Milton Mills Merchant John E. Horne (1878-1953)

By Muriel Bristol | December 10, 2023

John Everard Horne was born in Acton, ME, May 8, 1878, son of John and Emeline M.B. (Meserve) Horne.

John Horn, a lumberman, aged forty-nine years (b. ME), headed an Acton, ME, household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Emerline M.B. [(Meserve)] Horn, aged forty-three years (b. NH), his son, Everard J. Horn, aged two years (b. ME), and Carrie Heus, attending school, aged fourteen years (b. MA). His household appeared in the enumeration between those of Thomas Horn, Jr., a carpenter, aged fifty-nine years (b. ME), and [his brother,] Asa F. Horn, a lumberman, aged forty-five years (b. ME).

(Note the insertion of an additional letter “r” in “Emeline” by someone spelling her name as a non-rhotic “Yankee” speaker might pronounce it).

Father John Horne died in Lebanon, ME, July 28, 1887, aged eighty-five years.

DIED. Lebanon – July 28, Mr. John Horne, aged 85 years (Lewiston Sun-Journal (Lewiston, ME), August 20, 1887).

Frederic I. Horne and [John] Evarard Horne, both of Springvale village, Sanford, ME, graduated from a Portland, ME, business college in September 1897. (Given their young ages of nineteen years, a business-oriented school or academy seems more likely than a four-year college).

SPRINGVALE. Fred I. Horne and Everard Horne have just graduated from the business college in Portland (Portland Daily Press (Portland, ME), September 17, 1897).

John Everard Horne married (1st) in Springvale, ME, March 3, 1900, Olive Ann Moulton, he of Springvale, ME, and she of Newfield, ME. He was a shoemaker, aged twenty-one years, and she was a milliner, aged twenty-two years. Rev. Eugene M. Trafton performed the ceremony. She was born in Newfield, ME, October 20, 1877, daughter of Charles A. and Clara J. (Garland) Moulton.

(The known children of John E. and Olive A. (Moulton) Horne were: Doris Marguerite Horne (1900–1983), Lorita Amy Horne (1903–1996), Herman Julian Horne (1905–1978), John Everard Horne, Jr. (1917–1965)).

John E. Horne moved from Springvale village, Sanford, ME, to Milton Mills between April and June of 1900, as a branch manager for the Milton Mills store of Springvale clothier Everett F. Merrifield (1875-1940). He would buy out his employer’s Milton Mills interests in “less than a year.” (See Milton Mills Sketch of 1911 – 4).

John E. Horne, aged twenty-two years (b. ME), headed a Milton household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household appeared in the enumeration between those of Fred H. Simes, boss weaver (woolen mill), aged thirty-two years (b. NH), and R. Seth Pike, a butcher, aged twenty-two years (b. NH).

Charles Moulton, milling, aged fifty-six years (b. ME), headed a Newfield, ME, household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of twenty-seven years), Clara J. [(Garland)] Moulton, aged forty-nine years (b. ME), and his children, Alice B. Moulton, at school, aged eighteen years (b. ME), Harold C. Moulton, at school, aged twelve years, (b. ME), George B. Moulton, at school, aged ten years (b. ME), and Olive A. [(Moulton)] Horne, aged twenty-two years (b. ME). Charles Moulton owned their farm, free-and-clear. Clara J. Moulton was the mother of eight children, of whom five were still living.

Daughter Doris Marguerite Horne was born in Milton Mills, October 4, 1900. Daughter Lorita A. Horne was born in Milton Mills, March 31, 1903.

SPRINGVALE LOCALS. Mrs. J. Everard Horne of Milton Mills was in town a short time Wednesday (Biddeford-Saco Journal (Biddeford, ME), June 30, 1905).

Son Herman Julian Horne was born in Milton Mills, October 26, 1905.

MILTON MILLS, N.H. John E. Horne is proud as a peacock over the arrival of a bouncing boy last Friday morning (Biddeford-Saco Journal (Biddeford, ME), [Friday,] November 10, 1905).

SANFORD. John E. Horne, the prosperous young merchant at Milton Mills, was in town recently and was cordially greeted by a host of old-time friends, who know him best by the name of Edward [Everard]. He is doing a good business and well deserves the success that is coming to him (Biddeford-Saco Journal (Biddeford, ME), March 25, 1907).

MILTON MILLS. John E. Horne and family and Julian Horne and wife are at Stiles’ camp, Square pond, for a week (Biddeford-Saco Journal (Biddeford, ME), August 16, 1907).

John E. Horne, a clothing store proprietor, aged thirty-two years (b. ME), headed a Milton household at the time of the Thirteenth (1910) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of ten years), Olive [(Moulton)] Horne, aged thirty-two years (b. ME), his children, Doris Horne, aged nine years (b. NH), Loreta Horne, aged seven years (b. NH), Herman Horne, aged four years (b. NH), and his mother, Emaline M.B. [(Meserve)] Horne, a widow, aged seventy-three years (b. NH). John E. Horne rented their house in Milton Mills. Olive Horne was the mother of three children, of whom three were still living. Emeline Horne was the mother of four children, of whom one was still living. Their household appeared in the enumeration between Willis L. Reynolds, an electrical engineer (woolen mills), aged thirty-nine years (b. MA), and Thomas Cutts, a farmer (general farming), aged seventy years (b. ME).

HORN REUNION. There assembled at Horns retreat, a camp near the old Horn homestead in Acton, occupied by J.E. Horn and family of Milton Mills, August 30, 85 or more descendants of Benjamin and Alice Horn, deceased. Among the number we recognized one of the teachers of our youth, Mrs. Eliza Horn Wilkins, the oldest living relative; also her son, Oscar, who is settled in Rubio, Cuba, engaged in extensive stock raising. The occasion was also graced by the presence of Mrs. David Horn, an elderly lady from Buzzells ridge. All were pleased to welcome “Aunt Susan.” The youngest relative present was Herman Horn of Milton Mills. Among the other relatives were Mrs. Marion Horn Woods and Miss Marion Horn of North Chelmsford, Mass., and J.E. Horn and family of Milton Mills. Mrs. Sarah Watson of Brunswick was an invited guest. At 12.30 all partook of a sumptuous dinner under the pines, Z.G. Horn acting as toastmaster. The remainder of the day was passed in social chat and listening to the following programme: Song, Mrs. J.E. Horn; Song with guitar accompaniment, J.E. Horne. “The Three Wishes,” “Mother’s Appeal to Her Boy,” and several others were rendered. Recitation, “Mrs. O’Leary’s Cow,” Mrs. Elizabeth Wilkins. Recitation, Doris Horn. Colloquy by two sisters, Miss Sarah Horn and Mrs. Eliza Wilkins on “The Old White Hen.” Remarks, J.E. Horn and others. The exercises closed by all singing “God Be With You Until We Meet Again.” As we thought of the many who had been removed from our circle since we last met, by the “grim messenger,” it reminded us how important it is for those remaining to be prepared for that great reunion when we shall meet all the dear ones gone before, and never say goodbye (Biddeford-Saco Journal (Biddeford, ME), September 6, 1912).

Mother-in-law Clara J. (Garland) Moulton died in Newfield, ME, January 31, 1916.

Son John Everard Horne, Jr., was born in Milton Mills, March 3, 1917.

John E. Horne, general store (dry goods, etc.), aged forty-one years (b. ME), headed a Milton household at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Olive A. [(Moulton)] Horne, aged forty-two years (b. ME), his children, Doris W. Horne, aged nineteen years (b. NH), Lorita A. Horne, aged sixteen years (b. NH), Herman J. Horne, aged fourteen years (b. NH), and John E. Horne, Jr., aged two years (b. NH), and his mother, Emeline M.B. [(Meserve)] Horne, a widow, aged eighty-two years (b. NH). John E. Horne owned their house in Milton Mills Village, free-and-clear. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Fred Rowe, a hotel owner, aged forty-nine years (b. NH), and Everett F. Fox, aged sixty-three years (b. ME).

(Future father-in-law Alfred L. Coombs died in West Bath, ME, August 8, 1920). Father-in-law Charles A. Moulton died in Milton, October 25, 1921.

Daughter Doris Marguerite Horne married in Wakefield, NH, June 25, 1922, William Elliott Woodbury, she of Milton Mills, and he of Durham, NH. She was a teacher, aged twenty-two years, and he was a farmer, aged twenty-five years. Rev. Harvey E. Whitcomb performed the ceremony. Woodbury was born in Hudson, NH, September 23, 1896, son of Edgar C. and Eva J. (Wheeler) Woodbury.

Mother Emeline M.B. (Meserve) Horne died in Milton Mills, March 4, 1924.

SPRINGVALE. Friends of Mrs. E.M.B. Horne were grieved to hear of her death, which occurred at the home of her son, Everard Horne, at Milton Mills, who has many friends in Springvale (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), March 11, 1924).

MRS. E.M.B. HORNE. Special Despatch to the PRESS HERALD. Springvale, March 14 – News has been received here of the death of Mrs. E.M.B. Horne, which occurred in Milton Mills, N.H., at the home of her son, J. Everard Horne. She formerly resided in this place and will be remembered as having been an active member of the Free Baptist church and of Whatsoever Circle of King’s Daughters (Portland Press-Herald (Portland, ME), March 15, 1924).

Olive A. (Moulton) Horne died in Rochester, NH, June 9, 1924, aged forty-six years.

SPRINGVALE NEWS. Friends of Mr. and Mrs. Everard Horne of Milton Mills, former residents here, were grieved to hear of Mrs. Horne’s death. She died in Rochester hospital, Monday noon after a surgical operation that developed into pneumonia. Their daughter, Miss Lorita Horne, was a Nasson Institute graduate class of 1923 (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), June 12, 1924).

Olive Moulton Horne. Olive, wife of Everard Horne, of Milton Mills, N.H., died at Rochester city hospital Monday, June 9th, of pneumonia, aged 46 years. Mrs. Horne was born at Newfield and is survived by her husband and four children: two daughters, Mrs. William Woodbury, Lorita Horne, two sons, Herman and John, all of Milton Mills, N.H.; Two sisters, Mrs. Charles Davis, of Norwood, Mass., Mrs. Dwight Elliot, of Rumford; two brothers, George Moulton, of West Newfield, and Harold Moulton, of Springvale. Funeral was from the home of [at] Milton Mills, died at afternoon and interment was in Milton Mills cemetery. Mr. and Mrs. Horne were former residents of Springvale (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), June 19, 1924).

John E. Horne, and his children, Mrs. Doris H. [(Horne)] Woodbury, Lorita A. Horne, John E. Horne, Jr., all of Milton Mills, N.H., were among the approximately 225 persons attending a Meserve Family reunion in East Limington, ME, on Saturday, August 29, 1925 (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), August 31, 1925).

John Everard Horne married (2nd) in Bath, ME, May 1, 1926, Gertrude Madelyn Coombs, he of Milton Mills and she of Portland, ME. He was a merchant, aged forty-seven years, and she was a nurse, aged twenty-eight years. Rev. E.D. Hard performed the ceremony. She was born in Carbon, IA, March 10, 1896, daughter of Alfred and Amy H. [(Howe)] Coombs.

HORNE-COOMBS. New Hampshire Man Weds Daughter of Mrs. Alfred L. Coombs of West Bath. Miss Gertrude M. Coombs of Portland and John E. Horne of Milton Mills, N.H., were married Saturday morning at 9.30 at the Congregational manse by Rev. Edwin D. Hardin. They were immediately driven to the home of the bride’s mother, Mrs. Alfred L. Coombs, in the Campbell’s pond district of West Bath for a wedding breakfast, which was attended by her mother and three sisters and a brother, Mrs. John L. Evans, Miss Myra M. Coombs, Miss Julia V. Coombs, and V. Irving Coombs, and by a neighbor, Mrs. Benjamin Stackpole. The bride’s gown was of rosewood crepe satin. The groom is a son of the late Mr. and Mrs. John Horne of Milton Mills and is engaged in the clothing business. Mrs. Horne is well known in Bath, having attended the public schools here. She was graduated as a trained nurse from Trull hospital in Biddeford in 1923 and has been practising in Portland the last nine months. Mr. and Mrs. Horne departed after the breakfast for a wedding trip by automobile which will conclude at Milton Mills where they will be at home the middle of the month (Brunswick Times-Record (Brunswick, ME), May 1, 1926).

President Calvin “Silent Cal” Coolidge nominated John E. Horne as Postmaster of Milton Mills, December 10, 1928.

NEW HAMPSHIRE. John E. Horne to be postmaster at Milton Mills, New Hampshire, in place of J.E. Horne. Incumbent’s commission expires December 10, 1928 (US Congress, 1959). 

Daughter Lorita A. Horne married in Milton Mills, June 23, 1929, James Eldorado Lee, she of Milton Mills and he of Dover, NH. She was a school teacher, aged twenty-six years and he was an electrician, aged twenty-five years. Rev. Edwin B. Young performed the ceremony. Lee was born in Portsmouth, NH, circa 1904, son of James P. and Florence (Johnson) Lee.

Son Herman J. Horne married in Milton Mills, June 23, 1929, Mildred Evangeline “Millie” Dow, he of Milton Mills and she of Rochester, NH. He was a clerk, aged twenty-three years, and she was a cashier, aged twenty-five years. Rev. Edwin B. Young performed the ceremony. She was born in Dover, NH, circa 1904, daughter of Joseph W. and Charlotte (Heeney) Dow.

SPRINGVALE NEWS. A double wedding with 75 guests was performed at the home of John Edward Horne of Milton Mills, at noon, Sunday, when his son and daughter were participants in an elaborate double ceremony. Rev. Edwin A Young, a Methodist pastor of Rochester, formerly of Milton Mills, officiated, using the double ring service for both couples, under a bower of evergreen and sweet peas and a gigantic wedding bell. Herman J. Horne, 23, of Milton Mills, and Mildred Dow, 24, of New York, and Lorita A. Horne, 26, of Milton Mills, and James A. Lee, 26, of Rye, N.H., were the contracting parties. Mr. Horne was graduated from Brewster Academy in the Class of 1923 and a year later from Gray’s Business College in Portland. He is associated with his father in business. Miss Dow is also a graduate of Brewster Academy. She is employed as telephone cashier in Rochester, N.H. Her home is at Long Island, N.Y. Miss Lorita Horne is a graduate of Brewster Academy Class of 1920, Nasson Institute, Class of 1923, and is now a teacher of domestic science in the Whipple School, Portsmouth, N.H. James A. Lee is a graduate of Wentworth Institute, Class of 1923, and is now employed by a telephone company. Both brides were attired in white. Miss Horne wearing white crepe satin and lace while Miss Dow was gowned in white taffeta, each carrying bouquets of pink roses and lily of the valleys. The matron of honor was Mrs. Doris Woodbury, an older daughter of J.E. Horne. Following the wedding ceremony, a reception was given the couples on the lawn of Mrs. Woodbury. Many of the readers of the Tribune will be interested to read of the double wedding of son and daughter of John Everard Horne of Milton Mills. Mr. Horne was a resident of Springvale for many years (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), June 27, 1929).

John E. Horne, a retail merchant (dry goods), aged fifty-one years (b. ME), headed a Milton (“Milton Mills Village”) household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of four years), Gertrude C. [(Coombs)] Horne, aged thirty-three years (b. IA), his son, John E. Horne, aged thirteen years (b. NH), and his mother-in-law, Amy H. [(Howe)] Coombs, a widow, aged sixty-nine years (b. Canada). John E. Horne owned their house on Main Street, which was valued at $2,500. They had a radio set. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Charles Longley, a retail merchant (groceries), aged fifty-two years (b. ME), and Hermon Hersom, a lumberman (lumber mill), aged fifty-six years (b. ME).

Wm. Woodbury, a poultry breeder, aged thirty-two years (b. NH), headed a Milton (“Milton Mills Village”) household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of eight years), Doris [(Horne)] Woodbury, aged twenty-nine years (b. NH), his children, Ann Woodbury, aged five years (b. NH), Jane Woodbury, aged two years (b. NH), and Stephen Woodbury, aged two years (b. NH), and his servant, Ida Cotton, a private family servant, aged twenty-one years (b. NH). Wm. Woodbury rented their house on School Street, for $12 per month. Wm. Woodbury rented their portion of a two-family house on School Street, at its intersection with Main Street, for $12 per month. (The other portion was occupied by her brother, Herman J. Horne). They did not have a radio set. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Hermon Hersom, a lumberman (lumber mill), aged fifty-six years (b. ME), and Ernest Spinney, a poultry man (poultry plant), aged twenty years (b. ME).

James E. Lee, an electrician (power house), aged twenty-six years (b. NH), headed a Dover, NH, household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of one year), Lorita [(Horne)] Lee, a teacher (public school), aged twenty-seven years (b. NH). James E. Lee rented their house at 76 Central Street, for $25. They had a radio set.

Herman J. Horne, a dry goods salesman, aged twenty-four years (b. NH), headed a Milton (“Milton Mills Village”) household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of one year), Mildred Horne, aged twenty-six years (b. NH). Herman J. Horne rented their portion of a two-family house on School Street, at its intersection with Main Street, for $9 per month. (The other portion was occupied by his brother-in-law, Wm. Woodbury). They did not have a radio set. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Hermon Hersom, a lumberman (lumber mill), aged fifty-six years (b. ME), and Ernest Spinney, a poultry man (poultry plant), aged twenty years (b. ME).

John E. Horne appeared in a U.S. Senate list of U.S. Post Office Department nominations. (He was to replace himself, i.e., he was being renominated for another term in the office he held already).

NEW HAMPSHIRE. John E. Horne to be postmaster at Milton Mills, NH, in place of J.E. Horne. Incumbent’s commission expired December 12, 1932 (US Congress, 1933).

Mother-in-law Amy (Howe) Coombs died in West Bath, ME, in 1934, aged seventy-four years.

OBITUARY. MRS. AMY COOMBS. Widow of Alfred L. Coombs of Bath Dies at Her Home at Campbell’s Pond. Amy Coombs, 74, widow of Alfred L. Coombs, died Monday at her home Campbell’s Pond, West Bath, after a week’s confining illness. She was born in West Bath, a daughter of the late Edmund and Sarah Reed Howes or some years she resided in Carbon, Iowa, returning to Bath 34 years ago. She leaves five daughters, Mrs. John L. Evans, Wollaston, Mass.; Mrs. Axel Hanson, Worcester, Mass.; Miss Julia V. Coombs, Portland; Mrs. Robert D. Metcalf, West Bath; and Mrs. John E. Horne, Milton Mills, N.H. Also three sons, James A. Coombs, West Bath; V. Irving Coombs, Togus; and Robert R. Coombs, West Bath. The funeral will be Wednesday 2 p.m. at her late home in West Bath (Brunswick Times-Record (Brunswick, ME), November 26, 1934).

MILTON MILLS. Mr. and Mrs. William Woodbury and four children had quite a family dinner last Thursday. Their guests were Mr. and Mrs. James Lee of Dover, John E. Home, Jr., and Joseph Randall of Rye (Farmington News, December 7, 1934).

MILTON MILLS. Two youngsters, little cousins, Patricia Horne, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herman J. Horne, Ann, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Woodbury, recently had birthdays. Miss Patricia was one year old December 13, and she received many pretty gifts, as did Ann, who was ten years of age December 15 (Farmington News, December 21, 1934).

MILTON MILLS. Mr. and Mrs. Herman J. Horne entertained Mr. and Mrs. Lester Colt of Lowell, Mass., over the weekend (Farmington News, March 1, 1935).

John E. and Gertude M. (Coombs) Horne hosted the sixteenth annual Meserve family reunion at the Odd Fellows Hall in Milton Mills in September 1938.

Meserve Family Reunion. Many Lewiston and Auburn people are interested in the program of the 16th annual reunion of the Meserve family which took place recently at the Odd Fellows’ hall, Milton Mills, N.H. Mr. and Mrs. John E. Horne were host and hostess. During the morning session the group sang the Maine song which was written by Francis Meserve Cotton. There were members of the family in attendance and the following officers were elected: President, Mrs. Gertrude M. Cleaves; first vice-president, John E Horne; second vice-president, Mrs. Francis M. Cotton; treasurer, Fred Meserve; necrologist Maud M. Smith; and entertainment committee for 1939, Mrs. Vera Wilson, Mrs. Vera Profit and Miss Maud Meserve. The next reunion will be on the second Thursday in August in 1939 at East Limington (Sun Journal (Lewiston, ME), September 7, 1938).

MILTON MILLS. By Alfred W. Lewis. John Horne was host at the Meserve family reunion held in the Odd Fellow building last week. Mr. Horne’s mother was a Meserve. A large number were present from far and near. Mrs. Abbie Anderson and her Junior choirs of boys and girls entertained the guests (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), September 8, 1938).

Son Herman J. Horne and his family moved to Somersworth, NH, in late September 1938.

Briefs. Mr. and Mrs. Herman J. Horne and family moved last week to Somersworth, N.H., where Mr. Horne has purchased a home on Mount Vernon street. Mr. Horne, an employe of the Twin State Gas and Electric Co., has been living in the Stevens house on Market street (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), October 6, 1938).

LI390711- Horne, John E JrMiss Frances W. Down of Saugus, MA, announced her engagement to son John E. Horne, Jr., of Lynn, MA, in July 1939 (Daily Item (Lynn, MA), July 11, 1939). But they apparently broke it off, as she married instead, September 17, 1940, Edgar M. Holland, of Wakefield, MA.

John E. Horn, a retail dry goods manager, aged sixty-one years (b. ME), headed a Milton (“Milton Mills”) household at the time of the Sixteenth (1940) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Gertrude C. [(Coombs)] Horn, a retail dry goods clerk, aged forty-three years (b. IA). John E. Horn owned their house on the Milton Mills Road, which was valued at $2,000. Their household appeared in the enumeration between Charles A. Longley, a retail grocery storekeeper, aged sixty-two years (b. ME), and Anna J. Buzzell, a widow, aged seventy-two years (b. New Brunswick).

William E. Woodbury, a farmer (hen farm), aged forty-four years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Sixteenth (1940) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Doris H. [(Horne)] Woodbury, aged thirty-nine years (b. NH), and his children, Ann Woodbury, aged fifteen years (b. NH), Jone [Jane] Woodbury, aged twelve years (b. NH), Stephen H. Woodbury, aged twelve years (b. NH), and Susan Woodbury, aged eight years (b. NH). William E. Woodbury owned their house on Main Street, which was valued at $4,500. They had all resided in the same house in 1935. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of John H. Roberts, a teamster (teaming), aged sixty-five years (b. NH), and Othello D. Runnells, a counter man (leatherboard mill), aged thirty-seven years (b. ME).

James Lee, a load dispatcher (power co.), aged thirty-six years, headed a Dover, NH, household at the time of the Sixteenth (1940) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Loretta [(Horne)] Lee, aged thirty-seven years, his children, Carolyn Lee, aged nine years, and Millicent Lee, aged seven years, and his uncle, Joseph Randall, aged seventy-five years. James Lee rented their house at 27 Elmwood Street, for $5 per month. They had all resided in the same house in 1935.

J. Herman Horne, a foreman (electric light line), aged thirty-four years (b. NH), headed a Somersworth, NH, household at the time of the Sixteenth (1940) Federal Census. His household included his wife, D. Mildred [(Woodbury)] Horne, aged thirty-six years (b. NH), and his children, A. David Horne, aged eight years (b. NH), O. Patricia Horne, aged six years (b. NH), Pamela Horne, aged three years (b. NH), Peter Horne, aged three years (b. NH), and Robert Horne, aged seven months (b. NH). J. Herman Horne owned their house at 43 Mt. Vernon Street, which was valued at $4,500. Except for the three younger children, they had all resided in Milton Mills in 1935.

