate valued at $600.

Hiram W. Hayes, a laborer, aged forty-six years (b. NH), headed a Somersworth, NH, household at the time of the Seventh (1850) Federal Census. His household included Mary R. Hayes, aged twenty years (b. NH), Isabella Hayes, aged eighteen years (b. NH), Melissa Hayes, aged fifteen years (b. NH), Edwin L. Hayes, aged eleven years (b. NH), Clement Hayes, aged four years (b. NH), Lois Cook, aged thirty-two years (b. NH), Sarah R. Keaton, aged thirty-two years (b. ME), Harriet N. Day, aged twenty years (b. ME), Louisa Kendall, aged twenty years (b. ME), Ellen Chapman, aged eighteen years (b. ME), Paulina Hawes, aged nineteen years (b. ME), Eliza J. Patch, aged sixteen years (b. ME), Augusta Russell, aged fifteen years (b. ME), Mary Dinsmore, aged twenty-three years (b. ME), John Whitehouse, a manufacturer, aged nineteen years (b. ME), and George Goodwin, a manufacturer, aged eighteen years (b. ME).

Samuel S. Wentworth died in Lancaster, NH, in 1850.

NEWS ITEMS. The White Mountains were covered with snow, Wednesday, and the ground at Lancaster, N.H., was also wrapped in a frozen fleece (Brattleboro Eagle (Brattleboro, VT), September 29, 1851).

Daughter-in-law Lucinda (Hayes) Wentworth died in Lancaster, NH, May 2, 1854.

Son Stephen Wentworth died in Lancaster, NH, May 13, 1854. Son Benjamin Wentworth died in Lancaster, NH, December 25, 1854.

Daughter Rebecca (Wentworth) Colby died in Lancaster, NH, November 12, 1857.

The weather is rather cold at the North. Teams are crossing the ice over the St. Lawrence at Ogdensberg. At Lancaster, N.H., on Wednesday morning, at 7 o’clock, in different exposures, ranged from 33 deg. to 38 deg. below zero! (Fall River Daily Evening News (Fall River, MA), January 2, 1860).

Benaiah Colby, a gent., i.e., gentleman, aged seventy-six years (b. NH), headed a Lancaster, NH, household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household appeared in the enumeration just before that of [his son,] Benaiah Colby, Jr., a farmer, aged fifty years (b. NH).

Olive [(Wentworth)] Wentworth, boarding house, aged seventy-three years (b. NH), headed a Somersworth (“Great Falls”), NH, household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. Her household included Eliza Wentworth, aged forty-three years (b. NH), Hatty Vancouver, a dresser, aged forty years (b. ME), Jane Shattuck, a weaver, aged twenty-two years (b. ME), Julia Bryant, a weaver, aged sixteen years (b. ME), Martha Bryant, a weaver (b. ME), aged eighteen years (b. ME), Alice Lord, a weaver, aged thirty-seven years (b. ME), Eunice Cowell, a weaver, aged eighteen years (b. ME), Martha Carroll, a weaver, aged eighteen years (b. ME), and Sarah Small, a weaver, aged twenty-five years (b. ME). Olive Wentworth had real estate valued at $1,000 and personal estate valued at $500.

Shackford Wentworth, a hostler, aged sixty-six years (b. [NH]), headed a Lancaster, NH, household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household included Mary A. [Moulton)] Wentworth, aged fifty-five years (b. NH), Geo. T. Wentworth, aged eighteen years (b. NH), and Julia B. Wentworth, aged fourteen years (b. NH). Shackford Wentworth had real estate valued at $300 and personal estate valued at $100.

Joseph Wentworth, a farmer, aged sixty-two years (b. NH), headed a Lancaster, NH, household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household included Joanna [(Hayes)] Wentworth, aged sixty-one years (b. NH), Mary B. Wentworth, aged twenty-eight years (b. NH), and Amial Wentworth, aged twenty-one years (b. NH). Joseph Wentworth had real estate valued at $700 and personal estate valued at $300.

Hiram W. Hayes, a stone mason, aged fifty-six years (b. NH), headed a Somersworth (“Great Falls”), NH, household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household included Mary E.A. [(Wentworth)] Hayes, aged fifty-eight years (b. NH), Isabella Hayes, aged twenty-eight years (b. NH), Melissa Hayes, aged twenty-five years (b. NH), Edwin L. Hayes, a shoemaker, aged twenty years (b. NH), Clement Hayes, aged fourteen years (b. NH), and Loring Wentworth, a shoemaker, aged twenty-one years (b. NH). Hiram W. Hayes had real estate valued at $2,500 and personal estate valued at $200. Isabella Hayes had real estate valued at $1,000.

Daughter Mrs. Olive Wentworth appeared in the Great Falls [Somersworth], NH, directory of 1867, as a widow, with her house on Fourth street.

Daughter Mary E.A. (Wentworth) Hayes died at Great Falls, Somersworth, NH, between 1860 and 1867.

