Town Administrator to Depart

By S.D. Plissken | January 18, 2019

Milton’s Town Administrator is leaving us. Let us wish her Godspeed and all the best in her new endeavors.

That leaves Milton with no Town Administrator. Is that really such a bad thing?

One might bet any amount of money – even as much as a Town Budget increase – that there was a time when Milton had no Town Administrator (and that time was within living memory). And you would win that bet. Having a Town Administrator is a relatively recent “innovation.” How is that working out for us?

Mr. Elder informs us that we have had eight Town Administrators in the last ten years. And that there have been gaps of a month or more between them. That works out, roughly, to an average tenure of 14 months per Town Administrator, of which he further informs us that 6 months of that time is spent learning the ropes. Therefore, by his own accounting, we have paid (in just over a decade) for 4 years of getting up to speed and less than 6 years of town administration. (And 8 months of gaps between them).

Obviously, we have not received value for tax money in this whole Town Administrator venture. In the real world, we might now just cancel our subscription and take our business elsewhere. Or just give it up as being a “bad business.” But this is government.

Failed government innovations and interventions are rarely, if ever, “backed out” like the buggy software that they are. Government always doubles down: it “fixes” its failures with more tax money and increased regulations. (They are mired in the Calculation Problem). Cast your mind back, if you will, to Daylight Savings Time, farm subsidies, government cheese, Fannie Mae, the food pyramid (related to the farm subsidies), Dot-com bubbles, housing bubbles, student loan guarantee bubbles, health care market interventions, etc. etc.. The list is lengthy. It has always been thus.

In that same doubling-down spirit, some have suggested that Milton “solve” its perceived administration problems by “upgrading” to a Town Manager instead of a Town Administrator.

No, thanks. That would have us paying double – likely more – for even less satisfactory results. Selectmen are bad enough. (If they had to do their own administration, as they formerly did, they might have less time for mischief).

The Milton Town government’s ever-increasing budget problems are beyond level funding. They need cutting badly. (It’s a very deep hole with very steep sides). This current vacancy, in a non-constitutional position, presents a perfect opportunity to reduce staff through simple attrition. Do not fill the position, just eliminate it.

Lather, rinse, repeat. And never create any new positions. That would violate the Law of Holes: If you find yourself in a hole, stop digging.

References:

McEvoy, Eleanor. (1996). Trapped Inside. Retrieved from www.youtube.com/watch?v=tiK-I-cRqfg

Wikipedia. (2018, November 15). Law of Holes. Retrieved from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_holes

Milton in the News – 1863

By Muriel Bristol (Transcriber) | January 17, 2019

Here we bid farewell to the same Milton centenarian whose hundredth birthday was celebrated two years earlier. (This was also the year that Milton’s Class II Military Draft List was compiled).

Mrs. Eunice Hayes died at Milton, N.H., on the 27th of last March, at the age of 102. She left 181 descendants, was born on Friday – consecrated to God in baptism on Friday – married on Friday – moved into Milton on Friday – her husband died on Friday – and she died on Friday, as she often affirmed she should (Wood County (Wisconsin) Reporter, May 7, 1863).

See also Milton in the News – 1861 for her hundredth birthday.


NH regiments found it necessary to refill their ranks, which had been depleted through expiration of enlistments, captures, disease, wounds, death, and desertion. The recruitment bounty had increased vastly from the $10 of 1861 to as much as $1,000. (Greenback inflation was a part of this too).

Congress had passed also the Enrollment Act (or Military Draft Act), March 3, 1863, whose enforcement had occasioned the New York Draft Riots.

Recruiting in New Hampshire. Recruits come in at Concord at the rate of about forty daily, and rapidly increasing. Recruiting has been stopped for the 2d, 3d, 8th, 10th, 13th and 14th, and the men are now enlisting for the 6th, 9th and 11th, which regiments are with Burnside at Knoxville. The former regiments are nearly or quite full, the third lacking but seventeen men of the maximum number. Thus has New Hampshire, through her patriotic Governor, placed herself in the front ranks (New England Farmer (Boston, MA), December 19, 1863).


Previous in sequence: Milton in the News – 1862; next in sequence: Milton in the News – 1864


 

Absolute and Apparent Magnitude: Measures of Brightness

By Peter Forrester | January 17, 2019

I’ve sometimes referred to the brightness of different stars and other objects in the sky. Let me tell you how astronomers measure brightness.

The first term you need to know is “apparent magnitude,” which is just a fancy way of saying how bright an object appears to be, usually when seen from the surface of the Earth.

The second term is “absolute magnitude”, which means if you put the stars at the same distance from Earth, what would the brightness be then?

Now let me explain about the numbering scale used to express these brightness. This is where it gets to seeming crazy. You see, the brighter an object is, the lower the number is. For instance, the brightest object, the Sun, has an apparent magnitude of -26.74. The next brightest star, Sirius, comes in at “only” -1.46.

The peculiar scale goes back to the Greek writer Hipparchus in the 1st century BC. He labelled the brightest 20 stars as first degree stars, and the dimmest as 6th degree. This was a rather simple way of describing brightness, before there were telescopes or instruments for measuring brightness precisely. Stars that are too dim to see with the naked eye are 7th degree or lower.

Eventually, after measurement of magnitude started, a decimal form started to be written. This system was formalized in 1856 by an English astronomer named Norman Robert Pogson (1829-1891).  Under his system, a first degree star is 100 times as bright as a sixth degree star, and so each degree represents a ratio of about 2.5, sometimes called “Pogson’s ratio”. For you math nerds, the exact amount is the 5th root of 100.

