Browsing named entities in Charles A. Nelson , A. M., Waltham, past, present and its industries, with an historical sketch of Watertown from its settlement in 1630 to the incorporation of Waltham, January 15, 1739.. You can also browse the collection for 1634 AD or search for 1634 AD in all documents.

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Squeb would not bring us into Charles River, Wood's N. E. Prospect, 1634, gives Mishaum, Mishaumut—Charlestowne, and the names of Rivers of nurt, to which he was Representative most of the time from the first (1634) till 1657. After the return of Sir Richard Saltonstall to England,, were soon widely scattered. for the pasturage of their cattle. In 1634 Wood says of the people of New-towne:—The inhabitants most of them ae first entry in the original records of Watertown, made as early as 1634, stands as follows:—Agreed, by the consent of the Freemen, that thesixty-six years, and Mr. Phillips was its sole pastor till 1640. In 1634, the Rev. John Sherman, who received his first impressions of religiof Wickham Skeith, County Suffolk, England, who came to Watertown in 1634, when the daughters were respectively 15 and 18 years of age. Deacon Bright was married probably in the latter part of the year 1634. October 14, 1690, the town voted to treat with Mr. Henry Gibbs to assist <
n the north side of Main Street, above the brook, was the Cutting Tavern. Richard Cutting He was the great-grandson of Richard Cutting who came to Watertown in 1634, at the age of 11 years, and became a wheelwright. was a licensed inn-holder from 1742 to 1767, when he died, and his widow Thankful succeeded him in the business,rt of the Buttrick estate. Next above was an old farm house known as the Mixer place, occupied by descendants of Isaac and Sarah Mixer, who came from England in 1634 and settled in Watertown. It was probably the dwelling erected in the four acre lot granted in the Further Plain to Isaac Mixer. In 1798 it was owned and occupiethe original town of Watertown was the water-mill referred to on page 21 in connection with the grant of lands to the wear. It was a grist-mill, built as early as 1634, upon Mill Creek, a probably natural canal or raceway flowing around the lower fall and affording sufficient power for the mill, without the erection of a dam. The