Son-in-law Hiram W. Hayes appeared in the Lynn, MA, directories of 1867 and 1869, as a farmer, with his house at 43 Pearl street. E. Lyman Hayes appeared also, as a heller, with his house at 43 Pearl street. Clement Hayes appeared in the Lynn directory of 1869, as a shoemaker, boarding at 43 Pearl street.

Son-in-law Hiram W. Hayes died of kidney disease in Lynn, MA, August 9, 1869. He was a widowed shoemaker.

Beniah Colby, a cooper, aged eighty-six years (b. NH), headed a Lancaster, NH, household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. His household included Mary Colby, keeping house, aged sixty years (b. NH), Joseph Colby, a farmer, aged fifty-one years (b. NH), Jonathan E. Colby, a farmer, aged fifty-seven years (b. NH), John W. Colby, a carpenter, aged forty-five years (b. NH), Abbie Colby, a milliner, aged thirty-eight years (b. NH), and Cummings Winchester, a cooper, aged thirty years (b. NH). Mary Colby had personal estate valued at $100. Joseph Colby had personal estate valued at $300. Jonathan E. Colby had real estate valued at $3,000 and personal estate valued at $800. Cumming Winchester had real estate valued at $800 and personal estate valued at $200.

Eliza Wentworth, keeping house, aged forty-eight years (b. NH), headed a Somersworth, NH, household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. Her household included Joseph H. Corlis, works on R.R., aged twenty-seven years (b. ME), Helen M. [(Allen)] Corlis, keeping house, aged twenty-five years (b. NH), and Olive [(Wentworth)] Wentworth, no occupation, aged eighty-three years (b. NH). Eliza Wentworth had real estate valued at $1,000.

Shakford Wentworth, without occupation, aged seventy-five years (b. NH), headed a Lancaster, NH, household at the time of the Nineth (1870) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Elmira Wentworth, keeping house, aged sixty-five years (b. NH). [There was a tick mark next to Shakford Wentworth in the column headed “Male Citizens of U.S. of 21 years of age, and upwards, whose right to vote is denied or abridged on other grounds than rebellion or other crime].

Joseph Wentworth, a cooper, aged seventy-two years (b. NH), headed a Lancaster, NH, household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Joanna [(Hayes)] Wentworth, keeping house, aged seventy-three years (b. NH), Amiel Wentworth, a farmer, aged thirty-one years (b. NH), Martha [(Cook)] Wentworth, keeping house, aged thirty-six years (b. VT), Lillian Wentworth, aged one year (b. NH), and Wheatley Cook, a farm laborer, aged sixteen years (b. NH). Amiel Wentworth had real estate valued at $1,500 and personal estate valued at $500. Martha Wentworth had personal estate valued at $1,600.

R.R. Celebration at Lancaster, N.H. Twelve well-filled passenger cars left Wells River, on Tuesday last, to attend the opening of the extension of the White Mountain R.R. at Lancaster, N.H. (St. Johnsbury Weekly Times (St. Johnsbury, VT), December 6, 1870).

Daughter-in-law Almira [(Moulton)] Wentworth died in Lancaster, NH, January 28, 1871, aged sixty-five years.

DEATHS. Marriages and Deaths inserted FREE. Obituary Notices FIVE CENTS per line, in either of our papers, or TEN CENTS per line if inserted in all of them. COOS COUNTY. In Lancaster, 28th ult., Almira, wife of Shackford Wentworth, aged sixty-five years (Vermont Journal, February 11, 1871).

Son Shackford Wentworth died in Lancaster, NH, March 18, 1872.

Son-in-law Benaiah Colby died August 18, 1872.

Daughter Olive Wentworth died of paralysis in Great Falls, Somersworth, NH, February 2, 1875, aged eighty-eight years, three months. She was a married [?] housekeeper. Alvin Jenkins, M.D. signed the death certificate.

Son Joseph Wentworth died in Whitefield, NH, October 11, 1877, aged seventy-nine years.

Daughter-in-law Joanna (Hayes) Wentworth died of old age in Lancaster, NH, November 9, 1883, aged eighty-seven years. She was a widow.


References:

Find a Grave. (2012, November 20). Rebecca Wentworth Colby. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/101042040/rebecca-colby

Find a Grave. (2009, March 16). Hiram W. Hayes. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/34884906/hiram-w-hayes

Find a Grave. (2016, November 2). Joseph Wentworth. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/172120321/joseph-wentworth

Find a Grave. (2004, October 3). Olive Wentworth. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/9548949/olive-wentworth

Find a Grave. (2022, August 24). Shackford Wentworth. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/242946052/shackford-wentworth

Somers, Amos N. (1899). History of Lancaster, New Hampshire. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=nnQUAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA436

Wikipedia. (2023, December 14). Lancaster, New Hampshire. Retrieved from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lancaster,_New_Hampshire

Wikipedia. (2023, July 6). Willey House (New Hampshire). Retrieved from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willey_House_(New_Hampshire)