John E. Horne, Jr., an aeronautical machinist, aged twenty-three years (b. NH), lodged in the Lynn, MA, household of Flavie Liffert, a lodging house caretaker, aged forty years (b. ME) at the time of the Sixteenth (1940) Federal Census. The lodging house was situated at 8 Commercial Street and had eleven tenants. Horne had resided in Rural Strafford County, NH, in 1935.

SPRINGVALE. By LILLA H. LORD. – Telephone 716-M. J. Everard Horne of Milton Mills, N.H., was a business visitor in town Monday. Mr. Horne is a former resident of Springvale. He is a candidate for county commissioner of Strafford County (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), October 24, 1940).

John E. Horne sold his stock of clothing goods to Frederick L. Moody (1864-1952), in March 1941. Moody owned a clothing store in Exeter, NH.

MILTON MILLS. By Alfred W. Lewis. John E. Horne has sold his stock to F.L. Moody of Exeter, N.H. Mr. Horne came here from Springvale 41 years ago, opening up a store in the building now occupied by Lowe’s stores. Later he moved into the Asa Fox & Sons store and for several years was postmaster (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), March 13, 1941).

MILTON MILLS. By Alfred W. Lewis. The Friday Night Club is to meet at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John E. Horne Friday night (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), [Thursday,] April 3, 1941).

MILTON MILLS. By Alfred W. Lewis. Mr. and Mrs. John E. Horne are to be hosts for the Friday Nite Club Friday evening (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), January 28, 1943).

MILTON MILLS. By Alfred W. Lewis. The Friday Nite Club enjoyed a straw ride to the camp of John E. Horne on East Lake and partook of a “hot dog” roast (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), July 20, 1944).

Milton sent John E. Horne to Concord, NH, as its NH State Representative, for the 1945-46, 1947-48, 1949-50, 1951-52, and 1953-54 biennia.

Son John E. Horne, Jr., married in Braintree, MA, January 12, 1947, Barbara Carle Woodbury. She was born in West Roxbury, MA, September 1, 1921, daughter of Harland S. and Ramona M. (Carle) Woodbury.

WEDDINGS. Miss Barbara Carle Woodbury, 34 Tenney road, South Braintree, to John Everard Horne, Jr., of Milton Mills, N.H. (Boston Globe, January 12, 1947).

Miss Barbara Woodbury of South Braintree Weds John Horne, Jr. In the First Congregational Church of Braintree, Miss Barbara Carle Woodbury, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harland Sumner Woodbury of South Braintree, will become the bride this afternoon of John Everard Horne, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. John E. Horne of Milton Mills, N.H., and Rev. Newton E. Woodbury, field secretary of the Massachusetts Baptist Convention, and cousin of the bride, will officiate, assisted by Rev. Aaron Meckle, pastor. A reception will follow the ceremony in the church parlors. The bride, wearing traditional white satin, with a Chapel length veil, will be given in marriage by her father. Her flowers are orchids and sweet peas. Miss Marjorie Carle Woodbury, in a blush-pink crepe gown, and carrying flowers of pastel shades, will be maid of honor for her sister, and the bridesmaids, Mrs. Robert J. Kershaw and Miss Natalie Pingree, wearing turquoise crepe gowns, will carry armfuls of pink snapdragons, sweet peas and acacia. Henry Oscar Swain of Swampscott is the best man, and the ushers were James Donaldson Murphy of Boston, Robert C. Violet and Mark A. Taylor of Marblehead, and Harland S. Woodbury, Jr., University of New Hampshire. The bride’s mother has chosen American Beauty crepe, and Mrs. Horne will wear a rose gown. The corsages of baby orchids. The bride is a graduate of Chandler School in Boston, and Mr. Horne is a graduate of the G.E. Apprentice School in Lynn. Mr. Home Jr. and his bride will live at 95 Rockland st., in Swampscott (Boston Globe, January 12, 1947).

Son-in-law William E. Woodbury died of myocardial failure in the U.S. Naval Hospital in Kittery, ME, April 21, 1947, aged fifty years. He was a WW I veteran and poultry farmer. Lt. J.G. Morrison signed the death certificate.

William E. Woodbury. William E. Woodbury, 50, well known poultry and grain dealer here for the past 25 years and World War I veteran, passed away at the Naval Hospital, Portsmouth, Apr. 21. He served oversees with the 101st Field Artillery, 26th Division. He was a member of Oscar Moorehouse Post, American Legion, the V.F.W., the Unity Lodge, No. 32, A.F. & A.M., Miltonia Lodge, No. 52, IOOF and Pleasant Valley Grange. He leaves his wife Doris (Horne) Woodbury; a son, Stephen H.; three daughters, Ann, Jane and Susan; three sisters and five brothers. Military services were held Thursday afternoon at the Free Baptist Church. The Rev Frank Small of Melrose Highlands, Mass., officiated and Loring Wilkins, pastor of the church assisted. The Legion, Masons and Odd Fellows attended in a body (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), May 1, 1947).

After the death of her husband, daughter Doris (Horne) Woodbury substituted at the Milton Mills grammar school, for a day at least, and sold his poultry plant.

MILTON MILLS. By Alfred W. Lewis. Mrs. Doris Woodbury substituted at the Milton Mills Grammar School Friday (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), May 15, 1947).

MILTON MILLS. By Alfred W. Lewis. Mrs. Doris Woodbury has sold her poultry plant to a cousin of Rev. Loring Wilkins. They are busy converting the office building into a home (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), October 23, 1947).

C.E. Piper, Ruben J. Evans, and John E. Horne were Milton Trustees of the Trust Funds in 1950.

John E. Horne, a carpenter (building contractor), aged seventy-two years (b. ME), headed a Milton household at the time of the Seventeenth (1950) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Gertrude C. [(Coombs)] Horne, a registered nurse (hospital), aged fifty-three years (b. IA).

Real Estate Transfers. Raymond C. and Hazel D. Anderson, Arlington, Mass., to John E. Horne, Milton, N.H., two lots at Wilson Pond, Acton. … John E. Horne, Milton, N.H., to Ellsworth Gordon, Acton, land and buildings on French street, Acton (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), September 21, 1950).

Doris H. [(Horne)] Woodbury, a telephone operator (telephone co.), aged forty-nine years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Seventeenth (1950) Federal Census. Her household included her son, Stephen H. Woodbury, a repairman (retail radio store), aged twenty-two years (b. NH). Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Roland S. Pike, an automobile mechanic (automobile repair garage), aged twenty-five years (b. NH), and Winfield H. Holman, a minister (rural gospel society), aged thirty years (b. ME).

James E. Lee, a division operator (public services co.), aged forty-six years (b. NH), headed a Dover, NH, household at the time of the Seventeenth (1950) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Lorita H. [(Horne)] Lee, teaching school (municipal), aged forty-seven years (b. NH), his children, Millicent Lee, aged seventeen years (b. NH), Carolyn L. Jorde, a secretary (dental office), aged nineteen years (b. NH), and his lodger, Marie Grenuk, a floor lady (electrical mfg. co.), aged twenty-five years (b. NY). They resided at 7 Hamilton Street.

Hermon J. Horne, a line foreman (elec. maintenance), aged forty-four years (b. NH), headed a Somersworth, NH, household at the time of the Seventeenth (1950) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Mildred D. [(Dow)] Horne, aged forty-six years (b. NH), and his children, David Horne, a lathe operator (shoe parts mfg.), aged nineteen years (b. NH), Patrecia Horne, aged sixteen years (b. NH), Peter Horne, aged thirteen years (b. NH), Pamela Horne, aged thirteen years (b. NH), and Robert Horne, aged ten years (b. NH). They resided at 89 Prospect Street.

John E. Horne, Jr., supervisor of testing (gas turbine mfg.), aged thirty-three years (b. NH), headed a Swampscott, MA, household at the time of the Seventeenth (1950) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Barbara W. [(Woodbury)] Horne, aged twenty-eight years (b. MA), and his son, William C. Horne, aged one year (b. MA). They resided in the Basement apartment at 95 Rockland Street.

N.H. May Send Tobey a Hanky. Legislators Moved by Tears of Senator at Crime Hearing. Rep. John E. Horne, Milton Republican, gave the House of Representatives a mild jolt, which was followed by a wave of smiles, by filing a resolution this afternoon to send a “handsome red bandana kerchief” to Senator Tobey at Washington. The resolution was first referred to the House Judiciary committee on suggestion of Rep. John Pillsbury, Manchester Republican. But later on recommendation of Rep. Gardner Turner of Keene, it was given to the House Appropriations committee. Turner explained, “We probably will need a cash appropriation to purchase the bandana.” The resolution, resulting from overnight newspaper stories from New York City that Senator Tobey broke into tears at a Senate crime probe hearing, was as follows: “Whereas, New Hampshire Senator Charles W. Tobey broke down and wept copiously before television yesterday, and sobbingly declared that our big city gamblers should become better citizens by accepting religion. And, whereas we wish to fittingly express our sentiments concerning the unusual display of public service, Be it resolved that the House of Representatives dispatches with every possible speed as handsome a bandana kerchief as can be obtained for Senator Tobey’s use in future similar outbursts of uncontrolled emotions” (Concord Monitor (Concord, NH), March 15, 1951).

BATH PEOPLE AND THEIR FRIENDS. Mr. and Mrs. John E. Horne of Milton Mills, N.H., were week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Metcalf of Campbell’s Pond (Brunswick Times-Record (Brunswick, ME), December 17, 1952).

John E. Horne died of prostate cancer in Milton, December 15, 1953, aged seventy-five years, seven months, and seven days. Albert E. Bascomb, M.D., signed the death certificate.

MILTON MILLS. By Alfred W. Lewis. John E. Horne. John Everard Horne, postmaster here for 22 years and representative of Milton in the New Hampshire Legislature for four terms died recently. He was born in Acton, May 8, 1878, the son of John and Emeline Meserve Horne, moved to Milton Mills in 1900, opening up a men’s furnishing store. In recent years Mr. Horne had been a carpenter and builder. He had served as a trustee of the Milton Trust Funds, a trustee of the Public Library, a member of Pleasant Valley Grange, a 50-year member of Lodge of Odd Fellows, Unity Lodge F & AM of Union, N.H., Sunrise Rebekah Lodge and Columbia Chapter OES of Farmington, N.H. Private funeral services were held from the Clarence Peaslee Funeral Home in Union. Rev. Newton Woodbury, a relative, officiated. It was the desire of the family that flowers be omitted and if anyone desired to, he could send a contribution to the Damon Runyon Fund through Walter A. Bickford of the Rochester Trust Co. He leaves his wife, Gertrude C. Horne; two sons, Hermon J. of Somersworth and John E. Horne, Jr., of Beverly Mass; two daughters, Mrs. Doris Woodbury of this place and Mrs. Lorita Lee of Dover, N.H., and several grandchildren and great-grandchildren (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), December 24, 1953).

CARD OF THANKS. We wish to thank the Henrietta Goodall Hospital for their assistance, the nurses for their floral tribute, and all others who in any way assisted during our recent time of sorrow. Mrs. John E. Horne, Mrs. William E. Woodbury and family, Mrs. James E. Lee and family, Mr. Herman J. Horne and family, Mr. John E. Horne, Jr., and family. Milton Mills, N.H. (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), December 31, 1953).

Having died, Rep. John E. Horne could not complete the second year of his fifth (1953-54) term. His House committee assignment was given to another representative, Forrest Hodgdon of Tuftonboro, NH.

Rep Forrest Hodgdon of Tuftonboro was appointed to the House Public Works committee to succeed the late John E. Horne of Milton (Concord Monitor (Concord, NH), April 6, 1954).

Grandson Cpl. David A. Horne, aged twenty-three years, was one of thirty-nine members of the 622nd Eng. Aviation Battalion that died in a plane crash on Palakea Mountain, Nanakuli, HI, March 20, 1955.

MILTON MILLS. BY ALFRED W. LEWIS. Mr. and Mrs. Herman J. Horne and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Jackson of Somersworth, N.H., are driving to the Jefferson Barrack’s National Cemetery in St. Louis, Mo., on May 17, to attend the mass funeral service for the 39 unidentified bodies found in the wreckage of a plane which crashed recently into a mountain in the Hawaiian Islands. The Horne son, Cpl. David Horne, was one of the victims. Herman Horne formerly resided here (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), May 19, 1955).

MILTON MILLS. By Alfred W. Lewis. Mrs. Doris Woodbury is at her home for two weeks for the summer vacation (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), July 17, 1958).

Sons Herman J. Horne and John E. Horne, Jr., reported break-ins at their adjoining summer cottages on Great East Lake, in June 1960.

Cottage Breaks Total 25 At Acton. ACTON – Arrival of summer residents has uncovered two more cottage breaks in this area bringing the total discovered in the past week to 25. State Trooper James Monroe, Sanford, said he received reports Sunday from Herman J. Horne of Somersworth, N.H., and John Horne Beverly, Mass., of breaks into their adjoining cottages on Great East Lake since June 7. A table radio and an outboard motor are reported missing from the former’s camp. The other breaks have occurred on Great East Horne Pond and Mousam Lake (Portland Press Herald (Portland, ME), June 21, 1960).

Mrs. Gertrude M. (Coombs) Horne of Milton Mills, NH, sold wares at a “products party” held at the East Lebanon, ME, home of Mrs. Bernice G. (Libby) Tucker, in September 1964. One might suppose the “products” to have been something like Amway, Avon, Tupperware, etc.

East Lebanon. A products party was given at the home of Mrs. Bernice Tucker last Thursday evening by Mrs. Gertrude Horne of Milton Mills, N.H. Attending were Mrs. Hanley (of Milton Mills), Mrs. Ethel Williams and Mrs. Ellen Carbone (of Acton). Mrs. Gertrude Libby and Mrs. Barbara Smith and baby, Libby Jean (of Sanford), Mrs. Lillian Smith, Joyce Zawail and son, Tommy, and Mrs. Charlotte Rumford (of North Lebanon), Mrs. Emma Tucker, Mrs. Edna Libby, Mrs. Mollie Theriault, Mrs. Louise Stewart, Mrs. Marietta Wood, Mrs. Lula Junkins, Mrs. Bernice Neol, and Mrs. Tucker and Mrs. Horne (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), [Thursday,] September 10, 1964).

Son John Everard Horne, Jr., died in Beverly, MA, November 11, 1965, aged forty-eight years.

Deaths. John E. Home, Jr. John E. Home, Jr., 48, 4 Alcann Rd., Beverly, former manager of maintenance at General Electric Co. River Works, died yesterday after a lengthy illness. He was the husband of Mrs. Barbara Horne. Mr. Home was born in Milton, N.H., and was employed 27 years by GE. He was a member of Thomson Quarter Century and Jet Pioneers’ clubs of GE. He was also a member of Unity Lodge of Masons, Union, N.H., and was active in Cub and Boy Scout activities in Beverly. He also leaves his stepmother, Gertrude Horne of Milton Mills, N.H.; three sons, William, Michael and Richard, and a daughter, Wendy, all of Beverly; a brother, Herman Horne of Somersworth, N.H.; two sisters, Mrs. Lorita Lee of Dover, N.H., and Mrs. Doris Woodbury of Milford, N.H. Funeral Services will be held Saturday at 2 PM at the Lee and Moody Funeral Home, 9 Dane St., Beverly. Burial will be in North Beverly Cemetery (Daily Item (Lynn, MA), November 12, 1965). 

John E. Horne, Jr. Services for John E. Horne, Jr., 4 Alcann Rd., Beverly, former maintenance manager at General Electric Co., River Works, were held Saturday in the Lee and Moody Funeral Home in Beverly. The Rev. George Condon, associate minister of the Dane Street Congregational Church, Beverly, officiated. Bearers were Calvin Newman, Milton Wilson, Robert Violet, Robert Deering, Frank Bory, and Victor Hopkinson. Burial was in North Beverly Cemetery where Mr. Condon offered committal prayers (Daily Item (Lynn, MA), November 15, 1965). 

Gertrude M. (Coombs) Horne died May 3, 1974.

Son Herman Julian Horne died June 6, 1978. Daughter-in-law Mildred E. (Dow) Horne died in Rochester, NH, in September 1980.

Daughter Doris Marguerite (Horne) Woodbury died in Milford, NH, April 5, 1983. Son-in-law James E. Lee died in Dover, NH, in 1984.

Daughter Lorita Amy (Horne) Lee died in Dover, NH, in April 1996.


References:

Find a Grave. (2010, November 24). Alfred Lewis Coombs. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/62091221/alfred-lewis-coombs

Find a Grave. (2020, September 7). Herman Julian “Rip” Horne. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/215318557/herman-julian-horne

Find a Grave. (2018, February 7). John Horne. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/187162916/john-horne

Find a Grave. (2013, August 2). John Everard Horne. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/114788057/john-everard-horne

Find a Grave. (2009, October 7). John Everard Horne, Jr. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/42813937/john-everard-horne

Find a Grave. (2019, May 28). Lorita Amy Horne Lee. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/42813937/john-everard-horne

Find a Grave. (2021, October 1). Charles Moulton. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/232624605/charles-moulton

Find a Grave. (2013, July 31). Doris Marguerite Horne Woodbury. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/114726735/doris-marguerite-woodbury

US Congress. (1933). Congressional Record. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=bm9i6NAHowAC&pg=PA1214

US Congress. (1959). Journal of the Executive Proceedings of the Senate of the United States of America. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=bkWAXqFYvMYC&pg=PA99

Wikipedia. (2023, October 27). Rhoticity in English. Retrieved from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhoticity_in_English

Milton’s NH State Representatives – 1903-1954

By Muriel Bristol | November 2, 2023


Continued from Milton’s NH State Representatives – 1803-1902


New Hampshire’s legislature or General Court is a bicameral one. It has lower and upper houses, known respectively as the House of Representatives and the Senate. All of its officers, including its Governor and his Executive Council, are elected simultaneously for two-year periods known as “biennia.”

This period marks the beginnings of preliminary primary elections, rather than local party caucus meetings, prior to the general election for these seats.

New Hampshire’s State House now furnishes material for a daily despatch to the outside newspapers on the candidacies for office there declared under the new primary law. For example, Clarence K. Car of Andover filed his application for a place as Democratic nominee Thursday morning, while at noon Colonel Bertram Ellis of Keen walked into the secretary of state’s office to deposit one hundred dollars and make his declaration. Announcements of legislative candidates come to light daily. That direct primaries work better than the caucuses is yet to be demonstrated in any part of the Union, but New Hampshire’s experience, as a piece of Yankee-land, may well be awaited with interest (Boston Evening Transcript, July 23, 1910).

NH House Chamber - 2003 (per Granite Grok)In the reconstructed New Hampshire State House, dedicated yesterday, we trust the changes have not removed that famous guide, whose chief bon mot was delivered when pointing to the picture of Franklin Pierce: “This is the picture of the only President of the United States that New Hampshire ever had or ever will have” (Boston Evening Transcript, October 26, 1910).

Milton’s NH State Representatives elected during this period were:

1903-04, John E. Townsend, r; 1905-06, Fred B. Roberts, r; 1907-08, Haven R. Jewett, r; 1909-10, Carl E. Pinkham, d; 1911-12, John W. Avery, d; 1913-14, Joseph D. Willey, d; 1915-16, James J. Buckley, r; 1917-18, Moses G. Chamberlain, r; 1919-20, George E. Jordan, r; 1921-22, Fred S. Hartford, r; 1923-24, Frank D. Stevens, r; 1925-26, Seth F. Dawson, Jr., r; 1927-28, Moses G. Chamberlain, r; 1929-30, Fred B. Roberts, r; 1931-32, Moses G. Chamberlain, r; 1933-34, Fred B. Roberts, r; 1935-36, Stanley C. Tanner, d; 1937-38, George W. Longley, r; 1939-40, Lyman Plummer, r; 1941-42, 1943-44, George W. Longley, r; 1945-46, 1947-48, 1949-50, 1951-52, 1953-54, John E. Horne, r.;

(Where sources provided party affiliations they have been included after the Representative’s name ([d]=democrat,  and [r]=republican)).

And here may be found some details of the State House’s construction and several remodeling and upgrade projects.

NH State House - 1836Concord’s First State House. THE CORNERSTONE of the first state house was laid September 24, 1816.
Three thousand dollars were originally appropriated by the legislature to commence operations. The inhabitants of Concord donated the original two acres of land. Granite for the building was hewn by convicts at the state prison and was delivered free of charge to the state by the citizens of the city.
On the eighteenth of July, 1818, the gilded eagle atop the dome was raised to its place in public ceremony. The building was completed in 1819 with a total expenditure of nearly $82,000.
On September 20, 1864, ground was broken for enlargement of the state house and the building was ready for occupancy at the convening of the legislature on June 6, 1866, at a cost of $200,000. The changes made increased the depth of the building on the west side and added a French roof story on the west side and one on the north and south wings. It enlarged representatives’ hall and the senate chamber. The outward appearance of the building was materially improved by the construction of the portico and the removal of the doors leading into the north and south wings. A third remodelling and new addition was completed in 1910, when the enlarged New Hampshire state house was opened to public inspection and formally dedicated October 25 of that year. The cost for this project was $280,000 (Concord Monitor (Concord, NH), August 1, 1949).


References:

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

SeacoastNH. (1998). All about the Old NH Statehouse [in Portsmouth]. Retrieved from www.seacoastnh.com/all-about-the-old-nh-statehouse/?showall=1

Milton Vehicle Inspector Lyman Plummer (1912-1959)

By Muriel Bristol | October 29, 2023

Lyman Plummer was born in Milton, August 3, 1912, son of Bard B., Jr., and Ruth Lyman (Fall) Plummer.

ANOTHER ACCIDENT IN MILTON. Man and Four Children Have Narrow Escape When Auto Struck by Express Train. Porter Street crossing at Milton on the Conway branch of the Boston & Maine was the scene of another accident on Monday when the Boston and White Mountain express train No. 2012, due in this city at 12.48 p.m., struck an automobile containing Plummer and four children. Mr. Plummer, who had been to Rochester on a business trip, had as passengers Lyman and Lillian Plummer, Plummer’s Ridge, and Paul and Dorothy Plummer of Billerica, Mass. The children’s ages ranged from 6 to 16 years. He was returning home and was almost on the Porter street crossing, scene of many fatal accidents in last few years, when he saw the express approaching. He swerved his machine and the front end struck of the coaches, damaging the steps the car, then ripping the handles and steps from the Pullman cars. The automobile was smashed and all the occupants thrown out. The injured were treated by Dr. M.A. Hart. Mr. Plummer escaped with cuts on his hands; Lyman Plummer was cut and bruised about the face. The others had cuts and bruises not of a serious nature (Portsmouth Herald, July 15, 1924).

Future father-in-law Frank I. Whitehouse died of pulmonary tuberculosis on North Street in Farmington, NH, July 12, 1928, aged forty-three years, two months, and six days. He was a merchant. J.L. McLaughlin, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Lyman Plummer received $3.00 from the Town of Milton, in 1928, for “cleaning up ashes.”

Bard B. Plummer, a farmer (general farming), aged fifty years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of twenty-six years), Ruth L. [(Fall)] Plummer, aged forty-three years (b. NH), and his children, Bard Plummer, aged eighteen years (b. NH), Lyman Plummer, aged seventeen years (b. NH), Dorothy Plummer, aged eleven years (b. NH), and Jane Plummer, aged seven years (b. NH). Bard B. Plummer owned their farm on Plummer’s Ridge, which was valued at $10,000. They had a radio set. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Fred P. Jones, a farmer (general farming), aged seventy years (b. NH), and Mary B. [(Plummer)] Wallingford, a widow, aged eighty-five years (b. NH).

UNION. Mrs. Grace Littlefield, Mrs. Beatrice Kingman, Miss Virginia Littlefield, Bard and Lyman Plummer attended the joint installation at Wolfeboro on Tuesday evening (Farmington News, February 1, 1935).

Lyman Plummer received $15.60 from the Town of Milton, in 1935, for “minor repairs and expenses.”