Pogson’s system assigned the North Star, Polaris, as being of degree 2.0; however this was later changed because Polaris’ magnitude varies slightly over time. The star Vega is now defined as 0.00 magnitude. There are four stars brighter than Vega, which necessarily means they have negative numbers in their magnitude.

Here is a list of the 10 brightest objects in the sky (the planets and Moon are listed at their brightest but they vary over time). It should be noted that there are different possible ways of measuring apparent magnitude of stars, and you may see these in a slightly different order. See below Wikipedia, List of brightest stars for more information on these variations.

  1. The Sun: -26.74
  2. The Moon: -12.74
  3. Venus: -4.89
  4. Jupiter: -2.94
  5. Mars: -2.91
  6. Mercury: -2.45
  7. Sirius: -1.46 (star in Canis Major)
  8. Canopus: -0.74 (star in Carina*)
  9. Saturn: -0.49
  10. Rigil Kentaurus: -0.27 (star in Centaurus*)

*Note: Carina and Centaurus can only be seen from the Southern Hemisphere.

Now to Absolute Magnitude. This is defined as the brightness an object would have if seen from a standard distance (10 parsecs, or 32.6 light-years), adjusting for interstellar dust. They can also measure it in different light bands, but I won’t bore you with an explanation of that. See Wikipedia, Absolute magnitude for more on this. Warning: there’s a lot of complicated math on this page. Also, note that a parsec is a measure of distance, not time as implied in the first Star Wars movie.

Measurement of absolute magnitude is made with an instrument called a bolometer, and varies based on what type of light wavelength you’re looking at.

Some stars are so bright that they would appear brighter than the planets and cast shadows if they were only 10 parsecs away. For example, Rigel is -7.0, Deneb is -7.2, and Betelgeuse in Orion has an absolute magnitude of -5.6. By comparison, Sirius is 1.4, much brighter than the Sun’s absolute magnitude 4.83.

Apparent magnitude for objects in the solar system is based on supposing that the object were a standard distance of 1 Astronomical Unit (about 93 million miles, or the distance between the Sun and Earth) from both the Sun and the observer.

So now you know the difference between apparent and absolute magnitude. Now if someone asks how to measure the brightness of stars, you’ll know the answer!


References:

Wikipedia. (2019, January 14). Absolute magnitude. Retrieved from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absolute_magnitude.

Wikipedia. (2019, January 11). Apparent magnitude. Retrieved from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apparent_magnitude.

Wikipedia. (2018, 24 October). First magnitude star. Retrieved from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_magnitude_star.

Wikipedia. (2019, January 1). List of brightest stars. Retrieved from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_brightest_stars.

Wikipedia. (2018, 23 July). N. R. Pogson. Retrieved from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N._R._Pogson.

Milton Class II Draft List – 1863

By Muriel Bristol (Transcriber) | January 15, 2019

Here follows a June 1863 US military draft list of Milton’s seventy-five married men aged between 35 and 44 (Class II). (Those aged 45 and over were exempt from military conscription).


[Class I comprises all persons subject to do military duty between the ages of twenty and thirty-five years, and all unmarried persons subject to do military duty above the age of thirty-five years and under the age of forty-five. Class II comprises all other persons subject to do military duty.]

SCHEDULE II. – CONSOLIDATED LIST of all persons of CLASS II, subject to do military duty in the first Congressional District, consisting of the Counties of Rockingham, Strafford, Belknap, and Carroll, State of New Hampshire, enumerated during the month of June, 1863, under direction of Capt. John S. Godfrey, Provost Marshal.

Residence. Name. Age 1st July 1863. White or Colored. Professions, Occupation or Trade. Place of Birth (Naming the State, Territory, or Country). Former Military Service. Remarks.

