hide Matching Documents

The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.

Document Max. Freq Min. Freq
View all matching documents...

Your search returned 64 results in 22 document sections:

1 2 3
who was a resident of Halifax and whose agent was Ichabod Jones. In that case the estate referred to in the accounts of the committee was that of John Clewly of Halifax, a carpenter, who held a mortgage on the estate of Francis Whitmore, a resident of Medford at the time the deed was given. His estate in Middlesex County was not sold by the state, but it was settled in 795 by his administrator, John C. Jones; his real estate, which consisted of about 22 acres in Medford and 6 1/4 acres in Weston, was sold by his administrator, and after the payment of debts, the balance was ordered to be paid to his surviving brother and sister, Isaac Clewly and Bathsheba Wetherbee, and to the children of his deceased sister, Anna Jones. Sir William Pepperell was the grandson of the first Sir William Pepperell of Kittery, Me., and the son of Elizabeth (Pepperell) and Nathaniel Sparhawk of Kittery, and was named William Pepperell Sparhawk. In accordance with the terms of his grandfather's will, o
t still continue to harass the Yankees in that section: A Train of Government Wagons Captured by the Rebels.--A friend writes us from Grafton that on last Sunday night, at half-past 11 o'clock, twenty armed Secesh attacked a train of twelve wagons at Jacksonville, Lewis county, Va., fifty miles from Weston. They fired at the drivers, wounding four, one or two severely, but killed none. They captured the wagons and all the horses but three. Capt. Rowland's cavalry company, stationed at Weston, went in pursuit of the rebels, and it was thought he would capture some of them. The Captain is doing good service in and about Lewis county. He sends scouting parties out every night, and they very rarely return without game. The Secesh in that county are very much enraged at the Captain's energy in bringing them to justice.--Wheeling Intelligencer, Nov. 1. The New York Timeshas the following: The property of Charles W. Russell, of Wheeling, has been confiscated. Mr. Russell
1 2 3