UNION. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Drew, Miss Pauline Lord and Lyman Plummer motored through the mountains, Sunday (Farmington News, October 30, 1936).

Milton sent Lyman Plummer to Concord, NH, as its NH State Representative for the 1939-40 biennium.

In the first year of his term, Rep. Plummer asked NH Attorney General Thomas P. Cheney whether he could simultaneously accept an appointment as a Strafford County Deputy Sheriff.

Hon. Lyman Plummer, Member of the House of Representatives, Milton, New Hampshire.
Dear Mr. Plummer:
Replying to your inquiry as to whether you can accept an appointment as a deputy sheriff without affecting your right to your seat in the House of Representatives, it is my opinion that the two offices are not incompatible and that there is no legal 
limitation of your right to hold both offices at the same time. While in any manner concerning the right to a seat in the House of Representatives, we must always have in mind that the house is the judge of its own membership. I do not believe that you need have any hesitation in accepting an appointment as deputy sheriff if you so desire. The powers and duties of the two offices are not the same. The word “sheriff” as used in Article 95 does not include “deputy sheriff” and it is my opinion that this constitutional provision does not relate to the office of deputy sheriff.
Your truly, THOMAS P. CHENEY, Attorney General (NH Attorney General, 1940).

Lizzie L. [(Lyman)] Fall, a widow, aged eighty years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Sixteenth (1940) Federal Census. Her household included her grandson, Lyman Plummer, a county deputy sheriff, aged twenty-seven years (b. NH). Lizzie L. Fall owned their house on the Main Road, which was valued at $2,000. Their house appeared in the enumeration between those of Franklin B. Dickson, a finishing dept. foreman, aged thirty-eight years (b. NH), and Gertrude [(Gertrude)] Brailey, a widow, aged sixty-six years (b. NH).

Lyman Plummer registered for the WW II military draft in Milton, October 16, 1940. He was aged twenty-eight years (b. Milton, August 3, 1912), and was employed by the Strafford County Sheriff’s Office. His address was Union R.F.D. #1 and his telephone number was Milton-43-2. He stood 6′ tall, weighed 180 pounds, and had green eyes, brown hair, and a light complexion. His father, Mr. Bard Burge Plummer was his next of kin.

SURPRISE SHOWER TO MISS RUTH WHITEHOUSE. In honor of her approaching marriage to Lyman Plummer of Milton, a surprise shower was tendered Miss Ruth Whitehouse last Thursday evening, February 28, at the home of Mrs. Leslie Chase in Milton. Miss Whitehouse was greeted by approximately forty girl friends with whom she has become acquainted during her employment in that town. The home was attractively decorated with white wedding bells and beneath a large bell hanging over the dining room table were placed numerous useful gifts. The evening was devoted to the opening and admiring of these remembrances. The hostess served homemade Ice cream, fancy cakes, cookies and coffee. Miss Whitehouse’s mother, Mrs. Fannie Whitehouse of this town, was the only out of town attendant (Farmington News, March 6, 1942).

Lyman Plummer married in Farmington, NH, March 21, 1942, Ruth Evelyn Whitehouse. He was a motor vehicle department employee, aged twenty-nine years, and she was a secretary, aged twenty-six years. Rev. Leland L. Maxfield performed the ceremony. She was born in Farmington, NH, May 13, 1915, daughter of Frank I. and Fannie C. (Fall) Whitehouse.

PLUMMER-WHITEHOUSE. In a quiet home wedding last Saturday afternoon at four o’clock, Miss Ruth Whitehouse, daughter of Mrs. Frank I. Whitehouse o this town became the bride of Lyman Plummer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bard B. Plummer of Plummer’s Ridge, Milton. About twenty-five relatives assembled at the home of the bride where, the double ring service was performed by Rev. Leland B. Maxfield, pastor of the Milton Community church. The bride wore a navy blue ensemble, with a corsage of gardenias. Her bridesmaid was Miss Jane Plummer, sister of the groom, who was gowned in blue print and wore a corsage of modernistic daybreak carnations. The groom was attended by his brother, Bard Plummer. Beautiful cut flowers decorated the home for the occasion and following the ceremony a nice lunch was served and a three-tier wedding cake was cut by the bride. After a short period for the expression of good wishes from the guests the newlyweds left for a brief honeymoon trip to Boston. The bride always has lived in Farmington, where she graduated from the high school with the class of 1933. For some time she has been employed as a private secretary for Harlan Bryant in Milton and in that town she has added more to the wide circle of friendship which she enjoys in her home town. She has been one of the popular young ladies of this vicinity and among her fraternal associations during last year she was the presiding officer in Fraternal Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star. Mr. Plummer is a graduate of Nute high school in Milton, class of 1930, and is employed at the State House in Concord, in the motor vehicle department. These young people have a great many friends over a wide area who are expressing best wishes for a long and happy married life (Farmington News, March 27, 1942).

Lyman Plummer enlisted in the U.S. Army in Manchester, NH, August 7, 1942. He was a salesman, born in 1912. He stood 71 inches (5 feet, 11 inches) in height and weighed 171 pounds.

THREE LOCAL SELECTEES ACCEPTED BY U.S. ARMY. Raymond Cook and Woodrow Wilson Woode of Farmington are among the young men who have qualified for entrance into the United States armed forces and will leave town for Dort Devens, Mass., on Friday, August 21. Also in the group from this district will be Lyman Plummer of Milton, who is intimately known in Farmington (Farmington News, August 17, 1942).

Rochester. 23 Men Leave For Devens Induction. The following men, after acceptance for military service two weeks ago, when they passed their physical at Manchester, were sent yesterday by District Draft board No. 17 to Fort Devens for induction: Leon J. Gilbert, L.J.C. Camire, Herbert W. Varney, Robert J. Goupil, Fred L. Brown, Harry F. Lemke, Clarence W. Horne, John C. Hurd, James M. Wright and Robert H. Moore of Rochester, Harlan W. Copp of East Rochester. Joseph O. Ayotte, Raphael D. Ferland, Herbert A. Ramsey, and Robert C. Stevenson of Gonic, Lyman Plummer of Milton. Jeremiah H. Donovan, Ovilla Nadeau, Raymond W. Desmarais and Arthur J. Trombley of Somersworth, Woodrow W. Woods and Raymond R. Cook of Farmington and Arthur Evans of Laconia, a transfer (Portsmouth Herald, August 22, 1942).

PERSONAL. Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Plummer spent the week-end in Boston. Mr. Plummer, who is in the U.S. army, is stationed at Wakefield, Mass. (Farmington News, September 25, 1942).

PERSONAL. Private Lyman Plummer of Wakefield, Mass., spent the week-end at home with his wife, the former Miss Ruth Whitehouse (Farmington News, October 9, 1942).

PERSONAL. Private Lyman Plummer, of Boston, enjoyed a week-end leave at home with his wife (Farmington News, January 15, 1943).

PERSONAL. First class Lyman Plummer arrived home from Boston, Tuesday evening, for a short leave of absence from army duties. He will return to Boston Thursday and will be accompanied by his wife who will spend the week-end in that city (Farmington News, February 12, 1943).

PERSONAL. Mrs. Lyman Plummer spent the week-end in Boston with her husband, Private Plummer (Farmington News, May 21, 1943).

Rochester. Rochester Briefs. Pvt. Lyman Plummer, USA, stationed in Boston, called on Rochester friends Saturday. He had been called home to Farmington by the death of a relative (Portsmouth Herald, June 8, 1943).

Lyman (Ruth) Plummer appeared in the Boston, MA, directory of 1944, as a soldier – USA [U.S. Army) – with his house at 25 Allston street, Allston.

PERSONAL. Mrs. Lyman Plummer of Allston, Mass, spent several days in town this week visiting her mother [-in-law], Mrs. Lyman [Ruth] Plummer (Farmington News, April 21, 1944).

LETTERS FROM FARMINGTON MEN IN MILITARY SERVICE. Manilla, July 19, 1945. Dear Carl, Arrived here in the Philippines a short time ago and am sending along my new address, so you can start the paper my way again. I sure have missed reading the “News” since I left the States and it will mean more than ever now. Was very surprised to run into Lyman Plummer the other day. It was nice to talk to someone from home. The country and people here are interesting, and I got a kick out of watching them plow in mud with water buffalo. Manilla itself is pretty well ruined, but is being cleaned up fast. Please remember me to Bide, Abbie, and Bernice, and all the News staff, and many thanks for the paper. As ever, Pvt. Neal A. Irish, 31377524, 3rd Plat., 282 Repl. Co., 17th Bn., Care Postmaster, San Francisco, Cal. (Farmington News, August 3, 1945).

Lyman Plummer filed the last will of Harry T. Jones (1879-1947), who died of generalized carcinomatosis in Farmington, NH, July 15, 1947, aged sixty-seven years, eleven months, and eighteen days.

STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. To the Honorable Judge of Probate for the County of Strafford. Your petitioner, Lyman Plummer, in said County, respectfully represents that at a Court of Probate holden in Rochester in said County, on the 24th day of July, A.D., 1947, a certain instrument, purporting to be the last will and testament of Harry T. Jones, late of Farmington, in said County, deceased, was offered by Lyman Plummer, the executor therein named, for probate; that the same was proved, approved, and allowed as the last will and testament of said Harry T. Jones, in common form and without notice; that no appeal has been prosecuted or claimed, and that your petitioner is executor and legatee under the will of said deceased and interested in said will.  Wherefore he prays that the probate of said will may be reexamined and the same proved in solemn form before the Court of Probate for said County, and that the former probate thereof be decreed void or affirmed, as to law and justice shall appertain, agreeably to the laws of said State. Dated the 24th of July, A.D., 1947. Lyman Plummer (Farmington News, August 1, 1947).

Summoned by State Motor Vehicle Inspector Lyman Plummer for having an overloaded truck, Roger Larravierre of the Dover road entered a plea of guilty. Inspector Plummer said the truck was registered for 8,500 pounds, but was carrying a load of 11,720 pounds. Judge Emery imposed a fine of $25 and costs of $6.70 (Portland Press Herald (Portland, ME), April 29, 1948).

Somerville Trio Shaken by N.H. Steering Mishap. ROCHESTER, N.H., Aug. 17 – Roy W. Douglas, 30, of 131 Orchard st., Somerville, had a narrow escape today while enroute to Fryeburg to attend funeral services for his father, when the steering gear of his car broke on Route 16 just north of here. He told patrolman Clarence A. Woods and State Motor Vehicle Inspector Lyman Plummer that he was about a mile north of Rochester when the steering gear failed, and the machine headed for a pole. He pulled the wheel and it caught enough to send the machine across the road where it left the highway, went down an embankment and plowed into high bushes, 40 feet off the road. The front fender was damaged badly. The occupants of the car, Douglas, his wife and an uncle, escaped with minor injuries. A passing motorist gave the Douglas party a ride to Fryeburg where they arrived in time for the service (Boston Globe, August 18, 1949).

Lyman Plummer, a motor vehicle inspector (state motor vehicle dept.), aged thirty-seven years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Seventeenth (1950) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Ruth E. [(Whitehouse)] Plummer, aged thirty-four years, his daughter, Caroline F. Plummer, age two years (b. NH), and his mother-in-law, Fannie C. [(Fall)] Whitehouse, a repairer (shoe factory), aged sixty-two years. They resided in the “2nd house on right” when “proceeding north on State Highway No. 16 from point where State Highway crosses Great Brook to intersection of Farmington Road on left and Mill St. on right.”

Lyman and Ruth W. Plummer paid property taxes of $4,000 to the Town of Milton, in 1959. The properties (and their taxes) were the 60-acre Lizzie L. Fall farm ($3,500), the 55-acre Beechan lot ($250), and the 55-acre J.B. Lyman lot ($250). He and Stanley C. Tanner together paid property taxes on the 15-acre Littlefield lot ($50). The New England Telephone & Telegraph Co. [N.E. Tel & Tel. Co.] paid $100 in property taxes on Lyman Plummer land; presumably they were leasing it from him.

Lyman Plummer died of coronary thrombosis in his home on NH Rte. 16 in Milton, August 29, 1959, aged forty-seven years. He was an inspector for the NH Motor Vehicle Department and a WW II veteran. Percy C. Grigg, M.D., of Rochester, NH, signed the death certificate.

Deaths. LYMAN PLUMMER. MILTON, Aug. 31. (AP). Funeral Services will be held tomorrow for Lyman Plummer, 47, a widely known state motor vehicle inspector. He died at his home here Saturday night (Concord Monitor (Concord, NH), August 31, 1959).

The NH House of Representatives voted to extend its sympathy to Mrs. Ruth E. (Whitehouse) Plummer and her family after the death of its former member.

Mr. Reid of Milton offered the following resolutions: We have learned with regret of the death of Lyman Plummer of Milton, and Whereas, he was a former Representative from Milton, and at the time of his death a law enforcement officer for the Motor Vehicle Department, therefore be it Resolved, That we, the members of the House of Representatives of the General Court of New Hampshire, pay tribute to his services to his town, county, and state, and extend our sympathy to his family in its bereavement, and be it further Resolved, That the Clerk of the House transmit a copy of these resolutions to his widow, Mrs. Plummer. On a viva voce vote the resolutions were unanimously adopted.

Mother Ruth L. (Fall) Plummer died of coronary thrombosis in Milton, July 11, 1960, aged seventy-three years. Percy C. Grigg, M.D., of Rochester, NH, signed the death certificate.

Local Lines. DEATHS. MRS. BARD PLUMMER. Funeral is scheduled Thursday, July 14, for Mrs. Ruth L. Plummer, 73, who died Monday at her Plummer’s Ridge home after a long illness. Rev. Bradley Limes will officiate at services in the Community church. Burial will be in the Plummer-Palmer cemetery here. Mrs. Plummet was a lifelong resident of Milton. She served as school treasurer for 35 years and has been town clerk here for the past 15 years. She was a past matron and a 15-year member of Unity Chapter. She leaves her husband, Bard B. Plummer; a son, Bard Plummer, Jr., both of Milton; two daughters, Mrs. Dorothy Harrison of Somerville, Mass., Mrs. James Lovejoy of Acton, Me.; and five grandchildren (Farmington News, July 14, 1960).

Mother-in-law Fannie C. (Fall) Whitehouse died of circulatory failure at the Academy Nursing Home in Rochester, NH, July 27, 1961, aged seventy-three years. Percy C. Grigg, M.D., of Rochester, NH, signed the death certificate.

MILTON NEWS. WOMEN’S UNION. Mrs. Lyman Plummer served as hostess to the members of the Women’s Union of the Community Church for the monthly meeting. … A gift of money from Mrs. Catherine Gathmann and Mrs. Lyman Plummer will be used to purchase artificial flowers for use in the church on Sunday mornings. … Members are planning to hold a Maundy Thursday candlelight service in conjunction with the interim minister, Harold Roberts. Besides the choir, Mrs. Marguerite Brown, Mrs. Robert Taatjes, Mrs. Edwin Boggs, Mrs. Lyman Plummer, and Mrs. Edward Osgood, and Mrs. Harold Pinkham will participate. … Mrs. Lyman Plummer, the librarian of the Nute Library, recommended three books available for circulation, A biography of Howard Thurman, “Portrait of a Dreamer” by Elizabeth Yates, another biography “Eighth Moon,” and “Duet for a Lifetime,” about the original Siamese twins. Refreshments of cake, coffee, and tea were served by Mrs. Norris Provencher and Mrs. Ernest Pierce (Farmington News, March 25, 1965).

Father Bard B. Plummer, Jr., died of myocardial infarction at Frisbee Memorial Hospital in Rochester, November 20, 1970, aged ninety-one years. He was a farmer. Peter M. Ejarque, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Milton Woman’s Club. Twenty-two years ago, Milton Woman’s Club was seeing more red ink than black ink until a former Farmington resident, Mrs. Lyman Plummer (Ruth Whitehouse) came up with a brilliant idea – a bazaar. Over the years the bazaar has seen many changes. No longer is admission charged. No longer is there an exhibit. No longer is it two or even three days. No longer does it offer entertainment. No longer is it open evenings. No longer does it even last until three o’clock. In four hours from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 14, the club women will earn their 1971-72 budget. Like Apollo 15 the colors will be patriotic and the theme – Patriotism on Parade – will POP up everywhere through decorations, the dress of the workers, and even some of the items to be sold. (Farmington News, August 12, 1971).

Ruth E. (Whitehouse) Plummer died in Rochester, NH, October 10, 1992, aged seventy-seven years.

References:

Find a Grave. (2022, February 4). Bard B. Plumer, Jr. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/236491146/bard-b-plumer

Find a Grave. (2022, February 4). Lyman Plumer. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/236491524/lyman-plumer

Find a Grave. (2015, August 3). Frank I. Whitehouse. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/150165616/frank-i-whitehouse

NH Attorney General. (1940). Report of the Attorney General and Assistant Attorney General of the State of New Hampshire. Concord, NH.

Milton’s NH State Representatives – 1803-1902 – Redux

By John S. Frum | October 22, 2023

Today’s thumbnail biography of Rep. Frank G. Horne completes Ms. Bristol’s Milton’s NH State Representatives – 1803-1902. (Although she hopes to go back at some point and update those written before she was able to abstract a sampling of their roll call votes).

Milton would seem to have had no NH State Representative in 1841 which was the first year of the 1841-42 biennium. For a number of biennia that followed Milton had NH State Representative terms that were a year “out of synchronization” with the other towns, i.e., an even second year of one biennium and an odd first year of the following biennium, rather than the usual odd year and an even year sequence. The reason had not yet been discovered.

Beginning with the second year of the 1851-52 biennium, which would have been a redistricting year. Milton had next a twenty-five-year run of having two NH State Representatives, although one of them continued initially to be “out of synchronization” with the rest of the NH House until the 1855-56 biennium.

At some point, probably by the end of this year or beginning of 2024, Ms. Bristol intends to extend the sequence of these officials with Milton’s NH State Representatives, 1903-1954.

She will not bring this sequence forward past the Milton representative of the 1953-54 biennium, Rep. George W.H. Longley, as she is reluctant to provide information on living people that might be abused by scammers.


References:

Milton Salesman Frank G. Horne (1851-1923)

By Muriel Bristol | October 22, 2023

Frank George Horne was born in Milton, September 14, 1851, son of Frank D. and Sarah A. (Ricker) Horne.

Frank G. Horne married in Rochester, NH, March 24, 1872, Mary Carter Weeks, he of Milton and she of Wakefield, NH. He was a trader, aged twenty-three years, and she was aged twenty-two years. George S. Lindsey, J.P., performed the ceremony. She was born in Great Falls, Somersworth, May 24, 1852, daughter of Franklin S. and Harriet E. (Carter) Weeks.

(The known children of Frank G. and Mary C. (Weeks) Horne were: Herbert Francis Horne (1875–1941), Annie Jean Horne (1877–1962)), Ernest Garfield Horne (1882–1895), and Harriett Esther “Hattie” Horne (1887–1964)).

Son Herbert Francis Horne was born in Milton, August 10, 1875. Daughter Annie Jean Horne was born in Milton, October 26, 1877.

Frank G. Horn, works on shoes, aged thirty-eight years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal census. His household included his wife, Mary C. [(Weeks)] Horn, keeping house, aged twenty-eight years (b. NH), and his children, Herbert F. Horn, aged five years (b. NH), and Annie J. Horn, aged two years (b. NH). Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Sarah A. [(Ricker)] Horn, keeping house, aged sixty-two years (b. NH), and Samuel W. Wallingford, a farmer, aged forty-two years (b. NH).

Son Ernest Garfield Horne was born in Milton, December 6, 1881. (Republican U.S. President James A. Garfield was wounded by an assassin, July 2, 1881, and died of his wounds, September 19, 1881).

Daughter Harriet Esther “Hattie” Horne was born in Milton, December 30, 1887.

Son Ernest G. Horne died of peritonitis in Milton, March 7, 1895, aged thirteen years, three months, and one day. His father was a commercial agent [for the NY Biscuit Co.]. M.A.H. Hart, M.D., signed the death certificate.

NY Biscuit Company

Milton sent Frank G. Horne to Concord, NH, as its NH State Representative for the 1897-98 biennium. (He was a Republican). He was credited with 192 miles in travel allowance.

A souvenir legislative guidebook described Rep. Horne and his election:

Horne, Frank G. - 1897MILTON. FRANK G. HORNE, Republican, a member of the Committee on Insurance, was born at Milton, September 14, 1851. He is employed as a Traveling Salesman for the New York Biscuit Company of Cambridgeport, Mass., with which firm he has been connected for nine years. Mr. Horne is a member of Unity lodge, No. 62, A.F. and A.M., Unity [Union]. Vote of town: Frank G. Horne, Republican, 267 [76.5%]; Frank E. Norton, Democrat, 82 [23.5%] (Granite State Publishing Co., 1897).

Rep. Horne of Milton was appointed to the Insurance Committee. He was also appointed to a nine-member committee tasked with selecting House chaplains.

Prior to passage of the XVII Amendment, in 1913, U.S. Senators were elected by their state legislatures. (The original constitutional intent was that U.S. Senators would represent their separate states and state interests, rather than act as a super-legislature). On March 4, 1897, the NH House were to choose between Democrat former-U.S. Representative Hosea W. Parker (1833-1922) of Claremont, NH, and Republican incumbent U.S. Senator Jacob H. Gallinger (1837-1918) of Franklin, NH. Rep. Horne voted with the 265 members (83.3%) that voted for Sen. Gallinger, rather than with the 53 members (16.7%) that voted for Parker.

J.H. Gallinger, rep., New Hampshire – I would like woolen manufactures, lumber, granite, paper, agricultural products and possibly cotton manufactures protected by a tariff. I want it high enough to protect every American interest that comes in competition with foreign products (Boston Globe, March 8, 1897).

On March 11, 1897, Rep. Horne voted against indefinitely postponing a bill that sought to cease paying over liquor fines and penalties to informants and complainants (See Milton Under “Semi-Prohibition” – 1855-02).

An act to regulate the practice of pharmacy and the sale of spirituous and malt liquors for medicinal, mechanical, scientific, and sacramental purposes. The question being upon the adoption of the resolution reported from the committee, discussion ensued. On a viva voce vote, the resolution was adopted, and the bill indefinitely postponed. Mr. Hurlin of Antrim demanded the yeas and nays. The roll was called and 169 gentlemen voted in the affirmative and 115 in the negative, as follows:

Rep. Horne was one of 115 members (40.5%) that voted in the negative, rather than one of the 169 members (59.5%) that voted in favor of indefinite postponement.

Daughter Annie J. Horne taught at the West Milton district school in 1897-99 (See Milton’s West Milton Teachers, 1885-23).

Frank G. Horne of Milton was allotted 10,000 Lake Trout Fry for stocking by the NH Fish & Game Commissioners from their Laconia, NH, station, in 1898 (NH Fish & Game, 1899).

Frank G. Horne, a commercial traveler, aged thirty-eight years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of twenty-five years), Mary C. [(Weeks)] Horne, aged forty-eight years (b. NH), and his children, Herbert F. Horne, a commercial traveler, aged twenty-four years (b. NH), Annie J. Horne, a school teacher, aged twenty-two years (b. NH), and Hattie E. Horne, at school, aged twelve years (b. NH). Frank G. Horne owned their farm, free-and-clear. Mary C. Horne was the mother of four children, of whom three were still living. Their house appeared in the enumeration between those of John P. Hayes, butchering, aged sixty-seven years (b. NH), David Wallingford, a farmer, aged eighty-one years (b. NH).

The NH General Court authorized incorporation of the Milton Water Works Company, March 21, 1901, with initial board members Malcom A.H. Hart, Charles H. Looney, S. Lyman Hayes, Charles D. Jones, Fred B. RobertsHarry Avery, George E. Wentworth, Joseph H. AveryIra W. Jones, Arthur W. Dudley, Everett F. Fox, Henry F. Townsend, Freeman H. Lowd, William T. Wallace, Frank G. Horne, Charles A. Jones, and Nathaniel G. Pinkham. It established itself July 19, 1899, with Harry L. Avery as its treasurer (NH Secretary of State, 1901).