Milton

  1. Burrows, James, 40, white, farmer, New Hamp., none
  2. Burrows, Giles, 44, white, farmer, Maine, none
  3. Carr, Francis, 37, white, laborer, Ireland, none
  4. Chamberlain, Samuel G., 36, white, farmer, New Hampshire, none
  5. Dixon, Ichabod, 40, white, shoemaker, Maine, R.I. Cavalry, dischgd
  6. Dore, Isaac B., 42, white, shoemaker, New Hampshire, none
  7. Dore, Elliot F., 40, white, farmer, New Hampshire, none
  8. Dore, George W., 38, white, shoemaker, New Hampshire, none
  9. Downs, Joshua H., 37, white, shoemaker, New Hampshire, none
  10. Edgerly, Hiram V.R., 37, white, shoemaker, Vermont, none
  11. Fernald, Eli, 35, white, blacksmith, Maine, none
  12. Foss, Benjamin W., 42, white, farmer, New Hampshire, none
  13. French, Thomas P., 44, white, shoemaker, New Hampshire, none
  14. Furber, Charles A., 39, white, shoemaker, New Hampshire, none
  15. Gerrish, James L., 35, white, farmer, New Hampshr, none
  16. Gerrish, Josiah W., 38, white, farmer, Maine, none
  17. Goodwin, John E., 42, white, shoe manufacturer, New Hampshire, none
  18. Goodwin, Shepard K., 40, white, shoemaker, New Hampshire, none
  19. Guptill, James, 35, white, shoemaker, New Hampshire, none
  20. Hanscom, James, 35, white, shoemaker, New Hampshire, none
  21. Hanson, John M., 43, white, mill hand, Maine, none
  22. Hanson, Walter S., 38, white, shoemaker, New Hampshire, none
  23. Hart, Cyrus F., 42, white, farmer, New Hampshire, none
  24. Hayes, Leonard, 39, white, farmer, New Hampshire, none
  25. Hayes, Charles C., 40, white, farmer, New Hampshire, none
  26. Hayes, Luther, 43, white, farmer, New Hampshire, none
  27. Hill, Daniel W., 36, white, farmer, New Hampshire, 5 Me. Vol., dischgd
  28. Horne, Charles F., 40, white, shoemaker, New Hampshire, none
  29. Horne, Benjamin, 37, white, laborer, New Hampshire, none
  30. Huntress, William H., 37, white, hotel keeper, New Hampshire, none
  31. Hussey, William B., 39, white, farmer, New Hampshire, none
  32. Hussey, Edward R., 37, white, farmer, New Hampshire, none
  33. Jenness, Joseph, 39, white, stabler, New Hampshire, none
  34. Jewett, David, 39, white, farmer, New Hampshire, none
  35. Jewett, James J., 41, white, farmer, New Hampshire, none
  36. Jones, John P., 43, white, shoemaker, New Hampshire, none
  37. Jones, Nathan Jr., 40, white, shoemaker, New Hampshire, none
  38. Jones, George H., 37, white, farmer, New Hampshire, none
  39. Jones, Ezekiel R., 36, white, shoemaker, New Hampshire, none
  40. Leighton, Cyrus, 36, white, farmer, New Hampshire, none
  41. Leighton, Lewis L., 38, white, shoemaker, New Hampshire, none
  42. Lucas, John, 38, white, carpenter, Maine, none
  43. Lyman, George, 35, white, farmer, New Hampshire, none
  44. Maine, William, 43, white, shoemaker, New Hampshire, none
  45. Miller, Jonathan, 40, white, blacksmith, New Hampshire, none
  46. Nute, Stephen Jr., 44, white, shoemaker, New Hampshire, none
  47. Nute, John P., 37, white, shoemaker, New Hampshire, none
  48. Nutter, John W., 44, white, shoemaker, New Hampshire, none
  49. Palmer, John N., 40, white, shoemaker, New Hampshire, none
  50. Palmer, Daniel E., 41, white, physician, New Hampshire, none
  51. Pierce, Oliver, 39, white, shoemaker, Maine, none
  52. Plummer, Joseph, 44, white, farmer, New Hampshire, none
  53. Plummer, John H., 35, white, farmer, New Hampshire, none
  54. Reed, Lewis D., 38, white, hotel keeper, New Hampshire, none
  55. Remick, Moses H., 43, white, farmer, New Hampshire, none
  56. Rines, Joseph G., 39, white, mason, New Hampshire, none
  57. Runnels, Alvah, 37, white, blacksmith, Maine, none
  58. Sanborn, Joseph, 42, white, shoemaker, New Hampshire, none
  59. Sawyer, Charles A., 41, white, depot master, New Hampshire, none
  60. Stanton, John, 41, white, farmer, New Hampshire, none
  61. Swasey, Joseph P., 38, white, tailor, New Hampshire, none
  62. Swasey, Henry S., 42, white, farmer, New Hampshire, none
  63. Tebbetts, Ebenezer, 43, white, farmer, New Hampshire, none
  64. Townsend, Joseph, 40, white, mill hand, England, none
  65. Tuttle, William P., 40, white, miller, New Hampshire, none
  66. Varney, Seth W., 43, white, shoemaker, New Hampshire, none
  67. Varney, John B., 37, white, shoemaker, New Hampshire, none
  68. Varney, Jonas M., 35, white, farmer, New Hampshire, none
  69. Wakeham, Joseph B., 40, white, shoemaker, New Hampshire, none
  70. Wallingford, David Jr., 43, white, farmer, New Hampshire, none
  71. Wentworth, Hiram V., 44, white, shoemaker, New Hampshire, none
  72. Wentworth, John C., 41, white, shoemaker, New Hampshire, none
  73. Whitehouse, Henry D., 39, white, farmer, New Hampshire, none
  74. Whitehouse, Josiah, 44, white, farmer, New Hampshire, none
  75. Young, Thomas, 41, white, shoemaker, New Hamp, none

Colonel James B. Fry, Provost Marshal General U.S., Washington, D.C.

STATION: Headquarters first Congr. Dist. of New Hampshire. DATE: June 30, 1863. John S. Godfrey, Provost Marshal.


Of these 75 men, 30 (40.0%) were shoemakers, 29 (38.7%) were farmers, 3 (4.0%) were blacksmiths, 2 (2.7%) were hotel keepers, 2 (2.7%) were mill hands, 1 (1.3%) was a carpenter, 1 (1.3%) was a depot master, 1 (1.3%) was a laborer, 1 (1.3%) was a mason, 1 (1.3%) was a miller, 1 (1.3%) was a physician, 1 (1.3%) was a shoe manufacturer, 1 (1.3%) was a [livery] stabler, and 1 (1.3%) was a tailor.

William H. Huntress, Joseph Plummer, Lewis D. Reed, and Hiram V. Wentworth appeared also in the US Excise Tax of 1864.

References:

National Archives. (n.d.) Consolidated Lists of Civil War Draft Registrations, 1863-1865. NM-65, entry 172, 620 volumes. NAI: 4213514. Records of the Provost Marshal General’s Bureau (Civil War), Record Group 110

Milton in 1849

By Muriel Bristol (Transcriber) | January 14, 2019


Milton.

