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Medford Historical Society Papers, Volume 15. 2 2 Browse Search
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Medford Historical Society Papers, Volume 7., Meeting-house brook and the second Meeting-house. (search)
of £ 720; which, after deducting his own share, was to be paid to his brothers and sisters or their heirs, as follows: Andrew Andrew, born October 6, 1723, married Sarah Callender Ship master of Boston. (eldest son) £158.19.3 Sarah, born December 1, 1729, m. Hezekiah Blanchard, October 6, 1763, died November 28, 1792. James, born April 8, 1735, m. Mary Watson, March. 27, 1760, d. November 18, 1763., Isaac Isaac, born January 24, 1739, m. Abigail Cutter, October 8, 1761, d. November 24, 1789. Captain of Minutemen, April 19, 1775., Richard Richard, born November 12, 1737, m. Lucy Jones, November 9, 1762, d. June 27, 1827. Town clerk of Medford., Ebenezer Ebenezer, born May 31, 1748, m. Martha Jones, April 12, 1770, d. March 21, 1835. Occupation, tanner. Josiah Josiah, born October 17, 1744. Occupation, hatter, 1770. Probably went to West Cambridge. [Halls of New England. Hall.] and James James, born April 8, 1735, m. Mary Watson, March. 27, 1760, d. Novem
Newburyport and then to Halifax. In Brooks' history of Medford is an account of an examination respecting the political behavior of Colonel Royal. Among the persons examined was Captain Isaac Hall, who declared: That the winter before said battle (Lexington) he went to settle accounts with said Royal at his house; and that said Royal showed him his arms and accoutrements (which were in very good order), and told him that he determined to stand for his country, etc. Isaac Hall died November 24, 1789. A sword, said to be the one he carried at Lexington and Bunker Hill, is in the possession of Jas. L. Hall of Kingston, Mass. It was left him by Mrs. Susan M. Fitch, who received it from her grandfather, Ebenr Hall, a brother of Isaac. The tablet is not intended to perpetuate any remarkable military achievements of valor of Captain Isaac Hall, though he performed his part in those heroic contests which gave confidence to the colonists in their resistance to oppression. It is more
Medford Historical Society Papers, Volume 15., Something about Capt. Isaac Hall. (search)
on April 24, 1791, to Charles Stimpson the son of Recompense Wadsworth Stimpson, a merchant of Boston, Mass., and the writer of this communication is a grandson of this couple. The article above cited gives Capt. Isaac's death, (p. 102) (November 24, 1789). This I believe to be a mistake, and that it should be November 13, 1805. The Boston Directory for 1796 and ‘98 gives the name of Isaac Hall and locates him as a distiller, Distill House square, House No. 12, Franklin Place. The sameone particular, that of the date of Captain Hall's death, but adds interesting facts of the later days of both Captain and Mrs. Hall. We find in Halls of New England, by Rev. David B. Hall, A. M., Duanesburg, N. Y., 1883, the date of death November 24, 1789. The above work was shown us by Mrs. Annie (Hall) Gleason and is doubtless the basis of Mr. Hall Gleason's statement. By the courtesy, also, of Mrs. Gleason, we have examined the old family Bible in which are recorded the marriage of An