Son Herbert F. Horne married (1st) in Gloucester, MA, August 26, 1903, Florence Madeline Wilson, he of Milton and she of Gloucester, NH. He was a merchant, aged twenty-eight years, and she was at home, aged twenty-eight years. Rev. F.H. Reed performed the ceremony. She was born in Gloucester, NH, May 12, 1874, daughter of Thomas and Louisa (Logan) Wilson.

The Strafford County Commissioners elected Frank G. Horne of Milton as one of their seven County Agents, in April 1907 (Farmington News, April 5, 1907).

Daughter Harriet E. Horne married in Milton, June 4, 1907, Ralph Waldo Cobb, she of Milton and he of Dover, NH. He was a cashier, aged eighteen years, and she was aged nineteen years. Rev. M.P. Dickey performed the ceremony. Cobb was born in Orange, MA, September 1, 1888, son of George O. and Ella (Haskins) Cobb.

Annie J. Horne married in Bethel, ME, September 15, 1908, Charles Lafayette Beaton, she of Milton and he of Madison, NH. He was a railroad agent, aged twenty-six years, and she was a housekeeper, aged thirty years. He was born in Jefferson, NH, May 3, 1882, son of Charles C. and Allie E. (Hill) Beaton. (He was a brother of Milton’s long-serving B&M Railroad station agent, Hugh A. Beaton).

Frank G. Horne, a salesman (U.S. Biscuit Co.), aged fifty-eight years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Thirteenth (1910) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of thirty-five years), Mary [(Weeks)] Horne, aged fifty-seven years (b. NH). Frank G. Horne owned their farm, free-and-clear. Mary Horne was the mother of four children, of whom three were still living. Their house appeared in the enumeration between those of Clarence M. Wallingford, a farmer, aged fifty-seven years (b. NH), and James H. Horne, a farmer, aged fifty-eight years (b. NH).

Nabisco Graham Crackers

Herbert F. Horn, a U.S. Biscuit Co. salesman, aged thirty [thirty-five] years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Thirteenth (1910) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of ten [seven] years), Florence [(Wilson)] Horn, aged thirty-six years (b. MA). Herbert F. Horn rented their house. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Frank M. Tibbetts, a portable mill sawyer, aged fifty-five years (b. NH), and James J. Buckley, a general practice practitioner, aged thirty-three years (b. NH).

Charles Beaton, a B.&M. railroad freight agent, aged twenty-eight years, headed a Milton household at the time of the Thirteenth (1910) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of two years), Annie [(Horne)] Beaton, aged thirty-two years (b. NH). Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Hugh Beaton, a B.&M. railroad station agent, aged thirty-six years (b. OH), and Charles E. Piper, a railroad station helper, aged twenty years (b. NH).

Ralph W. Cobb, a biscuit company cashier, aged twenty-one years (b. MA), headed a Dover, NH, household at the time of the Thirteenth (1910) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of three years), Harriet Cobb, aged twenty-two years (b. NH), and his roomer, Grace Foss, a print works stenographer, aged thirty-one years (b. NH). Ralph W. Cobb rented their house at 258 Washington Street.

Daughter-in-law Florence M. [(Wilson)] Horne divorced her husband, Herbert F. Horne, in Strafford County court, October 13, 1911. She alleged extreme cruelty (one had to allege something). (She married (2nd) in Gloucester, MA, December 29, 1915, John E. Martin, she of Gloucester, MA, and he of West Peabody, MA, and she died in Gloucester, MA, June 19, 1958).

ACTON. Mrs. Alice Young and Mrs. Frank G. Horne visited Mrs. B.B. Grant Thursday of last week (Sanford Tribune (Biddeford, ME), December 31, 1915).

Son Herbert F. Horne married (2nd) in Farmington, NH, June 16, 1918, Amy Maude Barker, he of Dover, NH, and she of Farmington, NH. He was a salesman, aged forty-two years, and she was a lady, aged forty-one years. Rev. A.T. Everett performed the ceremony. She was born in Farmington, NH, August 8, 1876, daughter of John H. and Luella T. (Leighton) Barker.

ACTON. (Special to the Tribune). Mrs. Frank Horne is making some very nice tugs and stair carpets on her weaving machine. They are on sale at her home in Acton (Sanford Tribune (Biddeford, ME), December 12, 1919).

Frank G. Horne, retired, aged sixty-eight years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Mary C. [(Weeks)] Horne, aged sixty-seven years (b. NH). Frank G. Horne owned their farm on Plummer’s Ridge Road, free-and-clear. Their house appeared in the enumeration between those of John R. Horne, a farmer, aged sixty-six years, and Amos D. Wallingford, a teamster (owner), aged thirty years.

Herbert F. Horne, a traveling salesman, aged forty-four years (b. NH), headed a Farmington, NH, household at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Maud B. [(Barker)] Horne, aged forty-three years (b. NH), and his sister-in-law, Ethel Barker, an office telephone operator, aged forty-one years (b. NH). Herbert F. Horne rented their house on Lone Star Avenue.

Charles L. Beaton, a telegraph operator, aged thirty-eight years (b. NH), headed a Portsmouth, NH, household at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Annie H. [(Horne)] Beaton, aged forty-two years (b. NH). Charles L. Beaton rented their house at 50 Orchard Street.

Ralph W. Cobb, a commercial salesman, aged thirty-one years (b. MA), headed a Dover, NH, household at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Hariet [(Horne)] Cobb, aged thirty-two years (b. NH), and his daughter, Miriam Cobb, aged six years (b. NH). Ralph W. Cobb rented their house at 258 Washington Street.

Frank G. Horne died of cardiac dilation at Plummer’s Ridge in Milton, November 27, 1923, aged seventy-two years, two months, and thirteen days. Charles C. Rogers, M.D., signed the death certificate.

LIST OF FLOWERS. Following is the list of floral tributes at the funeral of Frank G. Horne held at the home on Plummer’s Ridge last Friday afternoon, November 30. Spray white carnations and chrysanthemums from Wife, wreath of mixed flowers, three children, pillow of roses and chrysanthemums, “At Rest,” Mr. and Mrs. C.A. Horne, Mr. John Horne, Miss Mattie Horne, Miss Maude Horne, wreath of roses and chrysanthemums, Miss Miriam Cobb; basket of pink and red roses, National Biscuit Co; spray white and pink carnations, Mrs. Allie Mitchell and family; spray daisies and chrysanthemums, Mrs. Herbert Seavey and Mrs. Charles Abbott; spray pink and white chrysanthemums, Mrs. George Ireland; spray yellow chrysanthemums, Mrs. Perkins, Miss Marr; spray white chrysanthemums, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Gates; wreath, Christian Service League, Portsmouth; spray carnations, Mr. and Mrs. George Cobb, spray of carnations, Dr. and Mrs. C.C. Rogers; spray lavender chrysanthemums, Mr. and Mrs. Allen de Rochemont; spray yellow and white chrysanthemums, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Johnson (Farmington News, December 7, 1923).

Herbert F. Horne, a salesman (National Biscuit Co.), aged fifty-four years (b. NH), headed a Farmington, NH, household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of twelve years), Amy M. [(Barker)] Horne, aged fifty-three years (b. NH), and his sister-in-law, Ethel Barker, a telephone office operator, aged fifty-one years (b. NH). Herbert F. Horne owned their house at 8 Lone Star Avenue, which was valued at $4,000. They had a radio set.

Charles L. Beaton, a railroad ticket agent, aged forty-eight years (b. NH), headed a Portsmouth, NH, household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of twenty-one years), Annie H. [(Horne)] Beaton, aged fifty-three years (b. NH), his niece, Gladys M. Beaton, a public school teacher, aged twenty-five years (b. NH), and his roomer, Sarah A. Mcdonald, a public school teacher, aged twenty-two years (b. MA). Charles L. Beaton rented their house at 50 Orchard Street, for $41.50 per month. They had a radio set.

Ralph W. Cobb, a commercial traveler (National Biscuit), aged forty-one years (b. MA), headed a Dover, NH, household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of twenty-two years), Harriet E. [(Horne)] Cobb, aged forty-two years (b. NH), his daughter, Mariam J. Cobb, aged seventeen years (b. NH), and his mother-in-law, Mary C. [(Weeks)] Horne, aged seventy-seven years. Ralph W. Cobb owned their house at 665 Central Street, which was valued at $5,500. They had a radio set.

Mary C. (Weeks) Horne died of a cerebral hemorrhage at Wentworth Hospital in Dover, NH, August 8, 1930, aged seventy-eight years, two months, and fourteen days. R.G. Blanchard, M.D., signed the death certificate.

OBSERVE 25TH ANNIVERSARY. Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Beaton of Orchard street entertained Mr. and Mrs. Ralph W. Cobb and Miss Cobb of Dover on Saturday, in observance of Mr. and Mrs. Cobb’s 25th wedding anniversary. Mrs. Cobb is a sister of Mrs. Beaton. A number of relatives from Farmington were present to join in the happy occasion. An anniversary dinner was greatly enjoyed and Mr. and Mrs. Cobb were presented with many beautiful gifts, including silverware. A bouquet of 25 roses was the gift of Mrs. Herbert Seavey (Portsmouth Herald, June 6, 1932).

MILTON, N.H. In a bower of apple blossoms, Harriet E. Horne, youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank G. Horne, was married Tuesday afternoon to Ralph W. Cobb. The Rev. M.P. Dickey officiated (Sanford Tribune (Biddeford, ME), June 15, 1933).

Herbert Horne, a retired salesman, aged sixty-four years (b. NH), headed a Farmington, NH, household at the time of the Sixteenth (1940) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Maude B. [(Barker)] Horne, housework, aged sixty-three years (b. NH), and his sister [-in-law], Ethel Barker, housework, aged sixty-two years (b. NH). Herbert F. Horne owned their house on Lone Star Avenue, which was valued at $4,200. They had all resided in the same house in 1935.

Charles L. Beaton, a B.&M. R.R. Ticket agent & telegraph operator, aged fifty-seven years (b. NH), headed a Portsmouth, NH, household at the time of the Sixteenth (1940) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Annie H. [(Horne)] Beaton, aged sixty-one years (b. NH). Charles L. Beaton rented their house at 50 Orchard Street, for $32.50 per month. They had both resided in the same house in 1935.

Ralph Cobb, a salesman (wholesale biscuit), aged fifty-one years (b. MA), headed a Dover, NH, household at the time of the Sixteenth (1940) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Harriet [(Horne)] Cobb, aged fifty-two years (b. NH), and his daughter, Miriam Cobb, a stenographer (doctor’s office), aged thirty-seven years (b. MA). Ralph Cobb owned their house at 665 Central Street, which was valued at $4,500. They had all resided in the same place in 1935.

Son Herbert F. Horne died of cardiac failure in Farmington, NH, April 10, 1941, aged sixty-five years, seven months, and twenty days. He was a retired salesman. J.L. McLaughlin, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Brother Of Local Woman Dies. Herbert Horne of Farmington, brother of Mrs. Charles L. Beaton of 50 Orchard street, Portsmouth, died at Farmington yesterday. He was 65 years of age widely known as a biscuit salesman. He retired about a year ago. He is survived by his wife and, in addition to his sister in this city, he is survived by another sister, Mrs. Ralph Cobb of Dover (Portsmouth Herald, April 11, 1941).

MISS COBB BRIDE. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph W. Cobb of Dover, N.H., announce the marriage of their daughter, Miriam J., t0 Herbert T. Butts, son of Mrs. E.S. Butts of Wyamissing, Penn., and the late Layton H. Butts. The wedding took place June 8 in the Community Church in Milton, N.H., with a reception following at the Summer home of the bride’s parents in Milton. Rev. Ralph S. Huffer of the First Parish Congregational Church in Dover officiated (Boston Globe, June 27, 1946).

Son-in-law Charles F. Beaton died of a gastro-intestinal hemorrhage in Portsmouth Hospital in Portsmouth, NH, February 24, 1948, aged sixty-five years, nine months, and twenty-one days. He was a ticket agent and telegraph operator. Louisa M. Norton, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Recent Deaths and Funerals. Charles L. Beaton. Portsmouth, N.H., Feb. 24 – Charles L. Beaton, 65, veteran railroad man and Boston and Maine Railroad ticket agent for 15 years died today after a brief illness. Mr. Beaton entered the railroad service as a telegrapher for the Maine Central at North! Conway 40 years ago and had been a resident of Portsmouth for 37 years. Before taking the Portsmouth post he worked at Milton and Hampton, N.H., and East Saugus and West Lynn, Mass. He was a member of St. John’s Lodge, FAM; Washington Chapter, RAM; Davenport Council, R&SM; DeWitt Clinton, KT; the North Congregational Church and the Order of Railroad Telegraphers, all of Ports mouth. Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Annie Beaton and a sister, Mrs. Josephine Rolfe of Bridgton Maine (Portland Press Herald (Portland, ME), February 25, 1948).

Maude B. [(Barker)] Horne, a secretary (bl’g & loan), aged seventy-three years (b. NH), headed a Farmington, NH, household at the time of the Seventeenth (1950) Federal Census. Her household included her sister, Ethyel Barker, aged seventy-two years (b. NH).

Annie H. [(Horne)] Beaton, aged seventy-two years (b. NH), headed a Dover, NH, household at the time of the Seventeenth (1950) Federal Census. She resided at 665 Central Street, Apartment A.

Ralph W. Cobb, a salesman (retail bread co.), aged sixty-one years (b. MA), headed a Dover, NH, household at the time of the Seventeenth (1950) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Harriet E. [(Horne)] Cobb, aged sixty-two years (b. NH). They resided at 665 Central Street, Apartment B.

Son-in-law Ralph W. Cobb died of diabetes mellitus with acidosis in Wentworth-Dover Hospital in Dover, NH, July 1, 1955, aged sixty-six years. He was a salesman of biscuit products. Samuel J. King, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Daughter Annie J. (Horne) Beaton died of myocardial infarction at 118 Loust Street in Dover, NH, June 4, 1962, aged eighty-four years. She was a teacher. Jesse M. Galt, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Daughter Harriet E. (Horne) Cobb died in 1964.

Daughter-in-law Maude B. (Barker) Horne died in Rochester, NH, June 6, 1969, aged ninety-two years.


References:

Find a Grave. (2018, October 13). Annie Jean Horne Beaton. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/193956666/annie-jean-beaton

Find a Grave. (2018, October 13). Harriet Esther Horne Cobb. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/193956726/harriet-esther-cobb

Find a Grave. (2018, October 13). Ernest Garfield Horne. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/193956639/ernest-garfield-horne

Find a Grave. (2016, April 15). Frank G. Horne. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/161126713/frank-george-horne

Find a Grave. (2023, March 3). Herbert Francis Horne. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/250109046/herbert-francis-horne

NH Fish & Game. (1899). NH Fish & Game Commissioners’ Report. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=i_dBAQAAMAAJ&pg=RA1-PA24

Granite State Publishing Co. (1897). A Souvenir of New Hampshire Legislators. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=5HsUAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA60

NH General Court. (1897). Journals of the Honorable Senate and House of the State of New Hampshire. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=1GBMAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA797

NH Secretary of State. (1901). Laws of the State of New Hampshire [Milton Water Works]. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=vJxGAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA781

Wikipedia. (2023, August 22). Nabisco. Retrieved from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nabisco

Milton Farmer Joseph Plummer, Jr. (1820-1907)

By Muriel Bristol | October 15, 2023

Joseph Plummer, Jr. [III], was born in Milton, March 11, 1820, son of Joseph [Jr.] and Sarah “Sally” (Brown) Plummer. (Enoch W. Plummer was his brother).

Father Joseph Plummer [Jr.] died in Milton, January 3, 1826, aged thirty-nine years.

Sarah [(Brown)] Plummer headed a Milton household at the time of the Fifth (1830) Federal Census. Her household included one female aged 40-49 years [herself], one female aged 20-29 years [Caroline Plummer], one male aged 20-29 years, one male aged 15-19 years [Enoch W. Plummer], one female aged 15-19 years, two males aged 10-14 years [Bard Plummer and Joseph Plummer], one female aged 5-9 years [Sarah Plummer]. Her household appeared in the enumeration between those of Levi Jones and Jos. P. Burrows.

Sarah [(Brown)] Plumer headed a Milton household at the time of the Sixth (1840) Federal Census. Her household included one female aged 50-59 years [herself], five males aged 20-29 years [Enoch W. Plumer, Bard Plumer, Joseph Plumer, and others], one female aged 20-29 years [Caroline Plumer], and one female aged 15-19 years [Sarah Plumer]. Five members of her household were engaged in Agriculture. Her household appeared in the enumeration between those of Benjamin Roberts and Levi Jones.

Joseph Plummer married (1st) in Somersworth, NH, October 30, 1844, Adaline Frances Baker, she of Somersworth, NH. She was born in Somersworth, NH, May 24, 1820, daughter of Moses and Sarah “Sally” (Thoms) Baker.

Marriages. In Somersworth, on the 30th ult., by Rev. Mr. Willey, Mr. Joseph Plumer of Milton, to Miss Adaline F. Baker, daughter of Hon. Moses Baker of S. [Somersworth] (Dover Enquirer, November 12, 1844).

Father-in-law Moses Baker died in Gorham, ME, March 25, 1847, aged eighty-one years.

(The known children of Joseph and Adaline F. (Baker) Plummer were: Moses Baker Plummer (1848–1938), Joseph Plumer [III] (1850–1907), and Sarah Bell Plumer (1854–1854)).

Son Moses Baker Plummer was born in Milton, April 4, 1848. He was a namesake for his maternal grandfather, Moses Baker.

Joseph Plumer, a farmer, aged thirty years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Seventh (1850) Federal Census. His household included Adaline S. [(Baker)] Plumer. aged thirty years (b. NH), and Moses B. Plumer, aged two years (b. NH). Joseph Plumer had real estate valued at $4,000. Their household appeared in the enumeration between Nathaniel W. Burnham. overseer of the alms house, aged forty-two years (b. NH), and Nahum Tasker, a farmer, aged fifty years (b. NH).

Son Joseph Plumer [III] was born in Milton, September 28, 1850. Daughter Sarah Bell Plumer was born in Milton, August 6, 1854. She died in Milton, September 7, 1854, aged one month.

Adaline F. (Baker) Plummer died of neuralgia in Milton, June 30, 1858, aged thirty-eight years, one month, and six days.

The Milton Selectmen of 1860 were C.H. Goodwin, Jos. Plumer, and M.W. Shapleigh.

Joseph Plummer, a farmer, aged forty years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household included Moses B. Plummer, aged eleven years (b. NH), Joseph Plummer [III], aged eight years (b. NH), J.L. Gerrish, a farm laborer, aged thirty-seven years (b. NH), Irene Gerrish, a housekeeper, aged thirty-eight years (b. NH), and Charles Hammons, a boarder, aged sixty years (b. NH). Joseph Plummer had real estate valued at $6,000 and personal estate valued at $2,000. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of an unoccupied house (with Albert Nason, a farmer, aged forty-five years, just beyond), and [his brother,] E.W. Plummer, a farmer, aged forty-five years (b. NH).

The Milton Selectmen of 1861 were Jos. Plumer, M.W. Shapleigh, and Jos. Cook.

Joseph Plumer received an initial five-year appointment as a Milton justice-of-the-peace, June 14, 1862.

Joseph Plummer married (2nd) in Saxonville, [Framingham,] MA, October 1, 1863. Hannah D. Clark, he of Milton and she of Framingham, MA. He was a farmer, aged forty-three years, and she was aged thirty-two years. Rev. George E. Hill performed the ceremony. She was born in Sanbornton, NH, December 18, 1830, daughter of Joseph H. and Sally Clark / John and Betsy (Taylor) Clark.

MARRIAGES. In Saxonville, Mass., 1st inst., Joseph Plumer, Esq., of Milton, to Miss Hannah D., daughter of John H. Clark, formerly of Sanbornton (Dover Enquirer, October 15, 1863).

Joseph Plummer paid a $2 tax for his carriage (valued at $125) in the U.S. Excise Tax of May 1864.

Joseph Plummer received a renewal five-year appointment as a Milton justice-of-the-peace, June 14, 1867. (Luther Hayes received an appointment that same day).

Mother Sarah “Sally” (Brown) Plumer died of dropsy in Milton, July 27, 1867, aged eighty-two years. She was a widowed farmer.

Joseph Plummer, a farmer, aged fifty years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. His household included Hannah D. [(Clark)] Plummer, keeping house, aged forty years (b. NH), and Joseph Plummer, a farm laborer, aged nineteen years (b. NH). Joseph Plummer had real estate valued at $9,000 and personal estate valued at $4,240. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Enoch F. Mason, a farm laborer, aged twenty-nine years (b. NH), and [his brother,] Enoch W. Plummer, a farmer, aged fifty-five years (b. NH).

Son Joseph Plummer [III] married, circa 1872, Carrie W. Fall. She was born in Lebanon, ME, December 14, 1853, daughter of Isaac W. and Mary Elizabeth (Clark) Fall.

Joseph Plummer received a renewal five-year appointment as a Milton justice-of-the-peace, May 3, 1872.

Joseph Plumer submitted the following report on Milton agriculture to the NH Board of Agriculture. Many towns reported that the so-called Canadian “horse disease” had been prevalent in their town in the prior Fall [1872] season. About one horse in forty, i.e., 2.5% of the horses, reportedly died of the disease. Plumer reported that seven-eighths [87.5%] of Milton horses had taken sick, but that none had died.

MILTON. [Reported by Joseph Plumer]. 1. Some earn money, not make it. 2. Do not believe the farms of Milton as a whole are paying one per cent profit. The great majority attend to their business, but not as closely as traders and people in other occupations. They make some improvements; have very little money at interest. 3. Three per cent of farms are given up to wood and pasturage. There are frequent cellars without houses. 4. There seems to be a stop to leaving the farms just now. All young people have gone. 5. It is generally thought farmers pay more than their proportion of the public taxes, and that stock in trade can be kept from the view of the assessors. 6. Neat stock is improving mostly by a mixture of Short Horn blood. 7. Seven-eighths of the horses had the disease last fall. Those not worked and kept out doors escaped. None died. Do not consider horses injured by the disease. 8. Few sheep, and they are profitable. No disease. About one hundred dogs taxed. 9. Wood growing less. Lumber mainly exported. 10. Chief crops grass, barley and oats. 11. Apples. 12. Labor scarce, especially in doors (NH Dept. of Agriculture, 1873).

Milton sent Joseph Plummer and Elbridge W. Fox to Concord, NH, as its NH State Representatives for the year 1873. Rep. Plumer was assigned to the Joint Committee on Engrossed Bills, and Rep. Fox was assigned to the Committee on the Normal School.

On Tuesday, June 10, 1873, Rep. Plumer of Milton submitted the petition of Alden F. Kidder (1845-1900) and seventeen others, citizens of Milton, praying that the Portsmouth, Great Falls & Conway Railroad might be authorized to connect with the Dover Railroad. Similar petitions were submitted by other representatives from citizens of Portsmouth, Somersworth, Dover, Wakefield, Brookfield, Wolfeboro, Ossipee, and Freedom, NH.

Joseph Plummer received a renewal five-year appointment as a Milton justice-of-the-peace, April 10, 1877.

Joseph Plumer, aged sixty years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Hannah D. [(Clark)] Plumer, aged forty-nine years (b. NH), and his help, Minnie M. Langley, at house, aged fourteen years (b. NH), and Lafayette Rines, at house, aged eighteen years (b. NH). Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Lydia Varney, keeping house, aged fifty-one years (b. NH), and Enoch W. Plumer, a farmer, aged sixty-five years (b. NH).