STRAFFORD Co. The Salmon Fall River washes its whole eastern boundary, a distance of thirteen miles; and a branch of the name river crosses from the south part of Wakefield, and unites near the centre of the eastern boundary.

Teneriffe, a bold and rocky mountain, extends along the eastern part Milton near which lies Milton Pond, of considerable size, connecting with the Salmon Fall river. This town was formerly a part of Rochester.

Boundaries. North-west by Middleton and Wakefield, east by Salmon Fall River, separating it from Maine, and south-west by Farmington.

First settlers. See Rochester. First ministers. See Rochester.

Productions of the Soil. Indian corn, 7,282 bushels; potatoes, 12,560 bushels; hay, 2,296 tons; wool, 3,625 pounds; maple sugar, 473 pounds.

Distances. Forty miles north-east from Concord and twenty north-west from Dover.

Milton gave 188 votes (68.6%) to independent Nathaniel S. Berry and 86 votes (31.4%) to Democrat incumbent Jared Warner Williams in the NH gubernatorial election of 1848. Governor Williams won re-election by 3,000 votes.

New Hampshire. The annual election for the choice of Governor, Council and Legislature, occurs next Tuesday, in N. Hampshire. The Polk party support Jared W. Williams, of Lancaster, now Governor of the State; and the “Allies” – the Whigs, Independent Democrats and Liberty men, Nathaniel S. Berry, of Hebron, for the office of Governor.

Each party seems to be awake, and the struggle will be a warm one. The result none can tell; but as the locofocos carried the State last year by 11 or 1200 majority, it is presumed that they calculate with confidence upon doing the same this year. Indeed, they proclaim the State theirs by thousands. If “Secret Inspectors,” with liberty to draw upon the National Treasury at the rate of $2,200 per annum for traveling (electioneering) fees can secure them the election they are sure of it. But for this corrupt system of buying up men with money from the Treasury, as it has been demonstrated is the practice of the administration in New Hampshire, we should count upon the State as certain for “Berry and Liberty.” As matters are, we can only hope for the best (St. Johnsbury Caledonian, March 11, 1848).

In a table of comparative statistics, Milton was said to have 330 polls; a tax rate of $3.65 per thousand in 1844; improved and unimproved lands valued at $216,852 in 1848; mills and carding machines valued at $10,075; 1,068 sheep; and a total amount of inventory of $383,023 in 1848.

(Farmington’s total amount of inventory was $556,796, Middleton’s was $117,232, Rochester’s was $907,610, and Wakefield’s was $309,515).


Previous in sequence: Milton in 1839; next in sequence: Milton in 1857


References:

Hayward, John. (1849). A Gazetteer of New Hampshire, Containing Descriptions of All the Counties. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=WpUUAAAAYAAJ

Wikipedia. (2018, September 24). Jared W. Williams. Retrieved from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jared_W._Williams

Wikipedia. (2018, September 21). Locofocos. Retrieved from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Locofocos

Wikipedia. (2018, September 24). Nathaniel S. Berry. Retrieved from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nathaniel_S._Berry

Milton in 1823

By Muriel Bristol (Transcriber) | January 14, 2019


MILTON, post-town, Strafford co., in lat. 43°26′, is bounded N.W. by Middleton and Wakefield, E. by Salmon Fall river, separating it from Maine, S.W. by Farmington, and contains about 25,000 acres. The Salmon Fall river washes its whole E. boundary, a distance of 13 miles; and a branch of the same river crosses from the S. part of Wakefield, and unites near the centre of the E. boundary. Teneriffe, a bold and rocky mountain, extends along the E. part of Milton, near which lies Milton pond, of considerable size, connecting with the Salmon Fall river. This town was formerly a part of Rochester, from which it was detached, and incorporated June 11, 1802. There is a meeting-house here, but no settled minister. Pop 1232.

In a table of comparative statistics, Milton was said to have 1 Meeting-house, 7 School districts, 7 School-houses, 5 Taverns, 5 Stores, 5 Saw-mills, 4 Grist-mills, 1 Clothing-mill, 2 Carding-machines, no Bark-mill, and 1 Tannery.

And, we might add, 1 Social library.


Previous in sequence: Milton in 1817; next in sequence: Milton in 1839


References:

Farmer, James, and Bailey, Jacob B. (1823). A Gazetteer of the State of New Hampshire. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=45Y-AAAAYAAJ&pg=189

Milton Teacher of 1796-1805

By Muriel Bristol (Transcriber) | January 13, 2019

Sophia Cushing was born in Dover, NH, in April 1781, daughter of Thomas Cushing. At the age of thirteen years [1794-95], she began teaching school in the Meaderboro district of Rochester.

She taught next in the “Miltonridge,” i.e., Milton, district of Rochester, at the age of sixteen years [1796-97].

In her first years at “Miltonridge,” she taught at the P. district school and mentions living in the households of early settlers. (She confuses the settlers of a generation before with the town founders of 1802). Prior paragraphs spoke of early settlers Joseph Plumer, Hon. B. Plumer, a state senator, and William Palmer, Esq. All of this – Plummer families, P. district, and Miltonridge – suggests that she began teaching at Plummer’s Ridge.

She, who was there at the founding, seemed to think that Milton was named for the English poet John Milton, author of Paradise Lost. She compared him with Homer (they were both blind poets).

She married (1st), probably in Milton, in 1798, Jonathan Hayes, who died on a trip to San Domingo, West Indies, that very same year. He was a son of Aaron and Deborah (Wingate) Hayes. They had one child.

