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Lucius R. Paige, History of Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1630-1877, with a genealogical register 3 1 Browse Search
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 13. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones) 1 1 Browse Search
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Lucius R. Paige, History of Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1630-1877, with a genealogical register, Chapter 16: ecclesiastical History. (search)
,Rev. John W. Merrill, W. U. 1834, D. D. (McK. C.) 1844. 1852, 1853,Rev. William H. Hatch. 1854, 1855,Rev. Converse L. McCurdy. Died 22 Nov. 1876. 1856,Rev. Abraham D. Merrill. 1857, 1858,Rev. George Bowler. 1859, 1860,Rev. Moses A. Howe. Died 27 Jan. 1861. 1861, 1862,Rev. David K. Merrill. 1863,Rev. Samuel Tupper. Died 11 Jan. 1869. 1864, 1865,Rev. William H. Hatch. 1866-1868,Rev. Isaac J. P. Collyer. Died 7 May, 1872. 1869, 1870,Rev. Pliny Wood. Died 1873. 1871-1873,Rev. William P. Ray. 1874, 1875,Rev. Charles T. Johnson, W. U. 1863. 1876,Rev. George W. Mansfield, W. U. 1858. Third Congregational (Unitarian).—The Third Congregational Society was incorporated June 16, 1827, The corporators were eight citizens, named, and all those persons who now have or hereafter may subscribe and pay the sum of fifty dollars towards the erection of a Congregational meeting-house at Lechmere Point in Cambridge.— Mass. Spec. Laws, VI. 575. and in the course of the same year
Poole, 8, 32, 116. Porter, 231, 6. 88. Post, 33. Powers, 319. Pratt, 20, 4, 6, 7, 32, 5, 76, 233. Prentice. or Prentiss, 4, 59, 76, 80, 1, 92, 4, 118, 214, 88, 92, 305, 92. 4, 400, 31. Prescott, 185, 288, 423. Price, 2 87. Prince, 33, 247. Prout, 272. Prudden, 49, 50. Pryor, 331. Putnam, 187, 423, 4, 6. Pynchon, 6, 8, 27, 398. Quincy, 42, 275, 82, 304, 65. Randolph, 76, 7, 95, 6, 103– 8. Ravenscroft, 110. Rawson, 99, 350, 1, 89, 98. Ray, 321. Raymond, 342. Read, 201, 31, 92, 324, 40, 427, 8. Reading, 11, 32. Reed, 201, 31, 92, 324, 40, 427, 8. Remington, 124, 5, 35, 224, 7, 88, 375, 94, 8. Reyle, 76. Rice, 36, 339. Richards, 11, 32, 110, 11,15. Richardson, 292, 310, 32, 36, 413, 14, 31-33. Riedesel, 168, 427. Riorden, 329. Robbins, 59, 76, 140, 3, 263, 407. Roberts, 36, 370. Robinson, 80, 226, 331, 415. Rogers, 288, 9. Rolfe, 54. Rollins, 341. Roripaugh, 319. Row, 341
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 13. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Official reports of the battle of Gettysburg. (search)
position which they held. I opened upon the batteries with my four Napoleons, firing canister and spherical case, until our infantry, who were present, began their charge. I then ceased firing, limbered to the front, and advanced some eight hundred or one thousand yards, and took another position, which I held till after dark, though several attempts were made by the enemy, both with infantry and artillery, to drive me from it. I lost at the first position one of my best gunners, Corporal William P. Ray. He was killed whilst in the act of sighting his gun. He never spoke after receiving the shot, walked a few steps from his piece and fell dead. I had, also, whilst in this (my first position) the following men wounded: Vincent F. Burford, badly bruised on shoulder; Silas C. Gentry, cut on the wrist; Joseph Moody, cut in the face and bruised on the back; Byrd McCormick, shot through the calf of the leg by a bullet from a spherical case; Edward J Sheppard, wounded badly in heel, and