Joseph Plumer, Jr. [III], a farmer, aged twenty-nine years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Carrie W. [(Fall)] Plumer, keeping house, aged twenty-six years. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Enoch F. Mason, a farmer, aged thirty-nine years (b. NH), and Christer L. Jones, a farmer, aged thirty-six years (b. NH).

Joseph Plummer received a renewal five-year appointment as a Milton justice-of-the-peace, March 30, 1882.

Joseph Plummer received a renewal five-year appointment as a Milton justice-of-the-peace, March 11, 1887.

Son Moses B. Plummer married in Milton, July 28, 1890, Elizabeth J. Hussey, he of Milton and she of Acton, ME. He was a farmer, aged forty-two years, and she was a teacher, aged thirty-three years. Rev. Frank Haley performed the ceremony. She was born in Acton, ME, May 13, 1857, daughter of Ralph R. and Martha J. (Lyon) Hussey.

Joseph Plummer received a renewal five-year appointment as a Milton justice-of-the-peace, March 15, 1892.

Joseph Plumer [Jr.], a farmer, aged eighty years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of thirty-seven years), Hannah B. [(Clark)] Plumer, aged sixty-nine years (b. NH). Joseph Plumer owned their farm, free-and-clear. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Bard B. Plumer, a farmer, aged fifty-three years (b. NH), and Calvin Mason, a farmer, aged fifty-three years (b. NH).

Joseph Plummer [III], a farmer, aged forty-nine years (b. NH), headed a Rollinsford, NH, household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of twenty-eight years), Carrie [(Fall)] Plummer, aged forty-six years (b. ME), his son, Jay Plummer, aged sixteen years (b. MA), and his servant, Harry Clem, a farm laborer, aged nineteen years (b. Nova Scotia). Joseph Plummer rented their farm. Carrie Plummer was the mother of one child, of whom one was still living.

Joseph Plummer [Jr.] died of progressive muscular atrophy at Plummer’s Ridge in Milton, March 5, 1907, aged eighty-six years, eleven months, and twenty-five days. He was a farmer and a lifelong resident of Milton. James J. Buckley, M.D., signed the death certificate.

LOCAL. Mr. Joseph Plummer of Milton, one of the most respected men of this county, has passed away at the age of eighty-five years (Farmington News, March 8, 1907).

OBITUARY. Joseph Plumer, a widely known and respected citizen of Milton, died at his home March 5, 1907, within six days of his eighty-seventh birthday. is illness extended over a period of six years, being confined to the bed almost four years.
He was born at Milton at the old homestead March 11, 1820, and was the son of Sally (Brown) and Joseph Plumer. He himself built the house where he has resided for sixty-five years and in which he died. His early education was received in the district schools and South Berwick, Strafford and Parsonfield academies. At the age of nineteen he entered Phillips Exeter where he showed a great aptitude for mathematics and in his later years he developed a remarkable proficiency on the subject. He was married in 1844 to Adaline Frances Baker, daughter of Hon. Moses Baker of Somersworth, N.H., who died in 1858, leaving two sons, Joseph, Jr., and Moses Baker. He was married again in 1863 to Hannah D. Clark of Framingham, Mass., daughter of John N. Clark of Sanbornton, N.H. Mr. Plumer held various offices in his town, has been a member of the House of Representatives and a delegate to the constitutional convention in 1876; in politics he was a Republican. He was one of the original corporators of the Norway Savings Bank of Rochester and also of the First National bank of the same city.
Besides conducting a large farm he was largely engaged in stock raising and in the wood and lumber traffic. Mr. Plumer was intensely interested in education and in the youth, an interest which knew no abatement in the patient years of his illness and his many visitors during that period never failed to be impressed with his thoughtfulness for people and affairs about him. Ever foremost to encourage and support what he considered for the best of the community he was a worth exponent of a rugged ancestry and a man of many sterling qualities, kind impulses and numerous private benefactions. He attended and supported the Congregational church. He leaves a widow and two sons and four grandsons.
Nothing could better testify to the respect in which Mr. Plumer was held than the host of friends who gathered at his bier and the many beautiful floral tributes.
What grander tribute can we bring, To ease the heart of pain; What greater monument than this, He did not live, in vain (Dover Enquirer, March 14, 1907).

MILTON MILLS, N.H. Joseph Plummer, one of our oldest and most influential citizens, died at his home on Plummer’s Ridge Tuesday morning, after a very long illness (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), March 15, 1907).

Son Joseph Plummer, Jr. [III] died of typhoid at Plummer’s Ridge in Milton, April 11, 1907, aged fifty-six years, six months, and thirteen days. James J. Buckley, M.D., signed the death certificate. He was a married farmer, who had previously resided in Lowell, MA.

MILTON, N.H. There were three deaths in this community last week in hardly more than twenty-four hours. Joseph Plummer, son of the late Joseph Plummer, Esq., aged 56 years and six months, and Abbie A. Wentworth, at South Milton, aged 83 years. These died Friday and the next day while sitting at the table. Hiram Whitten, on Lebanon side, passed away, aged 74 years, six months (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), April 26, 1907).

Moses B. Plumer, a farmer (general farm), aged sixty-two years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Thirteenth (1910) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of twenty-one years), Elizabeth J. [(Hussey)] Plumer, aged fifty-two years (b. ME), his children, Frances Plumer, aged eighteen years (b. NH), Joseph Plumer, aged fifteen years (b. NH), and Dwight H. Plumer, aged thirteen years (b. NH), his hired man, M.A. Charles, a laborer (general farm), aged fifty-nine years (b. ME), his servant, Abbin F. Charles, a private family servant, aged fifty-seven years (b. NH), and his mother-in-law [step-mother], Hannah D. [(Clark)] Plumer, aged seventy-nine years (b. NH). Moses B. Plumer owned their farm, free-and-clear.

ACTON. During the past week Miss Elizabeth Gerrish entertained at Well Sweep farm Mrs. John Lord, Tuesday; Rev. Danno Johnson, wife and child, Wednesday; Mrs. Wm Wilson and wife of Union, N.H.; Mrs. Moses B. Plummer and Mrs. Fred Jones of Plummer’s Ridge, Milton, N.H., and Mrs. Henry Horn of this town, Saturday. Miss Gerrish had a very busy week but enjoyed it fully (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), June 24, 1910).

Daughter-in-law Mrs. Carrie W. Plummer appeared in the Lowell, MA, directory of 1910, 1911, and 1913, as a housekeeper at 100 Appleton street.

Hannah D. (Clark) Plummer died of chronic valvular disease of heart at Plummer’s Ridge in Milton, September 2, 1912, aged eighty-one years, eight months, and fifteen days. She had resided in Milton for forty-five years, i.e., since circa 1867, with her previous residence having been in South Framingham, MA. James J. Buckley, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Daughter-in-law Mrs. Carrie W. [(Fall)] Plummer appeared in the Lowell, MA, directory of 1914, as having moved to Nashua, NH. (Her son, Jay B. Plummer, appeared in the Nashua, NH, directory of that year as a lumber surveyor, with his house at 35 Gillis street. He would “remove to Worcester, MA,” in 1916).

Daughter-in-law Elizabeth J. (Hussey) Plummer died of pernicious anemia at Plummer’s Ridge in Milton, May 15, 1918, aged sixty-one years, and two days. She had resided there for twenty-seven years, i.e., since circa 1890, with her previous residence having been in Acton, ME. James J. Buckley, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Death of Mrs. Moses Plummer. Mrs. Moses Plummer, wife of Moses Plummer, a very much respected lady of Milton, is dead at her home at Plummer’s Ridge after several weeks’  illness. The deceased was one of Milton’s best known ladies and is survived by a wide circle of relatives and friends (Dover Enquirer, May 17, 1918).

Moses B. Plummer, a farmer (owner), aged seventy-one years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census. His household included his sister-in-law, Carrie W. [(Fall)] Plummer, a widow, aged sixty-six years (b. ME). Moses B. Plummer owned their farm on Plummer’s Ridge Road, free-and-clear. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Bard B. Plummer, a farmer, aged forty years (b. NH), and Calvin Mason, a farmer, aged seventy-five years (b. NH).

Moses B. Plummer, retired, aged eighty-two years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. His household included his son, Joseph L. Plummer, aged thirty-five years (b. NH), and his sister-in-law, Carrie W. [(Fall)] Plummer, a housewife (private family), aged seventy-six years (b. ME). Moses B. Plummer owned their farm on Plummer’s Ridge, which was valued at $7,500. They did not have a radio set. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Mary B. [(Plummer)] Wallingford, a widow, aged eighty-five years (b. NH), and Calvin Mason, a farmer (general farming), aged eighty-five years (b. NH).

Son Moses B. Plummer died in Milton, September 27, 1938, aged ninety years, five months, and twenty days.

MOSES PLUMMER, FORMER LAND BARON AND LUMBER KING OF MILTON, A SUICIDE AT 90 YEARS. The lifeless body of Moses Plummer, 90-year-old former land baron and lumber king of Milton, was found by a searching party near his home on Plummer’s ridge shortly after six o’clock on Tuesday night. Death had resulted from a self-inflicted gash in the throat, the wound having been made with a heavy pocket knife. The body was viewed by Medical Referee Dr. Forrest L. Keay of Rochester, and turned over to a Rochester undertaker for burial and funeral arrangements. The tragedy was discovered by Warren Burroughs, J.W. Wishert and Wilfred Gilbert, who were members of a searching party composed of over two hundred towns people, including the American Legion, who responded to an alarm sounded shortly after four o’clock. Mr. Plummer left his home about 1.30, and when he failed to reappear neighbors started a search that ended in a general turnout, and the finding of the body about 400 feet from his home. During the morning Mr. Plummer had visited Rochester in company with his son Joseph, and while in the city procured a haircut and appeared to be in the best of spirits. He was a lifelong resident of Milton, the son of Joseph and Adeline (Baker) Plummer and for many years was active in the business and affairs of his town to which he gave a deep devotion. He was well known in Farmington and throughout Strafford County, and much sympathy is expressed for three sons, Joseph of Milton, Frances B. and Dwight H. Plummer of Boston, and a niece, Mrs. J.J. Buckley of Milton. He was one of the oldest members of the A.O.U.W. in this section. Funeral arrangements have not been announced at the hour of going to press (Farmington News, September 30, 1938).

Jay Plummer, a farm laborer (dairy farm), aged fifty-six years (b. MA), headed an Auburn, MA, household at the time of the Sixteenth (1940) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Annie B. [(Miner)] Plummer, aged fifty-six years (b. New Brunswick), his children, Lillian Plummer, a library assistant (public library), aged thirty-one years (b. MA), Paul Plummer, a sales clerk (retail grocery), aged twenty-two years (b. MA), Levere Plummer, aged seventeen years (b. MA), and his mother, Carrie [(Fall)] Plummer, aged eighty-six years (b. ME). Jay Plummer owned their house at 13 Rockland Road, which was valued at $4,600. They had all resided in the “same house” in 1935, except Carrie Plummer, who had resided in Milton.

Daughter-in-law Carrie W. (Fall) Plummer died in Cambridge, MA, November 17, 1941, aged eighty-seven years.

Attend Funeral Services For Mrs. C.W. Plummer. Funeral services for Mrs. Carrie W. Plummer, 87, were held yesterday afternoon at the Spencer Funeral home on South Main street. The Rev. Leland L. Maxfield, pastor of the Community church in Milton, officiated. Mrs. Plummer, widow of Joseph Plummer, died Friday at the Cambridge City hospital. She was born in Lebanon, Me., Dec. 14, 1853, daughter of Isaac W. and Mary Elizabeth (Clark) Fall. She leaves a son, Jay B., two grandsons, Paul and Levere Plummer, and a granddaughter, Miss Lillian Plummer, all of Mass. Burial was in the family lot in the Plummer cemetery in Milton, with a committal service at the grave by the Rev. Mr. Maxfield. Bearers were Bard and Lyman Plummer, Paul and Levere Plummer (Portsmouth Herald, November 18, 1941).


References:

Find a Grave. (2016, May 23). Moses Baker. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/163060639/moses-baker

Find a Grave. (2016, May 25). Adaline Frances Baker Plumer. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/163260581/adaline-frances-plummer

Find a Grave. (2022, February 4). Elizabeth J. Hussey Plumer. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/236486883/elizabeth-j-plumer

Find a Grave. (2021, November 8). Joseph Plumer [Sr.]. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/233852590/joseph-plumer

Find a Grave. (2016, May 24). Joseph Plumer [Jr.]. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/163223950/joseph-plummer

Find a Grave. (2016, May 24). Joseph Plumer, Jr. [III]. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/163224061/joseph-plummer

Find a Grave. (2016, May 27). Moses Baker Plumer. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/163365234/moses-baker-plummer

Find a Grave. (2022, February 4). Sarah B. Plumer. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/236486459/sarah-b-plumer

NH Dept. of Agriculture. (1873). Third Annual Report of the Board of Agriculture. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=8uVIAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA464

NH General Court. (1873). Journals of the Honorable Senate and House of Representatives of the State of New-Hampshire. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=aQhLAAAAMAAJ&pg=RA1-PA253

South Milton Farmer Theodore Lyman (1812-1891)

By Muriel Bristol | October 8, 2023

Theodore Lyman was born in Milton, August 23, 1812, son of Theodore C. and Dorothy (Allen) Lyman.

Future mother-in-law Lydia (Walker) Bragdon died in Milton, July 10, 1826, aged forty-seven years.

Theodore Lyman married, probably in Milton, circa 1837-38, Betsy Bragdon. She was born in Milton, in 1818, daughter of Samuel and Lydia (Walker) Bragdon. (Her younger sister, Louisa A. Bragdon, would marry in Milton, February 4, 1841, Luther Hayes, he of Rochester, NH, and she of Milton).

(The known children of Theodore and Betsy (Bragdon) Lyman were Andrew R. Lyman (1838-1906), and Samuel Lyman (1840-1856)).

Son Andrew R. Lyman was born in Milton, December 5, 1838.

Theodore Lyman 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 [Amanda M. ((Dixon)) Thurston) Lyman), one male aged 15-19 years, and one male aged under-5 years [Andrew R. Lyman] One member of his household was engaged in Agriculture.

Son Samuel Lyman was born in Milton, in 1840. Father-in-law Samuel Bragdon died in Milton, December 11, 1840, aged sixty-nine years, nine months.

Theodore and Betsy (Bragdon) Lyman were charter members of a Freewill Baptist Church that held its inaugural meeting in their South Milton home, May 5, 1843. He became its deacon.

A Free Will Baptist Church was organized at the house of Theodore Lyman on the fifth day of May 1843, with seventeen members, viz., Hazen Duntley, Daniel M. Quimby, Luther Hayes, William Fernald, James O. Reynolds, Drusilla [(Pickering)] Jewett, Betsey [(Bragdon)] Lyman, Mary H. Downs, Mrs. D.W. Wedgwood, William B. Lyman, Theodore Lyman, E.S. Edgerly, Dearborn Wedgwood, Phoebe [(Leighton)] Duntley, Sophia Quimby, Sally F. Downs, Mrs. A. Hubbard. Luther Hayes was chosen clerk, and Theodore Lyman deacon. Rev. William H. Waldron was the first pastor, having charge of the church about one year, and was succeeded by Rev. Horace Stanton. Mr. Stanton’s health failing he was soon obliged to resign the pastorate, and the Rev. Uriah Chase was called for a time. This church having no meeting house or suitable place for public worship, soon discontinued Sabbath meetings, but kept up prayer and conference meetings until May 1, 1850, at which time the organization became extinct. There were ten members added to the church after its organization. Although for the lack of pecuniary ability to build a meeting house and support the regular preaching of the gospel, this little church was obliged, for the time being to give up its organization, many of its members continued to feel a lively interest in the cause, and in 1859 succeeded in building the present very neat and tasty meeting-house, which was dedicated on the 25th day of December of that year (Scales, 1914).

Mother Dorothy (Allen) Lyman died in Milton, November 25, 1848, aged seventy-nine years.

Theodore Lyman, a farmer, aged thirty-eight years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Seventh (1850) Federal Census. His household included Betsey [(Bragdon)] Lyman, aged thirty-two years, Andrew R. Lyman, aged eleven years, and Samuel Lyman, aged nine years. Theodore Lyman had real estate valued at $3,500. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Luther Hayes, a lumber dealer, aged thirty years (b. NH), and Thomas Leighton, a machinist, aged sixty-four years (b. NH).

Son Samuel Lyman died in Milton, July 19, 1856.

Theodore Lyman, a farmer, aged forty-seven years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household included Betsey [(Bragdon)] Lyman, aged forty-two years (b. NH), Andrew R. Lyman, a farmer, aged twenty-one years (b. NH), and Ann F. Emerson, aged fifteen years (b. NH). Theodore Lyman had real estate valued at $6,000 and personal estate valued at $1,000. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Luther Hayes, a farmer, aged forty years (b. NH), and Henry B. Scates, a farmer, aged twenty-eight years (b. NH).

Son Andrew R. Lyman married in Milton, September 7, 1862, Amanda L. Thurston, he of Milton and she of Lebanon, ME. He was a farmer, aged twenty-one years, and she was aged twenty-four years. Rev. Ezra Tuttle performed the ceremony. She was born in Lebanon, ME, circa 1838, daughter of Benjamin and Hannah (Jones) Dixon.

Milton sent Theodore Lyman and Charles Jones (1833-1893) to Concord, NH, as its NH State Representatives for the 1863-64 biennium. They were allotted 90 miles as the length of their round-trip mileage.

On the third and final day of the Battle of Gettysburg, July 3, 1863, the NH House considered a series of joint resolutions on “National Affairs.” (News reports of the Union victory at Gettysburg, PA, would not reach New Hampshire until Tuesday, July 7, 1863). The majority committee report in support of President Lincoln read as follows.

Whereas, The General Government cannot in honor negotiate for peace with traitors and rebels in arms against its rightful authority; and whereas, a permanent and lasting peace cannot be obtained except through complete and triumphant victory; and whereas, neither the President nor Congress can constitutionally entertain any proposition which has for its object the dismemberment of the Government or the dissolution of the Union; therefore,
Resolved, by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court convened, That the State of New Hampshire pledges anew her entire resources for the integrity of the Union, the support of the Constitution, the enforcement of the laws, and the continued prosecution of the war until victory crowns our arms, and until the supremacy of the Federal Government is re-established throughout our entire country.
Resolved, That by the Federal Constitution all the powers necessary for the preservation of the Union and Government established by it are granted to that government and may be lawfully exercised to suppress the present entirely causeless and unjustifiable rebellion; and rebels against that Government and Constitution cannot rightfully claim the protection of either until they submit to the authority, and acknowledge the supremacy of both.
Whereas, The steadfast endurance, constancy and valor of the soldiers who have gone forth from New Hampshire, upon the march, in camp, and upon many a well fought field are honorable alike to themselves, and to the State, and demand her lasting gratitude; therefore,
Resolved, by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court convened, That New Hampshire hereby most heartily thanks all her sons who have thus gone forth to aid in crushing the rebellion, and to peril their lives for the defence of Liberty and the Union.

Democrat Rep. Harry Bingham (1821-1900) of Littleton, NH, moved that the three resolutions be voted upon separately. Reps. Lyman and Jones of Milton voted with the majority of 171 representatives [60.1%] that voted in favor of the first two resolutions, rather than with the 110 representatives [39.9%%] that voted against them. The final resolution passed on a voice vote.

The much lengthier minority committee report objected to President Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation, as an unconstitutional seizure of private property. i.e., the slaves, his suppression of the press, the trial and banishment of former Democrat Congressman Clement L. Vallandigham of Ohio, who was leader of the anti-war “Copperheads,” as well as Lincoln’s general conduct of the war. It read as follows.

Resolved, We do solemnly, and without mental reservation, declare our fidelity to the Constitution of the United States, and to the laws of the United States made in pursuance thereof, as the supreme law of the land and we will to the best of our ability, support, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States against all of its enemies, and we demand of all public rulers and magistrates, State and National, that they shall do likewise.
2. We repudiate, as dangerous and revolutionary, the doctrine that a state of war confers upon the President of the United States, or his subordinates in authority any powers, executive, legislative, or administrative, over persons or property, above or beyond what are vested in him or them by the Federal Constitution. We admit no military necessity to justify any violation of the Constitution, which is the guide and safeguard of rulers and people alike, in peace and in war, and in all conditions of public affairs the military should ever be subordinate to this civil power.
3. That there is a manifest difference between the administration of the government and the government itself. The government consists of the civil and political institutions created by the Constitution, and to it the people owe allegiance. The administration are but the agents of the people, subject to their approval or condemnation, according to the merit or demerit of their acts.
4. That in the exercise of their right to differ with the Federal Executive, we enter our solemn protest against the Proclamation of the President of the United States, dated the first day of January, one thousand eight hundred and sixty-three, by which he assumes to emancipate slaves in certain States, holding the same to be unwise, unconstitutional and void.
5. That we declare our determined opposition to a system of emancipation by the States upon compensation to be made out of the treasury of the United States as burdensome upon the people, unjust in its very nature, and wholly without warrant of the Constitution.
6. That we declare that the power which has recently been assumed by the President of the United States, whereby, under the guise of military necessity, he has proclaimed and extended – or asserts the right to proclaim and extend –  martial law over States where war does not exist, and has suspended the writ of habeas corpus, is unwarranted by the Constitution, and its tendency is to subordinate civil to military authority, and to subvert our system of free government.
7. That we hail with pleasure and hope the manifestations of conservative sentiment among the people of the Northern States, in their elections, and regard the same as earnest of a good purpose on their part to co-operate with all other loyal citizens in giving security to the rights of every section, and maintaining the Union and the Constitution as they were ordained by the founders of the Republic.
8. Then whenever it becomes practicable to obtain a convention of all or three- fourths of the States, such body should be convened for the purpose of proposing such amendments to the Federal Constitution as experience has proved to be necessary to maintain that instrument in the spirit and meaning intended by its founders, and to provide against future convulsions and wars.
9. That the soldiers composing our armies merit the warmest thanks of the nation. Their country called and nobly did they respond. Living, they shall know a nation’s gratitude; wounded, a nation’s care; and dying, they shall live in our memories and monuments shall be raised to teach posterity to honor the patriots and heroes who offered their lives at their country’s altar. Their widows and orphans shall be adopted by the nation, to be watched over and cared for as objects truly worthy a nation’s guardianship.
10. That the arrest, imprisonment, pretended trial and actual banishment of Clement L. Vallandigham, a citizen of the State of Ohio, not belonging to the land or naval forces of the United States, nor to the military in actual service by alleged military authority, for no other pretended crime then that of uttering words of legitimate criticism upon the conduct of the Administration in power, and of appealing to the ballot box for a change of policy, (said arrest and military trial taking place where the courts of law are open and unobstructed,) and for no act done within the sphere of active military operations in carrying on the war we regard as a palpable violation of the following provisions of the Constitution of the United States:
1. Congress shall make no law … abridging the freedom of speech or of the press, or the right of the people peaceably to assemble and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.
2. The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures shall not be violated; and no warrants shall issue but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched and the persons or things to be seized.
3. No person shall be held to answer for a capital or otherwise infamous crime unless on a presentment or indictment of a grand jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces or in the militia when in actual service in time of war or public danger.
4. In all criminal prosecutions the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law.

On Friday, July 10, 1863, Reps. Lyman and Jones of Milton joined the majority of 162 representatives [57.0%] that voted against the minority committee report, rather than the 122 representatives [43.0%] that voted in favor of it.

[Editor: For those who might be thinking that the majority numbers seem somewhat low, a Keene, NH, writer observed that week that “It may be interesting to your Vermont readers to know something [of] how the news of the late victories are being received in New Hampshire, where copperhead proclivities, as you know, prevail to a much greater extent than in old Vermont”].

Father Theodore C. Lyman died of old age in Milton, July 30, 1863, aged ninety-two years.