Next, she taught, and resided in various households, in the Three Ponds district. She left Milton for Gilmanton in 1805.

She married (2nd) in Dover, October 8, 1811, Samuel Wyatt. She became landlady of several notable hotels and, in her later years, wrote an autobiography of her life and experiences. She published it in 1854. She died in Georgetown, MA, December 31, 1857, aged seventy-six years, eight months, and twelve days.

Here is extracted Chapter XII of her 1854 book, Autobiography of a Landlady of the Old School, in which she recounts her time in early Milton. She mentions also her impressions of Milton from several return visits in later years. Her final visit, at the least the last one before her book went to press, was in January 1854.

She begins her tale with some standard Milton information copied from a gazetteer of 1823 (or later).


Milton

Milton is bounded north-west by Middleton and Wakefield, east by Salmon Falls river, separating it from Maine; south-west by Farmington. The Salmon Falls river washes its whole east boundary, a distance of thirteen miles; and a branch of the same river crosses from the south part of Wakefield, and unites near the centre of the east boundary. Teneriffe, a bold and rocky mountain, extends along the eastern part of Milton, near which lies the three ponds, connecting with the Salmon Falls river. This town was formerly a part of Rochester, where Messrs. Joseph Plumer, Bard Plumer, William Palmer, Benjamin Scates, and their associates, went boldly into the forest and commenced cutting down sturdy oaks, in a pleasant place now called Miltonridge, which was detached from Rochester, and incorporated, June 11th, 1802. Those worthy gentlemen, with industry and application, soon made noble farms, early became wealthy and independent. J. Plumer erected a public house, which was known for three score years and upwards, as Plumer’s tavern; one of the best inns ever built and kept in New England in those early days. The Hon. B. Plumer was a statesman, he was chosen senator in district No. 5, Strafford county, in New Hampshire legislature, for several years.

William Palmer, Esq., was a useful man, his mind was well stored with useful knowledge, and was competent to decide any arbitrations that might occur; he was highly respected. Dea. B. Scates lived beloved by all, a worthy exemplary Christian. Those early settlers have left highly respectable descendants.

A number of years since, the writer providentially called at the mansion house of the late senator Plumer, which was owned and occupied by one of his sons, who was laboring in the last stages of consumption; had his family of children gathered around, with the good minister of the parish, Rev. Mr. Walker, for their baptism. I heard him a short time afterward remark, “If my father and my uncle Joseph, and Esq. Palmer, had been religious men, what a good influence they would have exerted over this town.” 

The writer can look back with gratitude to the early patronage she received in Rochester, now Miltonridge. At the age of sixteen years [1797-98] I taught a school in the P. District; boarded in the families of the three first settlers, where kindness and friendship were the leading traits of character. My following terms of teaching were at the three ponds, in the district of Timothy Roberts, Esq., Ensign William Jones, and John Fish, Esq., and other officiating gentlemen of the place. It well might be pronounced a good school; the attention of the scholars was given to their studies, and each one was emulous to excel. At the close of the term, relatives, friends and neighbors, were invited to hear the recitations, and see and hear the dialogues spoken, which was rather a new thing half a century ago, so far up in the woods. The writer has fallen in with individuals in later years, that referred to that school. There are many descendants of those Milton gentlemen who fill eminent places in public life, who were of much enterprise; left their homes at an early day, to seek friends and wealth in other places.

The writer had an opportunity of visiting Milton in January, 1854, where an entire change had taken place. Many of those who made their homes so pleasant, were no more; they return not. But we were soon drawn from tears of sympathy, to be introduced to other scenes. Cheerful, lively, animated faces had taken the places of those that were not; all appeared desirous of doing good. To effect their object, they assembled at the residence of their pastor, the Rev. Mr. Dolt [James Doldt], taking with them a quantity of useful articles, such as any family would find necessary, as well as a surplus of that which we say answers all purposes; and also a luxuriant feast of good things, served up in fine style. Rev. Mr. Dolt is a man of exemplary piety, and unsullied integrity, is much beloved by his people.

But to return to Milton, named in honor of our English Homer.

The town has increased in population and business; and its water power and railroad aid the enterprise of the inhabitants. It has three houses for public worship, two ministers, Rev. James Dolt, Congregational, Rev. L.H. Gordon, Methodist. There are four practicing physicians: Dr. S. Drew early settled at the three ponds, and for thirty years and upwards, had the entire practice of the town. His long and successful practice has endeared him to the people. Dr. D.E. Palmer is a gentleman of much promise, and is fast gaining friends and practice. Dr. Buck is eminent in his profession, and a physician of high respectability. Dr. Swindleton [Dr. J.L. Swinerton] is useful in his profession, and popular. The shoe business of late has become very important. It has one bakery; Charles Sweasey, Esq., proprietor. Mr. Sweasey has long been known as a gentleman of exemplary piety. The manufactory of woolen fabrics is carried on at the westerly village, under the supervision of Mr. Townsend proprietor. It has a good town house, with stores, mills, and public houses, in due proportion.

We noticed at South Milton, a beautiful and substantial family tomb, built by the antiquarian, Theodore C. Lyman, Esq. A Boston gentleman remarked, “It would do Mount Auburn credit.”

But dropping a tear over the graves of those we early loved, we hasten from Milton away (Wyatt, 1854).


South Milton’s Theodore Cushing Lyman (1770-1863) was likely a relative of Sophia (Cushing) Hayes Wyatt.


