Browsing named entities in Historic leaves, volume 2, April, 1903 - January, 1904. You can also browse the collection for Chelsea (Massachusetts, United States) or search for Chelsea (Massachusetts, United States) in all documents.

Your search returned 3 results in 3 document sections:

Historic leaves, volume 2, April, 1903 - January, 1904, Neighborhood Sketch no. 6.
Medford
and
Walnut streets
. (search)
wanted for the Central fire station. Chester avenue did not exist at that time, but it was opened a few years later, when the several houses that front toward the railroad were built. There were three houses only on this portion of Barberry Lane, the one I occupied, the one owned and occupied by John W. Mandell next east of it, and a third one adjoining Mandell, owned and occupied by Charles Bird, Jr. Mandell afterward located on Prescott street as a florist, while Bird drifted to Chelsea and became an auctioneer. Northwest from us, along Medford street, there was no house until you came to Captain Brown's, near Central street. Opposite Brown, or a little further along, about where Ames street is, stood a small farmhouse and barn. A little more to the north of Medford street stood the home of Charles E. Gilman on Walnut street, also an old house opposite his, both of which are still standing. Mr. Gilman was about fifty years old at this time, and his farm of severa
Historic leaves, volume 2, April, 1903 - January, 1904, Literary men and women of Somerville. (search)
r honorable name, takes refuge, disguised as a man, in the old mill, by permission of the old miller. Her pursuer finds here there, runs up the steep ladder after her, but by a misstep falls through a hole in the floor, and meets a horrible death. The poems in this volume include rhymed anecdotes, verses suggested by the children, reflections of natural beauty, and thoughts on religious themes. Mrs. Katherine B. W. Libby, who died within a year (March 7, 1902), was born and educated in Chelsea, but lived in Somerville since shortly after her marriage. Mrs. Libby was remarkable for her patriotism, as well as her predilection for poetry. A ‘Daughter of the Revolution,’ a member of this society, and of several social and philanthropic bodies, she bore her part in practical affairs. Her writing, however, was to her of supreme importance: she would drop instantly whatever she might be doing when a thought came to her, that she might not lose its appropriate expression. Her writing
rlestown Neck14, 21, 91 Charlestown School, The58 Charlestown School, First15 Charlestown Schools, Early Records of17 Charlestown Schools, Regulations Concerning63 Charlestown Schoolhouse21 Charlestown School in the 17th Century15, 32 Charlestown Schools in the 18th Century58 Charlestown, Separation of15 Charter Street Burying-Ground40 Cheever, Elizabeth20 Cheever, Ezekiel, Schoolmaster, 166119, 20, 21, 32, 37, 39 Cheever, Ezekiel, Death of20 Chelmsford, Mass.19, 53, 54, 56 Chelsea, Mass.42, 66 Chester Ave., Somerville42, 45 Chesthunt leyes, England19 Christian Examiner, The3, 89 Christian Messenger, The27 Christian Souvenir, The3 Christ's Hospital School, England20 Clay Pits, The, Somerville44 Clark, Joseph47 College Hill26 Committee on Historic Sites, Somerville Historical Society74 Committee of Safety, The89, 90, 92 Concord Bridge78 Concord Fight, The80 Concord, Mass.52, 88 Concord, N. H.50, 51, 52, 56, 57 Concord R. R.51 Concord River52, 53, 54, 55 C