On Thursday, June 16, 1864, The NH House passed a resolution seeking to have the U.S. Congress propose and pass what would become in the following year the Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

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

Rep. Jones of Milton voted with the 160 representatives [60.8%] that voted in favor of the resolution, rather than the 103 representatives [39.2%] that voted against it. (Rep. Lyman is not on record as having voted either way). The resolution passed the NH House and went on to the NH Senate. The actual Constitutional Amendment was in progress already in the U.S. Congress, and would come back to the NH House in the next legislative session.

On Wednesday, July 13, 1864, Rep. Lyman, and Rep. Jones of Milton, were among the 190 [67.4%] representatives that voted against moving the State Capitol from Concord, NH, to Manchester, NH, while another 92 [32.6%] representatives voted in favor of the move. The State Capitol remains in Concord, NH.

New Hampshire Capitol. A vigorous effort is being made to remove the State Capital from Concord, N.H., to Manchester. The Legislature is greatly excited and divided on the subject (Vermont Journal, July 9, 1864).

GENERAL SUMMARY. The New Hampshire Legislature have settled the question of the removal of their Capitol by voting by 90 majority that it remain at Concord (Union & Journal (Biddeford, ME), July 15, 1864).

On Thursday, July 14, 1864, Rep. Lyman, and Rep. Jones of Milton, were among the 229 [79.5%] representatives that voted in favor of providing relief for the creditors of the Sullivan Railroad, while another 59 [20.5%] representatives voted against providing relief for those creditors. (The Sullivan Railroad suffered serious train wrecks in 1860 and 1863).

Rep. William Little (1833-1893) of Manchester, NH, introduced a joint resolution on Saturday, July 16, 1864:

Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court convened, That the pay of the members of the Honorable Senate and House of Representatives shall be two dollars per day, in gold, for the year 1865 and afterwards.

The NH House voted to indefinitely postpone the resolution – despite its having been reduced by amendment from $2.50 in gold to $2.00 in gold – but Rep. Hill of Manchester, NH, made a motion to reconsider. Rep. Jones of Milton, and Rep. Lyman, were among the 148 [56.3%] representatives that voted against reconsideration, while another 115 [43.7%] representatives voted in favor of reconsideration. (One may note that at least 115 of the legislators had hoped to be paid their per diem in gold, rather than in inflationary paper “Greenback” currency).

Betsy (Bragdon) Lyman died in Milton, September 22, 1864, aged forty-six years, four months.

Theodore Lyman, a farmer, aged fifty-seven years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. His household included Susan Jenness, a housekeeper, aged twenty-nine years (b. NH). Theodore Lyman had real estate valued at $4,000 and personal estate valued at $7,655. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Henry B. Scates, a dealer in wood & lumber, aged thirty-eight years (b. NH), and a vacant building. (Hiram V. Wentworth, a shoe manufacturer, aged fifty-one years (b. NH), resided just beyond the vacant building).

Andrew R. Lyman, works in shoe factory, aged thirty years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Amanda M. [((Dixon) Thurston)] Lyman, keeping house, aged twenty-nine years (b. ME), and his daughters, Bertha L. Lyman, at school, aged five years (b. NH), and Florance N. Lyman, at school, aged five years (b. NH). Andrew R. Lyman had real estate valued at $1,200 and personal estate valued at $200. They shared a two-family house with the household of Joseph B. Wakeham, works for shoe factory, aged forty-six years (b. NH). Their two-family house appeared in the enumeration between those of Mehitable Lyman, keeping house, aged forty-seven years (b. NH), and George Lyman, a farmer, aged forty-two years (b. NH).

Theodore Lyman, a farmer, aged sixty-seven years (b. NH) headed a Milton household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his housekeeper, Susan A. Jenness, a housekeeper, aged thirty-nine years (b. NH). Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of James O. Reynolds, a shoe manufacturer, aged fifty-four years (b. NH), and George Lyman, a farmer, aged fifty-two years (b. NH).

Andrew R. Lyman, a stable keeper, aged forty years (b. NH), headed a Boston, MA, household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Manda M. [((Dixon) Thurston)] Lyman, keeping house, aged thirty-nine years (b. ME), and his daughters, Bertha L. Lyman, at school, aged fifteen years (b. NH), and Florence N. Lyman, at school, aged fifteen years (b. NH), and his servant, Katherine Caunan, works in family, aged eighteen years (b. Ireland). They resided on Chestnut Hill Avenue.

Theodore Lyman died of heart disease and dropsy in Milton, August 1, 1891, aged seventy-eight years, eleven months, and nine days. He was a widowed farmer. J.W. Lougee, M.D., of Rochester, NH, signed the death certificate.

Andrew Lyman, a retired farmer, aged sixty-one years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of thirty-eight years), Amanda M. [((Dixon) Thurston)] Lyman, aged fifty-eight years (b. ME). Amanda M. Lyman was the mother of three children, of whom two were still living. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of George Lyman, a farmer, aged seventy-two years (b. NH), and Woodbury H. Downing, a teamster, aged thirty-five years (b. NH).

Frank Tasker, a wharf foreman, aged thirty-eight years (b. MA), headed a Boston, MA, household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of five years), Florence [(Lyman)] Tasker, aged thirty-six years (b. NH), Theodore L. Tasker, aged three years (b. MA), his father-in-law (married thirty-eight years), Andrew Lyman, a landlord, aged sixty years (b. NH), his mother-in-law (married thirty-eight years), Amandy [((Dixon) Thurston)] Lyman, a landlady, aged fifty-nine years (b. ME), his brother-in-law (married nine years), Alvin Smith, a milk dealer, aged forty years (b. MA), and his sister-in-law (married nine years), Bertha [(Lyman)] Smith, aged thirty-six years (b. MA). Frank Tasker rented their apartment at 81 Parsons Street. Florence Tasker was the mother of one child, of whom one was still living.  Amandy Lyman was the mother of two children, of whom two were still living.

Son Andrew R. Lyman died of heart disease in Milton, September 14, 1906, aged sixty-seven years, nine months, and nine days. He had resided in Milton for fifteen years, i.e., since the death of his father in 1891, with his previous residence having been in Brighton, MA. James J. Buckley, M.D., signed the death certificate. (Burial in Newtonville, MA).

DEATHS. LYMAN – Suddenly, in Milton, N.H., Sept. 14, Andrew R. Lyman of Brighton, Mass., 67 yrs. 9 mos. Services at Milton at 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 16. Also services at his late residence, 29 Bentley st., Brighton, Tuesday, Sept. 18, time given later (Boston Globe, September 15, 1906).

Benjamin F. Tasker, a foreman (ice co.), aged forty-nine years (b. NH), headed a Boston, MA, household at the time of the Thirteenth (1910) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of fifteen years), Florence L. [(Lyman)] Tasker, aged forty-five years (b. NH), his son, Theodore L. Tasker, aged thirteen years (b. MA), and his mother-in-law, Amanda L. [((Dixon) Thurston)] Lyman, own income, aged sixty-nine years (b. ME). Benjamin F. Tasker owned their house at 29 Bentley Street, free-and-clear. Florence L. Tasker was the mother of one child, of whom one was still living.  Amanda L. Lyman was the mother of two children, of whom two were still living.

Amanda M. [((Dixon) Thurston)] Lyman, a widow, aged seventy-eight years (b. ME), headed a Boston, MA, household at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census. Her household included her son-in-law, Francis B. Tasker, aged fifty-eight years (b. NH), her daughter, Florence L. [(Lyman)] Tasker, aged fifty-one years (b. NH), her grandson, Lyman T. Tasker, a bookkeeper (soap dealers), aged twenty-two years (b. MA), and another daughter, Bertha L. [(Lyman)] Smith, a widow, aged fifty-one years (b. NH). They resided on Bentley Street.

Daughter-in-law Amanda M. ((Dixon) Thurston) Lyman died in Newton, MA, April 5, 1929.

DEATHS. LYMAN – In Brighton, April 5, Amanda M., widow of Andrew R. Lyman. Funeral services at her late residence, 29 Bentley st., Brighton, April 8, at 2:30 p.m. (Boston Globe, April 6, 1929).


References:

Find a Grave. (2013, September 20). Samuel Bragdon. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/117393846/samuel-bragdon

Find a Grave. (2016, August 7). Andrew R. Lyman. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/167877824/andrew-r-lyman

Find a Grave. (2013, August 15). Samuel Lyman. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/115540497/samuel-lyman

Find a Grave. (2013, August 15). Theodore Lyman. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/115539802/theodore-lyman

Find a Grave. (2013, August 17). Theodore Cushing “TC” Lyman. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/115612665/theodore-cushing-lyman

General Court. (1863). Journal of the House of Representatives of the State of New-Hampshire. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=d8dHAQAAMAAJ&pg=RA1-PA5

General Court. (1864). Journal of the House of Representatives of the State of New-Hampshire. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=xjotAQAAMAAJ&pg=RA1-PA5

Wikipedia. (2023, September 28). Clement Vallandigham. Retrieved from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clement_Vallandigham

Wikipedia. (2023, September 27). Copperhead (Politics). Retrieved from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copperhead_(politics)

Wikipedia. (2023, September 27). Emancipation Proclamation. Retrieved from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emancipation_Proclamation

Milton Grocer Charles Ayer Varney (1834–1893)

By Muriel Bristol | October 1, 2023

Charles Ayer Varney was born in Milton, May 19, 1833, son of John H. and Elizabeth “Betsy” (Cloutman) Varney.

Father John H. Varney died of rheumatic fever in Milton, in January 1850, aged fifty-five years.

Betsey W. [(Cloutman)] Varney, aged forty-nine years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Seventh (1850) Federal Census. Her household included Susan Varney, aged twenty-four years (b. NH), Lydia Varney, aged twenty-one years (b. NH), Ruth [(Varney)] Nutter, aged twenty years (b. NH), John H. Varney, a shoemaker, aged eighteen years (b. NH), Charles A. Varney, a shoemaker, aged sixteen years (b. NH), Betsey Varney, aged fourteen years (b. NH), Theron F. Varney, aged eight years (b. NH), James W. Nutter, a shoemaker, aged twenty-one years (b. NH), George Scates, a trader, aged twenty-four years (b. NH), John G. Drew, a manufacturer, aged twenty-nine years (b. NH), and John W. Nutter, a shoemaker, aged twenty-nine years (b. NH). Betsy W. Varney had real estate valued at $2,000. James W. Nutter had real estate valued at $1,000. George Scates had real estate valued at $2,000. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Ira Knox, a shoemaker, aged twenty years (b. ME), and Noah Warren, a shoemaker, aged twenty-four years (b. NH).

Future mother-in-law Sarah A. (Varney) Nute died in Dover, NH, in October 1850.

Charles A. Varney married, circa 1858, Sophia J. Nute. She was born in Milton, April 27, 1842, daughter of John C. and Sarah A. (Varney) Nute.

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

Milton sent Charles A. Varney and Enoch W. Plumer to Concord, NH, as its NH State Representatives for the 1861-62 biennium. Rep. Varney of Milton was assigned the Committee on Education. (Rep. Plumer of Milton was assigned the Committee on Division of Towns).

On Tuesday, June 25, 1861, Rep. Lyman D. Stevens (1821-1909) of Concord, NH, moved that a bill regarding the Concord & Portsmouth Railroad be postponed to the next legislative session. Reps. Varney and Plumer voted with the majority of 210 representatives [71.2%] that opposed postponement, rather than with the minority of 85 representatives [28.8%] that favored postponement.

On Tuesday, July 2, 1861, the House resumed its consideration of “An act for remodeling the militia” (the Civil War having broken out only three months before). Democrat Rep. Harry Bingham (1821-1900) of Littleton, NH, moved that the bill be amended to insert the word “white” just before the word “able-bodied.” Reps. Varney and Plumer voted with the majority of 154 representatives [57.0%] that opposed the amendment language, rather than with the minority of 116 representatives [43.0%] that favored it.

In the second year of his two-year biennium, Rep. Varney was assigned to the Committee on Towns and Parishes. (Rep. Plumer was assigned to the Committee on Printers’ Accounts).

On Thursday, June 19, 1862, Rep. Varney filed a bill with the Committee on Incorporations, which was entitled “An act authorizing the sale of the Union Meeting House at Three Ponds in the village of the town of Milton.” The bill passed during the afternoon of Tuesday, July 1, 1862. (The Union Meeting House building would become the Milton Classical Institute several years later (after the Civil War)).

On Monday, June 30, 1862, the House considered whether or not Isaac Emerson (1825-1885) of Windham, NH, had a right to a House seat. (The remonstrance of R.B. Jackson and others asserted that he should not be seated). Rep. Emerson himself moved that the Committee on the Judiciary should investigate and report on the matter:

Resolved, That the Committee on the Judiciary be instructed to report, for the satisfaction of the “contestants” having the merits of this case in view, first, What constitutes a legal ballot? second, What votes should be counted by the moderator in determining the majority and the result of an election?

The House Committee on the Judiciary returned their opinion that Mr. Emerson should not be seated, as the necessary threshold of 69 votes would have been slightly higher if the six votes for “Charles Butrick” had been counted with those received for “Charles E. Butrick.”

At the annual town-meeting in Windham, in March last, after ten or more ballotings for representative, Isaac Emerson was declared elected. The whole number of votes, as declared by the moderator on that ballot, was one hundred and thirty-six (136); necessary to a choice, sixty-nine (69); and Isaac Emerson, having sixty-nine votes, was declared elected. On that ballot there was put into the ballot-box as votes, one piece of paper containing the name of an animal, another containing the name of a woman, and some six others on which was the name of Charles Butrick; but that there was one by the name of Charles E. Butrick. It was also admitted that some of those persons who voted for Charles Butrick intended to vote for Charles E. Butrick. The moderator excluded all these names from the ballots, and then declared the result aforesaid. The remonstrants claim that at least those pieces of paper containing the name of Charles Butrick should be counted as ballots, while the sitting member claims that they should not be so received, and claims that they were rightfully excluded. … The committee are also of the opinion that tickets containing the name of an animal, or inanimate things, or a woman, ought to be rejected in such computation of the whole number of ballots, as not being within the spirit of the statute defining that term, and as trifling with the right of suffrage, and tending to bring it into ridicule and disgrace. …

Rep. Varney voted with the 45 [25.3%] that agreed with the committee report and voted not to seat Mr. Emerson, rather than with the 133 representatives [74.7%] that went against the committee report and voted to seat him. (Rep. Plumer voted instead with those that sought to seat Mr. Emerson). So, Rep. Emerson was seated.

On Tuesday, July 8, 1862, Rep. Lewis P. Cushman (1824-1904) of Landaff, NH, introduced a resolution whereby House members and staff might forgo two days’ pay and spend that money instead on a soldiers’ hospital.

Resolved, by the Senate and House of Representatives, in General Court convened, That the Clerk, in making up the pay-roll of the members and officers of the House of Representatives, be instructed to deduct from the same Saturday and Sunday, July 5 and 6, and that the Governor is hereby authorized to expend the same in furnishing the hospital provided for by the present Legislature for the use of our sick and wounded soldiers.

Rep. Charles W. Woodman (1809-1888) of Dover, NH, moved that the resolution be indefinitely postponed. Reps. Varney and Plumer voted with the majority of 178 representatives [68.5%] that favored postponement, rather than with the 82 representatives [31.5%] that opposed postponement.

Rep. George Holbrook (1830-1927) of Manchester, NH, made an alternate motion:

Resolved, That a committee of one from each county be appointed to solicit a subscription from each member of this House and honorable Senate, the same to be applied to furnishing the hospital for the sick and wounded soldiers. 

(These hospital furnishings votes are somewhat reminiscent of a supposed discussion between one Horatio Bunce and then U.S. Congressman Davy Crockett, probably circa 1829, as collected by Bettina Bien Greaves (of which an audio version may be found in the References)).

Charles A. Varney, dry goods & groceries, aged thirty-six years (b. NH), headed a Wakefield (“Union P.O.”), NH, household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. His household included Sophia J. [(Nute)] Varney, keeping house, aged twenty-nine years (b. NH). Charles A. Varney had personal estate valued at $2,075.

Father-in-law John C. Nute died in Milton, April 26, 1872. Mother Betsy W. (Cloutman) Varney died in Milton, March 18, 1879.

Charles A. Varney, an excelsior manufacturer, aged forty-six years (b. NH), headed a Wakefield, NH, household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Sophia J. [(Nute)] Varney, keeping house, aged thirty-eight years (b. NH). (Excelsior was wood shavings used as a packaging material, as Styrofoam “peanuts” are in our own time).

Charles A. Varney and Charles H. Hayes (1849-1916) moved to Haverhill, MA, in 1884, and there formed a box-making company under the name Varney & Hayes. (Hayes was a son of Luther and Louise A. (Bragdon) Hayes (see South Milton’s High Sheriff Luther Hayes (1820-1895))).

He [Charles H. Hayes] came to Haverhill in 1884 with Charles Varney, also of Milton, and together they bought the George W. Wentworth Wood and Paper Box factory and power plant on Granite street. The business was at that time located in the wooden building, which was destroyed by fire some years ago, and built originally for Gardner Brothers as a shoe factory. The firm name of Varney & Hayes was adopted and the two townsmen in business together for eight years, when Mr. Varney retired and Mr. Hayes, buying his share, continued in business alone (Paper Box Maker, September 1916).

Chas. A. Varney (Varney & Hayes) appeared in the Haverhill, MA, directory of 1885, as a box mnfr. at 30 Granite street, with his house at 375 Washington street. The firm of Varney & Hayes (Chas. A. Varney and Chas. H. Hayes) appeared as mnfrs. of paper and wooden boxes, at 30 to 36 Granite street. Partner Charles H. Hayes appeared as having his house still at Milton, N.H.

LOCALS. Charles A. Varney, of the firm of Varney & Hayes of Haverhill, Mass., was in town, Tuesday, renewing old acquaintances. Mr. Varney came to Farmington in 1863, and filled the position of assessor’s clerk for four years for the late Captain Herring [a nickname for shoe manufacturer Israel Hayes]. In ’67 he went into trade at Union, continuing in the same about 14 years, run the excelsior business (purchased of S.H. Buzzell) three years – clearing from the same about $12,000. Three years ago Mr. Varney and Charles Hayes of Milton bought Wentworth’s wood and paper box factory at Haverhill. The venture, thus far, has proved a financial success, the last inventory showing a profit of $45,000 for the three years, and this from an investment of less than $20,000. The firm’s success is a matter of congratulation to their many friends both here and in Milton. Mr. Varney is a prominent Mason, having been a member of the Fraternal lodge [since] about ’71. (Farmington News, July 22, 1887).

Varney & Hayes appeared in a list of the 20,000 “rich” New Englanders that had paid the highest taxes in 1888. They paid $594 in that year (Luce & Bridge, 1888).

Charles A. Varney (Varney & Hayes) appeared in the Haverhill, MA, directory of 1889, as a box mnfr. at 30 Granite street, with his house at 325 Washington street. Partner Charles H. Hayes had his house at 22 Franklin street.

MALE HELP WANTED. WANTED – a good man to fit wooden boxes; also a good first-class nailer on shoe boxes; apply at once. VARNEY & HAYES, Haverhill, Mass.” Sud7t my4 (Boston Globe, May 5, 1890).

Box Factory Damaged $1000. HAVERHILL, Mass., June 4. – Fire at Varney & Hayes’ wooden and paper box manufactory, Granite st., this afternoon, caused loss of $1000. The chimney in the boiler room was being burned out, and overheated bricks set the woodwork in the vicinity on fire. About 25 of the 75 people employed were obliged to quit work. Loss covered by insurance (Boston Globe, June 4, 1890).

Varney & Hayes expanded their Haverhill building, in September 1890, in order to make space for an auxiliary motor.

SEPTEMBER [1890]. Varney & Hayes, Haverhill, began extending their box factory building for the purpose of introducing a new engine of 450 horse power. … NOVEMBER. The largest engine in Haverhill put in the box factory of Varney & Hayes, 500 horse power, Corliss pattern (MA Bureau of Statistics, 1891).

Charles A. Varney (Varney & Hayes) appeared in the Haverhill, MA, directory of 1891, as a box mnfr. at 30 Granite street, with his house at 325 Washington street. Partner Charles H. Hayes had his house at 266 Washington street. The firm entry now included their steam power source.

Varney & Lane experienced a boiler explosion in their new engine, February 27, 1891.

BOILER EXPLOSIONS. BOX FACTORY (46). About 3 o’clock on Feb 27th one of the boilers at the works of Varney & Hayes, on Granite street, Haverhill, Mass., burst, causing a suspension power in their box factory and in the places depending upon their engine. The direct damage was slight. The engineer was badly scalded about the face by the escaping steam (The Locomotive, April 1891).

Varney & Hayes suffered a serious fire that completely gutted its building on Saturday, April, 30, 1892.

HAVERHILL’S BIG FIRE. Four Alarms, one False – Loss $28,000 – Caleb Hersey Drops Dead. HAVERHILL, April 30.- Flames burst from the basement window of Varney & Hayes’ box factory tonight at 8.30 o’clock. An alarm was sent in and the department quickly responded. Chief Charlesworth at once ordered a second alarm and a few minutes later a third. A few minutes after another fire started in the stable of A.S. Dinsmore on Essex and a part of the apparatus was sent there. The flames were soon under control, and when completely conquered the damage was found to be only about $800. Soon after the third alarm another was sounded, but it was soon found to be false. Dinsmore’s stable was in the centre of a lot of dilapidated wooden buildings, but fortunately they were not ignited. Among others who started for the scene was Caleb Hersey, a well-known and prominent citizen and an ex-shoe manufacturer. He was hurrying through Oak st., when he fell dead probably from heart disease. At 10.30 the fire was under control and at 10.45 was “all out.” The Varney & Hayes building was completely gutted and the loss on building and contents will be about $25,000. At 11 o’clock firemen were called for the second time to the Dinsmore stable, the fire having broke out again. All of the hay was removed and the flames quickly extinguished. The protective wagon was also called to J.H. Winchell factory on Locust for a slight fire (Boston Glober, May 1, 1892).

Charles A. Varney retired from Varney & Hayes in 1892. (Partner Charles H. Hayes bought his share). Likely he was not interested in participating in the rebuilding of their box factory. Varney planned instead to start a sanitarium, i.e., a rehabilitation facility, at Berwick, ME.

NEW CORPORATIONS. The Massachusetts Sanitarium Co. been organised at Berwick to establish sanitariums and maintain treatment for persons addicted to liquor, morphine, etc., with $10,000 capital stock, of which $5700 is paid in. The officers are: President, Charles A. Varney of Haverhill, Mass.; treasurer, Horace E. Bartlett of Haverhill, Mass. Certificate approved March 18, 1893 (Lewiston Sun-Journal (Lewiston, ME), March 20, 1893).

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

MILTON. John H. Varney, a former resident of Milton, shot himself twice in the neck at Haverhill, Mass., Saturday, and died after a few days. His body was brought here for burial (Farmington News, February 3, 1893).

Charles A. Varney died of a cerebral softening and cerebral hemorrhage in Haverhill, MA, June 2, 1893, aged fifty-nine years, thirteen days. He was a manufacturer.

FROM APOPLECTIC SHOCK. Charles A. Varney Dies at His Home in Haverhill. Mass. Haverhill, June 2. Charles A. Varney, aged 59 years, died last night from the effects of apoplexy, sustained last Wednesday evening. Deceased was born in Milton, N.H., where, in early life, he was engaged in the grocery business. Later he was in a similar business at Union, N.H. About nine years ago he came to Haverhill. and in company with C.W. Hayes engaged in shoe box manufacturing, in which business he continued until a year ago, when he retired. Mr. Varney was a member of Unity Lodge of Masons at Union, N.H. He leaves a wife but no children (Boston Globe, June 2, 1893).