See also Milton in 1857 and Milton Teacher of 1891-95


References:

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

Wikipedia. (2019, January 7). John Milton. Retrieved from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Milton

Wikipedia. (2018, November 10). Mount Auburn Cemetery. Retrieved from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Auburn_Cemetery

Wyatt, Sophia Hayes. (1854). The Autobiography of a Landlady of the Old School: With Personal Sketches of Eminent Characters, Places, and Miscellaneous Items. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=GSbjtNCHpIoC&pg=PA76

Milton in 1817

By Muriel Bristol (Transcriber) | February 2, 2019


MILTON, in Strafford county, was formerly a part of Rochester, and is bounded by N.W. by Middleton, E. by Salmon falls river, which divides it from Shapley (in Maine,) and S.W. by Farmington. Its area is 25,000 acres, and its number of inhabitants 1005. It extends more than 13 miles on Salmon falls river. Branch river crosses the S.W. extremity of the town. Teneriffe mountain lies on its easterly side, near which is Milton pond. The southerly extremity of Milton is 9 miles and 82 rods distant from Wakefield. There are here 3 religious societies, 1 meeting-house, 3 grain-mills, 3 saw-mills, 1 clothing-mill and 3 trading stores.

In a table of comparative statistics, Milton was said to have had 184 polls in 1812; a tax rate of <blank> in 1775; a tax rate of $4.34 per $1,000 in 1812; 122 horses over 4 years old; 250 oxen; 367 cows; 440 cattle between 2 and 4 years old; 18 acres of orchard; and <blank> sheep.

Milton participated in Rochester’s 1775 tax rate of £9 11s 0d per £1000, which would work out to $9.55 per $1,000. Its own 1812 rate was less than half that exacted when a British colony.

Milton’s current tax rate of $25.48 per thousand is 267% of the colonial tax rate of 1775, and 587% of its own 1812 rate.


Next in sequence: Milton in 1823


References:

Merrill, Eliphalet, and Merrill, Phineas. (1817). Gazetteer of the State of New Hampshire. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=F38UAAAAYAAJ&pg=162

Non-Public BOS Session Scheduled (January 15, 2019)

By Muriel Bristol | January 13, 2019

The Milton Board of Selectmen (BOS) have posted their agenda for a BOS meeting to be held Tuesday, January 15.

The meeting is scheduled to be an entirely Non-Public session beginning at 4:00 PM. That agenda has two Non-Public items classed as 91-A:3 II (b) and 91-A:3 II (c).

91-A:3 II (b) The hiring of any person as a public employee.

Again, probably having to do with the truck driver posting. But, just possibly, something for the police or fire departments.

91-A:3 II (c). Matters which, if discussed in public, would likely affect adversely the reputation of any person, other than a member of the public body itself, unless such person requests an open meeting. This exemption shall extend to any application for assistance or tax abatement or waiver of a fee, fine, or other levy, if based on inability to pay or poverty of the applicant.

These (c) items are perennial favorites. There is only one of them planned this time.

The BOS have not posted any agenda items for a follow-on Public session on this occasion.


Ms. McDougall has called a fifth meeting of her Milton Advocates group. It will take place again in the Nute Library’s Community Room, on Saturday, January 19), at 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM. All town residents are invited. Bring your best manners. (Not her words).


References:

State of New Hampshire. (2016, June 21). RSA Chapter 91-A. Access to Governmental Records and Meetings. Retrieved from www.gencourt.state.nh.us/rsa/html/VI/91-A/91-A-3.htm

Town of Milton. (2018, January 11). BOS Meeting Agenda, January 15, 2019. Retrieved from www.miltonnh-us.com/uploads/bos_agendas_868_4231712231.pdf

Youtube. (1965). Cone of Silence. Retrieved from www.youtube.com/watch?v=g1eUIK9CihA&feature=youtu.be&t=19

Northeast Parish in the Second (1800) Federal Census

by Muriel Bristol | January 12, 2019

Milton was not yet its own town at the time of the Second Federal Census (1800). It would separate from Rochester in June 1802.

The final seven pages of Rochester’s entry in the Second (1800) Federal Census consisted of those Rochester Northeast Parish households that were shortly to be “set off” as its own town, i.e., shortly to become Milton.

Fortunately, the census enumerator broke this section out separately. It would have been better still had he not alphabetized the list (thus obscuring the geographical relationships within the Northeast Parish).

Note that, despite modern notions regarding constitutional separation of church and state, it was the quality of having “separate ministerial business” that justified creating a separate township. And this separation took place, for that reason, under the US Constitution. Also note that the original meeting-house was both a church and the townhouse. The construction committee financed the building through the sale of church pews, rather than taxation. (And rum, there was also rum).

Rochester’s Northeast Parish, i.e., Milton to be, had 899 residents on Monday, August 4, 1800: 430 males (47.8%) and 459 females (51.2%).

The separate columns are represented here as digits. The first five digits are the number of free white males aged under-10, aged 10-15, aged 16-25, aged 26-44, and 45-and-over. The second five digits are the number of free white females aged under-10, aged 10-15, aged 16-25, aged 26-44, and 45-and-over. The final two digits are the number of all other free persons, and slaves. (New Hampshire had 8 slaves within its borders in 1800; none of them were in the Northeast Parish).

The names of those Rochester residents that petitioned the NH legislature, May 28, 1802, for a separation from Rochester, have been bolded.


The following persons live in a part of Rochester that is proposed to be shortly set of [off] as a separate town, and at present transact their ministerial business separate from this next part of the Town.