Funeral of Charles A. Varney. Milton, N.H., June 5. The funeral of Charles A. Varney, who died in Haverhill, Mass., was held at the Congregational church this afternoon. The services were conducted by Rev. Mr. Dickey, and were largely attended. Unity lodge of Freemasons was present and escorted the remains to the Milton cemetery, performing their burial service previous to the interment (Boston Globe, June 6, 1893).

Hayes, CH - 1894Sophia J. (Nute) Varney had removed from Haverhill, MA, to Salmon Falls, i.e., Rochester, NH, before 1899. She had also a summer cottage at York, ME.

ALL THEY CAN ACCOMMODATE. York Beach Monopolized for at Least Two Months by Summer Visitors – Arrivals Past Week. … Mrs. Charles A. Varney of Salmon Falls opened her cottage on Long beach this week (Boston Globe, July 2, 1899).

Sophia A. [(Nute)] Varney, aged fifty-eight years (b. NH), headed a Rochester, NH, household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. Her household included her niece, Ethel G. Nute, aged seventeen years (b. NH), and Hilmer Sanson, at school, aged eleven years (b. NH). Sophia A. Varney rented their house at 12 Heaton Street.

Mrs. Sophia J. [(Nute)] Varney (Charles A.) appeared in the Rochester, NH, directories of 1902, 1905, and 1909, as having her house at 12 Heaton street.

Sophia [(Nute)] Varney, own income, aged sixty-seven years (b. NH), headed a Rochester, NH, household at the time of the Thirteenth (1910) Federal Census. She owned her house at 12 Heaton Street, free-and-clear.

Mrs. Sophia J. [(Nute)] Varney, widow of Charles A. Varney, appeared in the Rochester, NH, directories of 1912, and 1917, as having her house at 12 Heaton street.

Sophia J. [(Nute)] Varney, a widow, aged seventy-seven years (b. NH), headed a Rochester, NH, household at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census. She owned her house at 12 Heaton Street.

Mrs. Sophia J. [(Nute)] Varney, widow of Charles A. Varney, appeared in the Rochester, NH, directories of 1921, and 1924, as having her house at 12 Heaton street.

Sophia J. (Nute) Varney died of valvular heart disease at 12 Eaton Street in Rochester, NH, July 12, 1927, aged eighty-five years. two months, and fifteen days. Edson M. Abbott, M.D., signed the death certificate.


References:

Find a Grave. (2015, July 25). Charles H. Hayes. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/149749219/charles-h-varney

Find a Grave. (2016, November 13). John C. Nute. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/172705709/john-c-nute

Find a Grave. (2020, October 20). Charles Ayer Varney. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/217522900/charles-ayer-varney

Find a Grave. (2020, October 20). John Hanson Varney. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/217515882/john-hanson-varney

Greaves. Bettina Bien. (2009, May 7). Davy Crockett: Not Yours to Give. Retrieved from mises.org/library/not-yours-give

Luce & Bridge. (1888). Twenty Thousand Rich New Englanders: A List of Taxpayers who Were Assessed in 1888 to Pay a Tax of One Hundred Dollars Or More. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=aAkPAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA33

MA Bureau of Statistics. (1891). Annual Report on the Statistics of Manufactures. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=VoMkAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA398

NH General Court. (1861). Journals of the Honorable Senate and House of Representatives of the State of New Hampshire. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=zt43AAAAMAAJ&pg=RA1-PA146

NH General Court. (1862). Journal of the House of Representatives of the State of New-Hampshire. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=MQ8tAQAAMAAJ&pg=RA1-PA5

Wikipedia. (2023, April 18). Corliss Steam Engine. Retrieved from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corliss_steam_engine

Milton Farmer Enoch W. Plummer (1815-1896)

By Muriel Bristol | September 24, 2023

Enoch W. Plumer was born in Milton, April 4, 1815, son of Joseph [Jr.] and Sarah “Sally” (Brown) Plumer.

Father Joseph Plummer [Jr.] died in Milton, January 3, 1826, aged thirty-nine years.

Sarah [(Brown)] Plumer headed a Milton household at the time of the Fifth (1830) Federal Census. Her household included one female aged 40-49 years [herself], one male aged 20-29 years, one female aged 20-29 years, one female aged 15-19 years [Caroline Plumer], one male aged 15-19 years [Enoch W. Plumer], two males aged 10-14 years [Bard Plumer and Joseph Plumer], and one female aged 5-9 years [Sarah Plumer]. Her household appeared in the enumeration between those of Levi Jones and Jos. P. Burrows.

Sarah [(Brown)] Plumer headed a Milton household at the time of the Sixth (1840) Federal Census. Her household included one female aged 50-59 years [herself], five males aged 20-29 years [Enoch W. Plumer, Bard Plumer, and Joseph Plumer, and others], one female aged 20-29 years [Caroline Plumer], and one female aged 15-19 years [Sarah Plumer]. Five members of her household were engaged in Agriculture. Her household appeared in the enumeration between those of Benjamin Roberts and Levi Jones.

Enoch W. Plumer married, June 16, 1840, Orinda Ayers. She was born in Wakefield, NH, in 1817, daughter of Joseph and Olive R. “Ruth” (Nudd) Ayers.

(The known children of Enoch W. and Orinda (Ayers) Plumer were: John Tyler Plumer (1841–1868), Joseph Emmons Plumer (1842–1899), Mary Baker Plumer (1844–1939), Bard Burge Plummer (1846–1919), Sarah Plumer (1848–1931), Fanny W. Plumer (1851–1933), and Susan Plumer (1854–1878).

Enoch W. Plummer, son of Joseph and Sally Brown (Plummer), was born on the old home place in 1815. He followed farming in a general way and erected the barn now standing on the Plummer farm. He lived to reach the age of eighty-one years, dying in 1896; his wife had died the previous year, and both were buried in the cemetery on Plummer Ridge. Her maiden name was Orinda Ayers and their marriage was blessed with seven children: John T., Joseph E., May B., Bard B., Sarah, Fannie W., and Susan. Mr. Plummer was a Republican in politics, and at one time served as representative of the town of Milton. In addition to farming, he also was of a half interest in a saw mill, his partner being Lewis Plummer. He was a devout christian, a member of the Congregational church, and for more than forty years was a deacon in the church, death terminating that tenure (Scales, 1914).

Son John Tyler Plumer was born in Milton, June 3, 1841. Son Joseph Emmons Plumer was born in Milton, October 5, 1842.

Col. James J. Chesley commanded the Thirty-Third NH Militia Regiment in 1843. His staff included Lt. Col. Enoch W. Plumer; Maj. Jonathan W. Sanborn; Adjutant Leonard S. Nute of Alton, NH; and Quartermaster Moses H. Chesley of East Alton, NH (NH Adjutant General, 1843).

Daughter Mary B. Plumer was born in Milton, September 8, 1844.

Col. Enoch W. Plumer commanded the Thirty-Third NH Militia Regiment in 1844. His staff included Lt. Col. Jonathan W. Sanborn; Maj. John Churchill; Adjutant Leonard S. Nute of Alton, NH; and Quartermaster Moses H. Chesley of East Alton, NH (McFarland & Jenks, 1845).

Col. Enoch W. Plumer commanded the Thirty-Third NH Militia Regiment in 1845. His staff included Lt. Col. Jonathan W. Sanborn; Maj. John Churchill; Adjutant Leonard S. Nute of Alton, NH; and Quartermaster Moses H. Chesley of East Alton, NH (Farmer & Lyon, 1844).

Col. Enoch W. Plumer of Milton commanded the Thirty-Third NH Militia Regiment in 1846. His staff included Lt. Col. Jonathan W. Sanborn; Maj. Cyrus K. Sanborn of Brookfield, NH; Adjutant Isaac N. Fellows of Wakefield, NH; and Quartermaster Moses H. Chesley of East Alton, NH (Claremont Manufacturing Co., 1846).

Son Bard Burge Plummer was born in Milton, in 1846.

Father-in-law Joseph Ayers died in Wakefield, NH, August 26, 1847.

Daughter Sarah Plumer was born in Milton, in 1848.

Enoch Plumer, a farmer, aged thirty-five years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Seventh (1850) Federal Census. His household included Orinda [(Ayers)] Plumer, aged thirty-three years (b. NH), John T. Plumer, aged eight years (b. NH), Joseph E. Plumer, aged seven years (b. NH), Mary B. Plumer, aged five years (b. NH), Beard Plumer, and four years (b. NH), Sarah Plumer, aged two years (b. NH), Sarah [(Brown)] Plumer, aged sixty-six years (b. NH), and Sarah Plumer, aged twenty-eight years (b. NH). Enoch Plumer had real estate valued at $6,000. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of David Wallingford, a farmer, aged forty-nine years (b. NH), and David D.A. Robinson, a shoemaker, aged twenty-seven years (b. NH).

Mother-in-law Olive Ruth (Nudd) Ayers died in Wakefield, NH, September 20, 1852.

Daughter Susan Plummer was born in Milton, April 27, 1854.

The Republican party was founded in 1854 by anti-slavery activists who opposed the Kansas-Nebraska Act of that year.

In his latter years he [Enoch W. Plummer] supported the Republican party in politics (Biographical Review, 1897).

The NH State Agricultural Society awarded Enoch W. Plumer of Milton a $15 second-place prize for his stallion of seven years, Young Messenger, in November 1858 (NH Agricultural Society, 1860).

E.W. Plumer, a farmer, aged forty-five years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household included Orinda [(Ayers)] Plumer, aged forty-two years (b. NH), John T. Plumer, aged nineteen years (b. NH), Joseph E. Plumer, aged seventeen years (b. NH), Mary B. Plumer, aged fifteen years (b. NH), Bard B. Plumer, aged fourteen years (b. NH), Sarah Plumer, aged twelve years (b. NH), Fanny W. Plumer, aged nine years (b. NH), Susan Plumer, aged six years (b. NH), Sarah [(Brown)] Plumer, aged seventy-five years (b. NH), Caroline Wentworth, aged forty-six years (b. NH), and Thomas Wentworth, aged twenty years (b. NH). Enoch Plumer had real estate valued at $6,000 and personal estate valued at $1,500. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Joseph Plumer, a farmer, aged forty years (b. NH), and Charles Jones, a farmer, aged twenty-seven years (b. NH).

Milton sent Enoch W. Plummer and Charles A. Varney to Concord, NH, as its NH State Representatives for the 1861-62 biennium. Rep. Plumer of Milton was assigned the Committee on Division of Towns. (Rep. Varney of Milton was assigned the Committee on Education).

On Wednesday, June 11, 1861, Rep. George F. Bartlett (1826-1897) of Milford, NH, moved that a ten-member committee be appointed to seek one or more House chaplains. As a result, Rep. Plumer of Milton was appointed as the Strafford County member.

Resolved, That a committee of ten, one from each county, be appointed by the chair; to select some suitable clergyman to officiate as chaplain of the Legislature during the present session; and that prayer be offered each morning of the session, in the Representatives Hall, immediately preceding the forenoon session; and that the Governor and Council, and the Senate, be invited to attend.
Ordered, That Messrs. Bartlett of Milford, Nason of Hampton Falls, Plumer of Milton, Taylor of Sanbornton, Milliken of Effingham, Coffin of Concord, Edwards of Keene, Gallup of Plainfield, Tenney of Hanover, and Abbott of Northumberland, be said committee.

(His Plumer surname appeared in both forms – Plumer and Plummer – in House journals. This variance originated probably in eighteenth and early nineteenth century orthography. Duplicate letters might be represented as a single letter with a stroke over it, indicating that the single letter written stood for two identical paired letters).

On Tuesday, June 25, 1861, Rep. Lyman D. Stevens (1821-1909) of Concord, NH, moved that a bill regarding the Concord & Portsmouth Railroad be postponed to the next legislative session. Reps. Plumer and Varney voted with the majority of 210 representatives [71.2%] that opposed postponement, rather than with the minority of 85 representatives [28.8%] that favored postponement.

On Tuesday, July 2, 1861, the House resumed its consideration of “An act for remodeling the militia” (the Civil War having broken out only three months before). Democrat Rep. Harry Bingham (1821-1900) of Littleton, NH, moved that the bill be amended to insert the word “white” just before the word “able-bodied.” Reps. Plumer and Varney voted with the majority of 154 representatives [57.0%] that opposed the amendment language, rather than with the minority of 116 representatives [43.0%] that favored it.

In the second year of his two-year biennium, Rep. Plumer was assigned to the Committee on Printers’ Accounts. (Rep. Varney was assigned to the Committee on Towns and Parishes).

On Tuesday, June 24, 1862, the House voted on an “Act providing for a system of public-school supervision.” Rep. Plumer voted with the minority of 112 representatives [39.0%] that voted in favor, rather than with the majority of 175 representatives [61.0%] that voted against it. (Rep. Varney may have been absent that day, as he did not vote).

On Monday, June 30, 1862, the House considered whether or not Isaac Emerson (1825-1885) of Windham, NH, had a right to a House seat. (The remonstrance of R.B. Jackson and others asserted that he should not be seated). Rep. Emerson himself moved that the Committee on the Judiciary should investigate and report on the matter:

Resolved, That the Committee on the Judiciary be instructed to report, for the satisfaction of the “contestants” having the merits of this case in view, first, What constitutes a legal ballot? second, What votes should be counted by the moderator in determining the majority and the result of an election?

The House Committee on the Judiciary returned their opinion that Mr. Emerson should not be seated, as the necessary threshold of 69 votes would have been slightly higher if the six votes for “Charles Butrick” had been counted with those received for “Charles E. Butrick.”

At the annual town-meeting in Windham, in March last, after ten or more ballotings for representative, Isaac Emerson was declared elected. The whole number of votes, as declared by the moderator on that ballot, was one hundred and thirty-six (136); necessary to a choice, sixty-nine (69); and Isaac Emerson, having sixty-nine votes, was declared elected. On that ballot there was put into the ballot-box as votes, one piece of paper containing the name of an animal, another containing the name of a woman, and some six others on which was the name of Charles Butrick; but that there was one by the name of Charles E. Butrick. It was also admitted that some of those persons who voted for Charles Butrick intended to vote for Charles E. Butrick. The moderator excluded all these names from the ballots, and then declared the result aforesaid. The remonstrants claim that at least those pieces of paper containing the name of Charles Butrick should be counted as ballots, while the sitting member claims that they should not be so received, and claims that they were rightfully excluded. … The committee are also of the opinion that tickets containing the name of an animal, or inanimate things, or a woman, ought to be rejected in such computation of the whole number of ballots, as not being within the spirit of the statute defining that term, and as trifling with the right of suffrage, and tending to bring it into ridicule and disgrace. …

Rep. Plumer voted with the 133 representatives [74.7%] that went against the committee report and voted to seat Mr. Emerson, rather than with the 45 [25.3%] that agreed with the committee report and voted not to seat him. So, Rep. Emerson was seated.

On Tuesday, July 8, 1862, Rep. Lewis P. Cushman (1824-1904) of Landaff, NH, introduced a resolution whereby House members and staff might forgo two days’ pay and spend that money instead on a soldiers’ hospital.

Resolved, by the Senate and House of Representatives, in General Court convened, That the Clerk, in making up the pay-roll of the members and officers of the House of Representatives, be instructed to deduct from the same Saturday and Sunday, July 5 and 6, and that the Governor is hereby authorized to expend the same in furnishing the hospital provided for by the present Legislature for the use of our sick and wounded soldiers.

Rep. Charles W. Woodman (1809-1888) of Dover, NH, moved that the resolution be indefinitely postponed. Reps. Plumer and Varney voted with the majority of 178 representatives [68.5%] that favored postponement, rather than with the 82 representatives [31.5%] that opposed postponement.

Rep. George Holbrook (1830-1927) of Manchester, NH, made an alternate motion:

Resolved, That a committee of one from each county be appointed to solicit a subscription from each member of this House and honorable Senate, the same to be applied to furnishing the hospital for the sick and wounded soldiers. 

(These hospital furnishings votes are somewhat reminiscent of a supposed discussion between one Horatio Bunce and then U.S. Congressman Davy Crockett, probably circa 1829, as collected by Bettina Bien Greaves (of which an audio version may be found in the References)).

E.W. Plumer of Milton paid a $1 tax for his horse carriage (valued at $70), in the U.S. Excise Tax of 1862.

Enoch W. Plummer paid a $10 tax on his stallion, and a $1 tax for his 1-horse carriage (valued at $75), in the U.S. Excise Tax of May 1864. Perhaps the stallion was the same one, Young Messenger, for which he had received a second-place prize in 1858.

Son John T. Plummer married in Boston, MA, January 31, 1867, Armena P. Gilman, he of Union, [Wakefield,] NH, and she of Milton. He was a merchant, aged twenty-five years, and she was aged twenty-three years. Rev. O.T. Walker performed the ceremony. She was born in Wakefield, NH, daughter of Theophilus and Parna [(Dearborn)] Gilman.

Mother Sarah “Sally” (Brown) Plummer died of dropsy in Milton, July 27, 1867, aged eighty-two years. She was a widowed farmer.

Son John Tyler Plumer died June 20, 1868.

Son Joseph Emmons Plummer married in Milton, October 18, 1869, Susan E. [Evyline] Pecker, he of Milton and she of Concord, NH. He was a farmer, aged twenty-seven years, and she was aged thirty years. Rev. James Doldt performed the ceremony. She was born in East Concord, NH, September 6, 1839, daughter of William and Susan D. (Chandler) Pecker.

Enoch W. Plummer, a farmer, aged fifty-five years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. His household included Orinda [(Ayers)] Plummer, keeping house, aged fifty-two years (b. NH), Mary B. Plummer, aged twenty-five years (b. NH), Bard B. Plummer, a farm laborer, aged twenty-four years (b. NH), Sarah Plummer, aged twenty-two years (b. NH), Fanny W. Plummer, aged nineteen years (b. NH), Susan Plummer, aged eleven years (b. NH), and George I. Whitehouse, a farm laborer, aged seventeen years (b. NH). Enoch Plumer had real estate valued at $6,000 and personal estate valued at $4,340. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Joseph Plummer, a farmer, aged fifty years (b. NH), and Charles Jones, a farmer, aged thirty-six years (b. NH).

William Pecker, a farmer, aged sixty-one years (b. NH), headed a Concord, NH, household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. His household included Susan D. [(Chandler)] Pecker, keeping house (b. NH), aged fifty-nine years, Joseph E. Plummer, a farm laborer, aged twenty-seven years (b. NH), and Susan E. Plummer, a domestic servant, aged thirty years (b. NH). William Pecker had real estate valued at $10,000 and personal estate valued at $1,500. Joseph E. and Susan E. [(Pecker)]] Plummer had been married in the prior September [October].

Daughter Mary B. Plumer married November 10, 1870, Samuel Willard Wallingford. Wallingford was born in Milton, November 27, 1837, son of David and Mary A. (Tasker) Wallingford.

Son Bard Burge Plummer married in Milton, October 15, 1875, Eliza Dixwell Wentworth, both of Milton. He was a farmer, aged twenty-nine years, and she was aged twenty-four years. Rev. James Doldt performed the ceremony. She was born in Jamaica Plain, MA, December 13, 1851, daughter of John J. and Elizabeth (Currant) Wentworth.

Daughter Susan Plummer married in Milton, November 30, 1876, John S. Roberts, both of Milton. He was a shoemaker, aged twenty-eight years, and she was aged twenty-two years. Rev. James Doldt (then of Canterbury, NH) performed the ceremony. Roberts was born in Milton, circa 1848, son of John C. and Lydia J. (Scates) Roberts.

MARRIAGES. ROBERTS-PLUMMER. In Milton, N.H., 29th ult., at the home of the bride’s parents, by Rev. James Doldt, Mr. John P. Roberts and Miss Susie Plummer, daughter of Enoch W. Plummer, both of Milton (Boston Globe, December 7, 1876).

Daughter Susan (Plummer) Roberts died of heart trouble in Farmington, NH, September 12, 1878, aged twenty-four years.

Daughter Sarah Plummer married in Seabrook, NH, May 1, 1878, Frank Enoch Haley, she of Milton and he of Seabrook, NH. He was a clergyman, aged forty-three years, and she was aged thirty years. This was his second marriage. Rev. James Doldt performed the ceremony. Frank E. Haley was born in Tuftonboro, NH, February 20, 1835, son of Enoch and Cynthia (Piper) Haley.

Daughter Frances W. ‘Fanny” Plummer married in Milton, July 11, 1878, John H. Twombly. He was aged twenty-nine years, and she was aged twenty-seven years. Twombly was born in Dover, NH, October 17, 1848, son of John and Charlotte (Drew) Twombly.

Enoch W. Plumer, aged sixty-five years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Orinda [(Ayers)] Plumer, aged sixty-five years (b. NH). They shared a two-family residence with the household of Bard B. Plumer, a farmer, aged thirty-three years (b. NH). Their residence appeared between those of Joseph Plumer, a farmer, aged sixty years (b. NH), and Enoch S. Mason, a farmer, aged thirty-nine years (b. NH).

Samuel W. Wallingford, a farmer, aged forty-two years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Mary B. [(Plummer)] Wallingford, keeping house, aged thirty-six years (b. NH), his mother, Mary A. [(Tasker)] Wallingford, at home, aged seventy-four years (b. NH), his nephew, George W. Wallingford, aged eight years (b. NH), and his niece, Millie M. Wallingford, aged five years (b. NH). Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Frank G. Horn, works on shoes, aged thirty-eight years (b. NH), and James A. Wentworth, a farmer, aged forty-two years (b. NH).

Bard B. Plumer, a farmer, aged thirty-three years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Eliza D. Plumer, keeping house, aged twenty-eight years (b. MA), and his children, Lucia C. Plumer, at house, aged three years (b. NH), Fannie W. Plumer, at house, aged one year (b. NH), and Bard B. Plumer, at house, aged seven months (b. NH (October [1879])). They shared a two-family residence with the household of [his father,] Enoch W. Plummer, a farmer, aged sixty-five years (b. NH). Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Joseph Plummer, aged sixty years (b. NH) and Enoch S. Mason, a farmer, aged thirty-nine years (b. NH).

Frank Haley, a clergyman, aged forty-five years (b. NH), headed a Seabrook, NH, household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included Sarah P. [(Plummer)] Haley, keeping house, aged thirty-two years (b. NH), Mary L. Haley, a milliner, aged twenty-two years (b. NH), Agnes C. Haley, at home, aged sixteen years (b. NH), and Susan P. Haley, aged eight months (b. NH (September)).

William Pecker, a farmer, aged seventy-one years (b. NH), headed a Concord (“Concord East P.O.”), NH, household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Susan D. [(Chandler)] Pecker, keeping house, aged sixty-nine years (b. NH), his daughter, Susan E. ((Pecker)] Plummer, at home, aged forty years (b. NH), his son-in-law, Joseph E. Plummer, a farmer, aged thirty-seven years (b. NH), and his boarder, Hattie E. King, a teacher, aged twenty-three years (b. NH).

Widowed son-in-law John S. Roberts married (2nd) in Farmington, NH, December 26, 1883, Ella Belle Pearl, both of Farmington, NH. (He would die of heart valvular disease in Farmington, NH, January 22, 1907, aged fifty-eight years, three months, and fifteen days).

MILTON. Nearly fifty people from Farmington, including a full chorus of singers, wended their way “Miltonwards” Wednesday evening, by the light of the genial moon – somewhat clouded – to witness and take part in an entertainment and concert gotten up by the good ladies of the Congregational Society for the benefit of their church. The evening was all one could wish and the drive delightful. On reaching this one of the most beautiful villages in this section, the party was most hospitably entertained by their Milton friends, prominent among whom were the genial Mr. and Mrs. Amos Roberts, Rev. Mr. Haley the pastor, and his estimable lady, Mrs. Annie M. Varney, the two Mrs. Pinkhams, Mrs. Willard Wallingford, the venerable deacon Plummer of the Ridge, and a host of others whose names have slipped our memory. A glance at the interior of the spacious and handsomely decorated church gave evidence of a large assembly, there being some two hundred and fifty present. Want of space and time forbid of more than mere mention of the following program that was excellence in itself, and never have we seen the rendering excelled. … (Farmington News, June 11, 1886).

Orinda (Ayers) Plumer died of a liver abscess in Milton, April 18, 1895, aged seventy-seven years, six months, and twelve days. M.A.H. Hart, M.D., signed the death certificate.

MILTON. The funeral of Mrs. Enoch Plumer occurred Saturday afternoon. She leaves a husband and five children (Farmington News, [Friday,] April 26, 1895).

Enoch W. Plumer died of cirrhosis of the liver in Milton, June 18, 1896, aged eighty-one years, two months, and fourteen days. M.A.H. Hart, M.D., signed the death certificate.

RECENT DEATHS. … Mr. Enoch W. Plummer, one of the oldest citizens of Milton, N.H., died Thursday. He was born in the town April 4, 1813. He was identified with the Volunteer Militia, and held the commission of colonel for several years. He filled many town offices, representing the town in the New Hampshire Legislature. For over forty years he was a deacon of the Congregationalist Church, and at the date of his death the oldest Church member (Boston Evening Transcript, June 20, 1896).

HERE AND THERE. Mr. and Mrs. John S. Roberts attended on Sunday the funeral of deacon Enoch W. Plumer of Milton, who was a citizen truly well known (Farmington News, [Friday,] June 26, 1896).

ENOCH W. PLUMMER. Enoch W. Plummer died June 18. He was born in Milton April 4, 1815, and had maintained a continuous residence there. He was identified with the volunteer militia, and held the commission of colonel for several years. He filled many town offices, representing the town in the New Hampshire legislature. For over forty years he was a deacon of the Congregational church, and at the date of his death the oldest church member (Granite Monthly, July 1896).

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. LEBANON. – Jan. 6. Mary B. Wallingford, et al., of Milton, N.H., to Bard B. Plummer, of same place, real estate in Lebanon for $500. Jan 28. Frances W. Twombly, et al., of Milton, N.H., to Bard B. Plummer, of same place, real estate in Lebanon for $500 (Biddeford-Saco Journal (Biddeford, ME), February 10, 1897).

Son Joseph E. Plummer died of pulmonary phthisis in Concord, NH, January 5, 1899, aged fifty-six years, three months. He was a farmer. G.P. Connor, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Son-in-law Samuel W. Wallingford died of pyemia (following a pulmonary abscess) in Milton, May 25, 1899, aged sixty-one years, five months, and twenty-eight years. M.A.H. Hart, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Armine [(Gilman)] Plummer, a nurse, aged forty-seven years, was one of seven lodgers in the Rochester, NH, household of Charles Barker, a landlord, aged fifty years (b. MA), at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. Charles Baker resided on South Main Street.

Mary B. [(Plummer)] Wallingford, a farmer, aged fifty-five years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. Her household included her brother-in-law, John H. Twombly, a physician (retired), aged fifty-one years (b. NH), and her sister (and his wife of twenty years), Frances W. [(Plummer)] Twombly, aged forty-nine years (b. NH). Mary B. Wallingford owned their farm, free-and-clear. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Susan F. Horn, a widow, aged fifty-six years (b. NH), and George F. Henderson, a farmer, aged fifty-six years (b. ME).

Bard B. Plummer, a farmer, aged fifty-three years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of twenty-four years), Eliza D. Plummer, aged fifty-one years (b. MA), his children, Lucia C. Plummer, aged twenty-three years (b. NH), Fannie W. Plummer, aged twenty-one years (b. NH), Bard B. Plummer, Jr., aged twenty years (b. NH), and Orinda Plummer, at school, aged twelve years (b. NH), and his boarder, Christie L. Jones, a farm laborer, aged fifty-eight years (b. NH). Bard B. Plummer owned their farm, free-and-clear. Eliza D. Plummer was the mother of four children, of whom four were still living. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Fred P. Jones, a farmer, aged forty years (b. NH), and Joseph Plummer, a farmer, aged eighty years (b. NH).

Frank Haley, a retired clergyman, aged sixty-five years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Sarah [(Plummer)] Haley, aged fifty-two years (b. NH), his daughter, Susan P. Haley, an accountant, aged twenty years (b. NH), and his sister-in-law, Susan E. [(Pecker)] Plummer, aged sixty years (b. NH).

Daughter-in-law Armine P. (Gilman) Plummer died of uterine cancer at 6 Main Street in Rochester, NH, February 15, 1902, aged fifty-eight years, five months. She was a widowed nurse, who had been resident in Rochester, NH, for “about” fourteen years, i.e., since circa 1887, with her previous residence having been in Milton. John H. Neal, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Frank Haley died of Bright’s Disease in Milton, NH, March 28, 1904, aged sixty-nine years, one month, and nine days. He had resided in Milton for nineteen years, i.e., since circa 1885, with his previous residence having been in Boscawen, NH. He was a clergyman. M.A.H. Hart, M.D., signed the death certificate.

DEATHS. HALEY. In Milton, N.H., March 28, Rev. Frank Haley, aged 69. He graduated from Dartmouth Medical in 1857, and practiced medicine for some years, then entered Andover Seminary where he graduated and has preached since in Enfield and Milton, N.H., and Concord, Mass., and was in charge of a home missionary church and school in Macon, Ga. Although hampered by ill health all his life, he did important work wherever he was along educational lines and in the pulpit (Congregationalist and Christian World, May 21, 1904).

MILTON, N.H. Mrs. Mary Wallingford with a party of friends went Friday on a trip to the White mountains returning home Tuesday night. In spite of the very inclement weather they reported a most enjoyable time (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), September 29, 1905).

MILTON, N.H. Mrs. Mary B. Wallingford went to Wolfeboro recently, making the trip in a touring car. … Mrs. Wallingford entertained a party of nine ladies from Dover Tuesday of last week. … Miss Kate Gardner Jackson of Westwood, Mass., is spending a few weeks at Mrs. Mary B. Wallingford’s on the Ridge (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), August 9, 1907).

MILTON. Mrs. Mary B. Wallingford and Rev. and Mrs. Dickey attended the Washington birthday meeting of the Congregational club last Saturday at Dover (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), March 6, 1908).

Mary B. [(Plummer)] Wallingford, a general farm farmer, aged sixty-five years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Thirteenth (1910) Federal Census. Her household included her brother-in-law, John H. Twombly, a home farm keeper, aged sixty-one years (b. NH), her sister (and his wife of thirty-one years), Fannie W. [(Plummer)] Twombly, aged fifty-nine years (b. NH), and her sister-in-law, Susan [(Pecker)] Plummer, aged seventy years (b. NH). Mary B. Wallingford owned their farm, free-and-clear.

Bard B. Plummer, a general farm farmer, aged sixty-three years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Thirteenth (1910) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Eliza D. Plummer, aged fifty-eight years (b. MA), his son, Bard B. Plummer, Jr., a home farm farmer, aged thirty years (b. NH), his daughter-in-law, Ruth L. Plummer, aged twenty-four years (b. NH), his daughter, Orinda Plummer, aged twenty-four years (b. NH), his granddaughter, Elizabeth Plummer, aged one year (b. NH), his sister-in-law, Fannie Littlefield, aged sixty-two years (b. MA), his nephew, Roscoe Littlefield, aged thirty-four years (b. CA), and his servant, John M. Smith, a general farm laborer, aged twenty-two years (b. VT).

Sarah P. [(Plummer)] Haley, a widow, aged forty-eight years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Thirteenth (1910) Federal Census. Her household included her daughter, Susan P. Haley, aged thirty years (b. NH). Sarah P. Haley owned their house, free-and-clear.

KENNEBUNK. Miss Mary Goodwin, assistant in the Kennebunk Savings Bank, is passing her annual vacation at the Mary Wallingford Farm, Milton, N.H. (Portland Sunday Telegram, September 21, 1919).

Son Bard B. Plummer died of lobar pneumonia on Plummer’s Ridge in Milton, October 22, 1919, aged seventy-three years, four months, and four days. James J. Buckley, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Mary B. [(Plummer)] Wallingford, a widow, aged seventy-five years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census. Her household included her brother-in-law, John H. Twombly, a farmer, aged seventy-one years (b. NH), her sister, Frances W. [(Plummer)] Twombly, aged sixty-eight years (b. NH), and her sister-in-law, Susan E. [(Pecker)] Plummer, a widow, aged eighty years (b. NH). Mary B. Wallingford owned their farm on the Plummer’s Ridge Road, free-and-clear.

Sarah P. [(Plummer)] Haley, a widow, aged seventy-one years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census. Her household included her daughter, Susan P. Haley, a retail dry goods bookkeeper, aged forty years (b. NH). Sarah P. Haley owned their farm on the Farmington Road, free-and-clear. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of William S. Lougee, a leatherboard superintendent, aged forty-five years (b. NH), and Edwin S. Huse, a high school teacher, aged forty years (b. MA).

Daughter-in-law Susan E. (Pecker) Plummer died of a cerebral hemorrhage at Plummer’s Ridge in Milton, February 29, 1920, aged eighty years, six months. She had resided in Milton for twenty years, i.e., since the death of her husband in 1899, with her previous residence having been in East Concord, NH. John H. Twombly, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Son-in-law John H. Twombly died of arterio-sclerosis in the Masonic Home at 813 Beech Street in Manchester, NH, March 2, 1927, aged seventy-eight years, four months, and thirteen days. He was a retired physician. F.P. Scribner, M.D., signed the death certificate.

DR. JOHN H. TWOMBLY DIES AT DOVER, N.H. DOVER, N.H., March 3 – Dr. John H. Twombly, who died at the Masonic Home in Manchester last evening, was a native of Dover, born Oct. 17, 1848, the son of John and Charlotte (Drew) Twombly. He was a descendant of Ralph Twombly, who came from England and settled at Dover Neck about 1650. On the maternal side he was descendent from Lieut. John Drew of Dover, an officer of the Indian Wars. Dr. Twombly graduated from Dartmouth in 1868 and from the Harvard Medical School in 1872. He first practiced in Brooklyn and later was on the staff of the insane asylum at Kalamazoo, Mich., after which he followed his profession in New Market. He owned a drug store there. He was affiliated with Dover and New Market Masonic bodies, and was the oldest living eminent commander of St. Paul Commandery, K.T., of this city. The body will be brought here tomorrow and will later be interred in Pine Hill Cemetery with Knight Templar Rites (Boston Globe, March 4, 1927).

Orinda P. [(Plummer)] Little, an electrical bookkeeper, aged forty-three years (b. NH), headed a Sharon, MA, household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. Her household included her twin sons, William G. Little, aged eight years (b. MA), and Robert A. Little, aged eight years (b. MA), her mother, Eliza D. [(Wentworth)] Plummer, retired, aged seventy-eight years (b. MA), and her sister, Fanny W. [(Plummer)] Littlefield, a private family housekeeper, aged fifty-one years (b. NH). Orinda P. Little owned their house at 11 Crest Road, which was valued at $8,500. They did not have a radio set. All three women were widows, Orinda P. Little having married at thirty-four years of age, Eliza D. Plummer at twenty-three years of age, and Fanny W. Littlefield at forty years of age.

Sarah P. [(Plummer)] Haley, aged eighty-two years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. She owned her house on the Farmington Road, which was valued at $3,500. She did not have a radio set.

Mary B. [(Plummer)] Wallingford, a widow, aged eighty-five years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. Mary B. Wallingford owned her house on Plummer’s Ridge, which was valued at $4,000.

Daughter-in-law Eliza D. (Wentworth) Plummer died in Sharon, MA, March 12, 1931, aged seventy-nine years.

Daughter Sarah (Plummer) Haley died in Milton, NH, April 10, 1931.

LOCAL. Mrs. Sarah Plummer Haley, a life-long resident of Milton, passed away last week. She is survived by a daughter, Miss Susan Haley, who has many friends in Farmington (Farmington News, April 17, 1931).

Daughter Frances W. (Plummer) Twombly died in Dover, NH, March 22, 1933.

Daughter Mary B. (Plumer) Wallingford died of hypertensive heart disease in the Masonic Home in Manchester, NH, September 22, 1939, aged ninety-five years, and fifteen days. She was a widow. She had resided in Manchester for seven years, eight months, i.e., since circa February 1932, with her previous residence having been in Milton.


References:

Claremont Manufacuring Co. (1846). New Hampshire Register and Farmer’s Almanac. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=5ucWAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA89

Farmer, John, & Lyon, G. Parker. (1844). NH Annual Register, and United States Calendar. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=BJIBAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA85

Find a Grave. (2016, February 29). Joseph Ayers. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/158761255/joseph-ayers

Find a Grave. (2022, February 3). Sarah Plumer Haley. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/236457524/sarah-haley

Find a Grave. (2022, February 4). Armine P. Gilman Plumer. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/236489175/armine-p-plumer

Find a Grave. (2022, February 4). Bard Burge Plumer. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/236476751/bard-burge-plumer

Find a Grave. (2017, October 19). Enoch W. Plumer. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/184409140/enoch-w-plumer

Find a Grave. (2022, February 24). John Tyler Plumer. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/236487000/john-tyler-plumer

Find a Grave. (2017, March 18). Joseph Emmons Plummer. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/177490511/joseph-emmons-plummer

Find a Grave. (2021, November 8). Sally Brown Plumer. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/233852675/sally-plumer

Find a Grave. (2012, September 30). Frances W. Plummer Twombly. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/98010643/frances-w-twombly

Find a Grave. (2017, October 17). Mary Baker Plumer Wallingford. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/184359008/mary-baker-wallingford

Granite Monthly. (1896, July). Enoch W. Plummer. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=NfVQAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA62

Greaves. Bettina Bien. (2009, May 7). Davy Crockett: Not Yours to Give. Retrieved from mises.org/library/not-yours-give

McFarland & Jenks. (1845). Osborne’s New Hampshire Register: With an Almanack. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=jMEwAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA83

NH Adjutant General (1843). Report. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=0-1GAQAAMAAJ&pg=RA1-PA318

NH General Court. (1861). Journals of the Honorable Senate and House of Representatives of the State of New Hampshire. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=zt43AAAAMAAJ&pg=RA1-PA146

NH General Court. (1862). Journal of the House of Representatives of the State of New-Hampshire. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=MQ8tAQAAMAAJ&pg=RA1-PA5

NH State Agricultural Society (1860). Transactions of the New Hampshire State Agricultural Society. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=MWo2AQAAIAAJ&pg=PA116

Scales, John. (1914). History of Strafford County, New Hampshire and Representative Citizens. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=nGsjAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA872

Milton Mills Sketch of 1911 – 4

By Muriel Bristol | September 17, 2023

Continued from Milton Mills Sketch of 1911 – 3

In researching something else, several lengthy articles on Milton Mills were encountered in the Sanford Tribune of October 6, 1911. This fourth and last article dealt with several local merchants and their businesses: John E. Horne (1878-1953), William F. Mills (1838-1913), Joseph A. Maddox (1847-1916), Elijah T. Libby (1846-1918), Daniel Murray (1858-1917), Nicholas L. Mucci (1869-1966), and Mott L. Archibald (1874-1953).

(This new information may require some minor revisions or additions to some earlier Observer articles).


J.E. HORNE. Clothing and Men’s Furnishings. The store conducted by John E. Horne is in keeping with the high-class character of the community in which he is located. Mr. Horne is also a man of the character that is typical of the section – fair and square in his dealings with the public and social qualities that add to his business popularity. He first went to Milton Mills in the spring of 1900 as manager for F. Merrifield who then established a store there in connection with his Springvale business. In less than a year Mr. Horne bought out the business and has conducted it since and has been very successful. When the business was first started the Berry block was divided into two stores. Six years ago the demands for room to accommodate the increasing trade became so insistent that Mr. Horne was obliged to hire the whole space.
The two stores were made one and now the room is hardly sufficient.
Two years ago, a stock of boots and shoes was added and a very good trade in that line has resulted.
Three years ago Mr. Horne, in company with Forrest L. Marsh, established a grain and feed store. That is located in the Rines block.

WILLIAM F. MILLS. Livery and Sale Stable. Mr. William F. Mills is a native of Milton and has always been interested in horses but did not go into the livery business until 1905. He then bought the Platt place on Main Street which he repaired and put into proper shape for a home and the business he then decided to establish. He formerly lived on a farm not far from the mills. He cultivated it successfully for twenty-two years.
Mr. Mills has a clean well-kept stable and the horses are of a superior class averaging above the average for livery stock. He has six or more horses for letting. Mr. Mills had reared some colts that have sold for high prices. Sybil, by Francisco, was sold for a large sum five years ago. Mr. Mills is the right kind of a man to own and handle horses for he recognizes the fact that they are sentient and intelligent creatures responding to like qualities in man when given the chance.
As Mr. Mills is a good horseman, so is he a good citizen and an upright man. He is held in high regard by his fellow citizens. He has served the town two terms as a selectman.

J.A. MADDOX & SON. Grocers. Central square in Milton Mills has been greatly improved in looks by the establishment of the new grocery store by J.A. Maddox & Son, and the village benefitted by the advent of a new and enterprising store. J.A. Maddox & Son conduct a wholesale and retail grocery business at South Berwick where Mr. Maddox, senior, established the business 30 years ago. Albert S., the junior member, was admitted to the firm twelve years ago. The business done there is one of the largest of the kind in York county, and the members of the firm are among the strongest and best citizens of the place. Mr. J.A. Maddox has served the town as selectman and in other capacities and is successful in the conduct of what ever business he is charged with – whether private or public.
The business was established in Milton Mills about a year and a half ago and because of the character of the firm and the splendid stock of goods carried the store has become popular. The store formerly occupied by Freeman Loud, who was burned out, and owned by Ira Miller was rebuilt and newly fitted for the use of this firm and it is only saying what is echoed throughout the village to say that no more attractive store has ever been conducted there. It is large, being about 75 feet long and thirty feet wide, high posted and well lighted by large plate glass windows. Mr. Maddox and his son are both well known in Milton Mills, the f0rmer having been born in Newfield and a resident of Shapleigh at a later period. Alfred was born in the latter town. Before going to South Berwick they were well known throughout this section.
In addition to a line of groceries the firm deals in crockery and kitchen utensils and also carry a fine line of confectionery. A special feature is made of high grade chocolates and bonbons. The store and local business is in charge of Mr. Charles A. Langley, who has been in the firm’s employ at South Berwick for four years. Mr. Langley is assisted by his wife and their genial and obliging ways add much to the popularity of the store. Mr. Langley is a native of Shapleigh and was known to the people in Milton Mills before becoming a resident.
Recently the firm has established another store at Union. This business is in charge of Geo. W. Grant.

ELIJAH T. LIBBY. Postmaster. Elijah T. Libby, one of the men well worth knowing in Milton Mills, is the postmaster. He is a native of Limerick but has lived in Milton for thirty-eight years and has been postmaster for twenty years, in all. He is now serving his fifth term. He was first appointed by President Harrison. During the four years that President Cleveland was in, Mr. Libby did not have the office but upon the return of the Republicans to power he was again appointed and has held the position ever since.
In the anniversary year of Milton Mr. Libby was town treasurer. He is a member of the Knights of Pythias and the Grange. He has been at times engaged in the jewelry and printing business but his health is not equal to the demands of such trades. In connection with the office a few articles of merchandise are sold and in the summer time he conducts an ice cream business. Mr. C.L. Stevens is assistant postmaster.

DANIEL MURRAY. Hardware and Plumbing. Mr. Daniel Murray has been in the hardware business for thirty-six years. He occupies one of the largest stores in Milton Mills, it being seventy-five feet long and twenty-five wide. The store is filled with a variety of goods, hardware and paints being a feature of the stock. Tinware and kitchen utensils perhaps are given as much space as any particular line of goods. The Glenwood stoves are always kept in stock. In addition to the retail business which is largely looked after by Miss Florence Murray, Mr. Murray carries on a large plumbing and jobbing business. He has a shop in the rear of the store, where small jobs are attended to. His outside work consists of all kinds of work that comes under the head of plumbing and steam fitting and furnace work. He has become expert in his line and is called upon from surrounding places.
During the second Cleveland administration the post office was in Mr. Murray’s store. J.W. Murray was postmaster and Mr. Daniel Murray was assistant. Among the men of character and high social and business standing, Mr. Murray ranks as a leader and is held in the highest esteem to Milton Mills and began business for himself and has been successful.

N. MUCCI. Fancy Groceries, Fruit. One of the first signs of modern village, so far as business is concerned, that greets the eye of the stranger approaching from the east, is the fine display of fruit and fancy groceries in the store of N. Mucci. As may be inferred from the name Mr. Mucci is a native of the sunny clime where fruit forms a large part of the food of the people and has inherited the natural aptitude of the Italians for the appetizing display of such products. But the fruit business is only an incident in the trade of this store. A full line of staple groceries is kept as well as the best of confectionery. The ice cream business is an important feature, particularly in the summer. He not only has a cosy little room where the delicacy is served by the plate, but he is prepared at all times to serve the public with large quantities. He supplies families and parties and among the summer visitors in the surrounding sections trade is large. A soda fountain operates throughout the year.
Mr. Mucci came to America thirteen years ago and for a few months worked with his brother-in-law, F. Broggi, at Sanford. He then went to Milton Mills and began business for himself and had been successful. Mr. Mucci prides himself on always keeping his stock complete and in prime condition. A full stock of tobacco and cigars is kept, too. Mr. Mucci and his wife are pleasant persons to meet and have become as interested in the affairs of the town as though natives are not classified as “foreigners.”

M.L. ARCHIBALD. Real Estate; Lumber. Mr. M.L. Archibald is one of the best known men in Strafford and York Counties. For the last seven years his headquarters have been at Milton Mills. He lives at the Central house but has a legal residence on the Acton side. He is a dealer in native and western horses and sells valuable animals in this section. He has special shipments of western horses and is prepared to furnish animals of what ever kind may be required. Having been familiar with equine stock from youth, his knowledge enables him to select horses suitable to the purpose for which they are to be used and to the person who is to use them.
He is extensively interested in real estate and timber. He is buying and selling timber lands all the time and sells farm property and builds houses for sale. HIs varied interests oblige him to be away from Milton Mills part of the time. Anyone wishing to have an interview with him or desiring any property that he has for sale will find it advisable to write to him at Milton Mills. Mr. Archibald is a man whose business record for many years has established him in the confidence of his patrons, and while a man not much given to talking, it is felt that what he says concerning any business deal needs no discount.
He is a native of Acton and has always been connected with affairs in this section, but for several years was in the eastern part of the state. He has been permanently located at Milton Mills since 1903.


This concludes the Sanford Tribune’s Milton Mills articles of October 6, 1911.


Find a Grave. (2013, July 31). Mott L. Archibald. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/114726309/mott-l-archibald

Find a Grave. (2012, November 27). Frank Broggi. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/101348468/frank-broggi

Find a Grave. (2013, August 3). John Everard Horne. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/114788057/john-everard-horne

Find a Grave. (2021, April 4). Charles Agustus Langley. Retrieved fromwww.findagrave.com/memorial/225305049/charles-agustus-langley

Find a Grave. 2013, August 14). Elijah T. Libby. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/115423048/elijah-t-libby

Find a Grave. (2013, December 20). Albert S. Maddox. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/121964473/albert-s-maddox

Find a Grave. (2012, May 17). Joseph A. Maddox. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/90285175/joseph-a.-maddox

Find a Grave. (2012, February 27). Everett Franklin Merrifield. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/85847682/everett-franklin-merrifield

Find a Grave. (2013, July 13). William F. Mills. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/114681781/william-f-mills

Find a Grave. (2o13, July 31). Daniel Murray. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/114681970/daniel-murray

Find a Grave. (2013, August 15). Charles L. Stevens. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/115512774/charles-l-stevens