  1. Thomas Appleby, 11010-40010-00
  2. William Appleby, 10010-00100-00
  3. Dudley Burnham, 10010-30100-00
  4. James Berry, 00101-01101-00
  5. James Berry Jr, 10010-10100-00
  6. Francis Berry, 20010-20011-00
  7. William Berry, 10110-00010-00
  8. Isaac Brackett, 01010-41010-00
  9. Moses Chamberlain, 01010-01010-00
  10. David Corsen, 01110-10010-00
  11. Benjn Corsen, 31010-00100-00
  12. Joshua Corsen, 10101-31010-00
  13. Ebener Corsen, 31210-21010-00
  14. Saml Chapman, 20001-10010-00
  15. Frederick Cate, 20100-00100-00
  16. Jeremiah Cook, 10010-10100-00
  17. Dodavah Copp, 10010-11010-00
  18. Ephm Drew, 10000-21010-00
  19. John Downs, 10010-30010-00
  20. Moses Downs, 30010-21010-00
  21. Jona Door, 21110-10010-00
  22. Daniel Door, 10010-11110-00
  23. Beniah Door, 11010-21010-00
  24. Nathl Dearborn, 10011-10211-00
  25. Milis Dairs, 10010-10010-00
  26. Winthrop Door, 00100-00010-00
  27. Paul Ellis, 20010-10010-00
  28. John Fish, 01010-30110-00
  29. Thomas Furber, 01001-21010-00
  30. Joseph Dearborn, 10010-10011-00
  31. John Fifield, 00001-10110-00
  32. Benjn Foss, 00110-11011-00
  33. Jeremiah Goodwin, 31001-21101-00
  34. James Goodwin, 01110-31010-00
  35. Daniel Grant, 20010-10010-00
  36. Nathan Grant, 00100-00000-00
  37. Peter Grant, 00001-00001-00
  38. James Hayes, 30010-10110-00
  39. Clement Hayes, 01010-20010-00
  40. Theodore Ham, 11110-10010-00
  41. Nichs Harford [Hartford], 00201-00001-00
  42. John Hanson, 21001-20010-00
  43. Joseph Hight, 22001-20310-00
  44. Jotham Ham, 30010-31010-00
  45. [Richd] H[orn], 11100-00100-00
  46. Isaac Hanson, 10010-20010-00
  47. Daniel Hayes, 12010-12010-00
  48. Ezekiel Hayes, 30010-00100-00
  49. Ichd Hayes, 00010-00000-00
  50. Eleazar Hodgdon, 20010-30010-00
  51. William Hatch, 10010-30010-00
  52. Pelatiah Hanscomb, 00300-10201-00
  53. Shadrach Heard, 10100-00100-00
  54. Robert Hart, 01100-00201-00
  55. Paul Jewett, 01101-01201-00
  56. Gilman Jewett, 00100-10200-00
  57. Stephen Jenkins Jr, 10100-00010-00 
  58. Stephen Jenkins, 00201-01101-00
  59. Ebener Jenkins, 00010-20100-00
  60. Stephen Jennes, 10010-10101-00
  61. Reubin Jones, 01101-00201-00
  62. Ebener Jones, 02101-00301-00
  63. Wm Jones, 01010-10010-00
  64. Elisha Jennes, 11010-10010-00
  65. Levi Jones, 00010-00000-00
  66. Wm W. Lord, 00010-12101-00
  67. James Merrow, 50010-00100-00
  68. Richd Monson, 00201-00100-00
  69. Benjn Miller, 21010-11010-00
  70. Richard Miller, 00020-11100-00
  71. Henry Miller, 00100-10100-00
  72. Robert Mathes, 10010-10010-00
  73. Wm Mathes, 00100-00000-00
  74. Bartholomew Miller, 00100-10100-00
  75. Samuel Nute, 20301-01101-00
  76. Lt Jotham Nute, 33010-10120-00
  77. Francis Nute, 20010-10100-00
  78. Saml Nute Jr, 30100-00100-00
  79. Capn Saml Nute, 11001-01001-00
  80. Josiah Nute, 10010-00100-00
  81. Thomas Nutter, 01010-31010-00
  82. Jona Pottle, 10100-10010-00
  83. Thomas Pinkham, 41010-11010-00
  84. Jona Pinkham, 01010-21010-00
  85. Nathl Pinkham, 20010-30010-00
  86. Joseph Perkins, 00100-00000-00
  87. Beard Plumer, 21201-11210-00
  88. Joseph Plumer, 02101-01201-00
  89. Wm Palmer Esqr, 21010-21020-00
  90. Saml Palmer, 01001-00110-00
  91. John Palmer, 00010-00010-00
  92. Otis Pinkham, 10010-11010-00
  93. Ephm Plumer, 30010-21010-00
  94. Oliver Peavey, 20010-10010-00
  95. Henry Rhines, 10100-10010-00
  96. Shubal Roberts, 00100-00000-00
  97. Lemuel Ricker, 00211-02201-00
  98. Elias Ricker, 00100-00000-00
  99. John Ricker, 10010-20010-00
  100. Ebener Ricker, 21110-3001-00
  101. Timothy Ricker, 21010-20110-00
  102. John Remick, 10101-10101-00
  103. John Remick Jr, 11010-20110-00
  104. Tobias Ricker, 00101-32210-00
  105. Timothy Roberts, 12110-20010-00
  106. Isaac Staunton, 00100-10010-00
  107. Benjn Scates, 12001-01201-00
  108. John Scates, 11110-01100-00
  109. Dadavah Scates, 20001-01010-00
  110. John Smith, 30010-00010-00
  111. Ephm Twombly, 11110-21021-00
  112. John Twombly, 01001-00201-00
  113. Saml Twombly, 00101-31101-00
  114. John Twombly, 10010-10100-00
  115. Ebenr Twombly, 00010-30110-00
  116. Ephm Twombly Jr, 21010-11110-00
  117. Wm Tuttle, 10101-02210-00
  118. Enoch Varney, 00101-40010-00
  119. James Varney, 10010-21010-00
  120. John Varney, 00010-00110-00
  121. Benjn Varney, 01101-00101-00
  122. Lemuel Varney, 10010-10010-00
  123. Aaron Varney, 11010-11010-00
  124. Edmond Varney, 00010-20010-00
  125. Richd Walker, 10111-11111-00
  126. John Wentworth, 20010-02010-00
  127. Saml J. Wentworth, 21010-11010-00
  128. James Wentworth, 10001-10001-00
  129. Stephen Wentworth, 30010-10011-00
  130. Saml J. Wentworth, 31110-20010-00
  131. Gershom Wentworth, 00011-00110-00
  132. Amos Witham, 01011-00001-00
  133. John Witham, 22010-20010-00
  134. Josiah Witham, 01010-40010-00
  135. Caleb Wakeham, 31101-12111-00
  136. Enoch Wingate, 00001-10101-00
  137. David Wallingford, 20010-20020-00
  138. Isaac Worster, 02010-20100-00
  139. Ephm Wentworth, 10010-20010-00
  140. Ichd Wentworth, 21010-30010-00
  141. Enoch Wentworth, 20010-00010-00
  142. Caleb Wingate, 01010-00210-00
  143. Stephen Watson, 11010-50010-00
  144. David Wentworth, 00010-00100-00
  145. Simon Branon, 00100-00100-00
  146. John McDuffie, 10001-10010-00
  147. Wm Griffis, 00001-01001-00
  148. Philip Door, 00001-00001-00
  149. Saml Loe, 00001-00021-00
  150. [blank] Demerett, 10001-20010-00
  151. Widow Smith, 10000-00001-00
  152. Elizabeth [Sp]encer, 00000-20010-00
  153. Aaron Wentworth, 00101-01001-00
  154. John Tanner, 11010-01011-00
  155. Henry Rollins, 11110-10110-00
  156. Moses Dorrs, 10100-10010-00
  157. Lt Elijah Horn, 10010-31010-00
  158. Mark Miller, 20010-00100-00

Rochester’s Northeast Parish had 158 households with an average 5.7 inhabitants per household. Only 2 households (1.3%) were headed by a female, one of them identified as a widow.

336 (37.4%) of the Northeast Parish’s 899 inhabitants were aged under-10 years of age (158 males and 178 females), 124 (13.8%) were aged 10-15 years (67 males and 57 females), 148 (16.5%) were aged 16-25 years of age (65 males and 83 females), 199 (22.1%) were aged 26-44 (97 males and 102 females), and 82 (9.1%) were aged 45-and-over years of age (43 males and 39 females). All of these were “free white” inhabitants.

The constitutional purpose of the census is to apportion US Representatives. For that a simple head count would do. Some of the awkward breaks into uneven age groups are due to another governmental purpose: attempting to determine the size of military age cohorts.

Of primary interest was the size of the males aged 16-25 years cohort. Those are the minutemen. The males aged 26-44 years cohort was of secondary interest. They formed the bulk of the militia. Males aged 45-and-over were exempt from military service. Militia officers Captain Samuel Nute,  Lieutenant Jotham Nute, and Lieutenant Elijah Horn were identified by their militia ranks in this census enumeration.


Note that only 80 (51.3%) of the 156 Northeast Parish’s male householders signed the 1802 separation petition.

24 petitioners were not householders in the Northeast Parish, namely Joseph Berry, Joseph Cook, Wentworth Cook, Ernest Corsen, William Corsen, Abraham Dearborn, Benjamin Dearborn, Gershom Downs, Francis Drew, Nathaniel Gilman, Humphrey Goodwin, Benjamin Higgins, Nathaniel Jewett, Benjamin Jones, John Jones, James McGeoch, Robert McGeoch, Dudley Palmer, Jedediah Ricker, Henry Rollins, Samuel Twombly Jr., Joseph Walker, Josiah Willey, and Obadiah Witham.

Likely, most of these 24 non-householding petitioners resided within the named Northeast Parish households, as column tick marks. If so, the non-householding petitioners and the householder petitioners combined would represent 104 (63.0%) of the approximately 165 Northeast Parish male voters.


palmer, william esqr Joseph Plumer, Wm Palmer Esqr, and Saml Palmer

Note also that only one man – William Palmer Esqr – is termed Esqr., or Esquire. It is quite clearly written so. The various printed histories that describe Milton’s first town meetings report William Plumer, Esq., as having called the first town meeting (and a William Plumer as being one of the first selectmen chosen at that meeting). One of these things is not like the other. Either the census enumerator or the history typesetter may have made an error.


Previous in sequence: Northeast Parish in the First (1790) Federal Census; next in sequence: Milton in the Third (1810) Federal Census


References:

State of New Hampshire. (1884). Provincial and State Papers (Volume 13). Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=hYw7AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA349

Wikipedia. (2018, November). 1800 United States Census. Retrieved from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1800_United_States_Census