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r charged at Front. No.Name.Date. ...D. G. ColburnJune 29, 1833. ...Samuel ColtFeb. 25, 1836. 182D. LeavittApr. 29, 1837. *364S. DayAug. 3, 1837. 216O. W. WhittierMay 30, 1837. 409C. ParkhurstSept. 25, 1837. 698Theo. F. StrongApr. 21, 1838. 707Nichols and ChildsApr. 24, 1838. 713M. NuttingApr. 25, 1838. 832E. JaquithJuly 12, 1838. 1,106E. B. ButterfieldMar. 16, 1839. 1,134D. EdwardsApr. 27, 1839. 1,304Samuel ColtAug. 29, 1839. 5,316L. H. GibbsOct. 2, 1847. 6,669E. WessonAug. 28, 1849. 7,613Samuel ColtSept. 4, 1850. 7,629Samuel ColtSept. 4, 1850. 7,802J. StevensNov. 26, 1850. 7,894J. WarnerJan. 10, 1851. 8,229J. WarnerJuly 15, 1851. 8,412J. StevensOct. 7, 1851. 8,982North and SkinnerJune 1, 1852. 9,694Robert AdamsMay 3, 1853. 9,929J. StevensAug. 9, 1853. 10,259M. L. RoodNov. 22, 1853. 10,812J. EllsApr. 25, 1854. 10,821Charles BusoApr. 25, 1854. 10,930J. PeckMay 16, 1854. 11,419J. EllsAug. 1, 1854. 11,447E. WhitneyAug. 1, 1854. 11,470I. W. BrownAug. 8,
Margaret Fuller, Memoirs of Margaret Fuller Ossoli (ed. W. H. Channing), chapter 11 (search)
y helped nobly at first, in the service of the hospitals, when there was far less need; but they had all gone. What would I have given that I could have spoken to one of the Lawrences, or the Phillipses; they could and would have saved the misery. These poor men are left helpless in the power of a mean and vindictive foe. You felt so oppressed in the slave-states; imagine what I felt at seeing all the noblest youth, all the genius of this dear land, again enslaved. to W. H. C. Rieti, Aug. 28, 1849. You say, you are glad I have had this great opportunity for carrying out my principles. Would it were so! I found myself inferior in courage and fortitude to the occasion. I knew not how to bear the havoc and anguish incident to the struggle for these principles. I rejoiced that it lay not with me to cut down the trees, to destroy the Elysian gardens, for the defence of Rome; I do not know that I could have done it. And the sight of these far nobler growths, the beautiful young
Adams's company from this Precinct and other towns, in 1758. See Wyman, 239, group 11. Cornell, Mehitable—brought up with Deacon John Winship—adm. to the ch. 3 July, 1757. Cotting, William and Sarah, o. c. 31 Jan. 1813. Had Benjamin Eddy, bap. 7 Feb. 1813 [H. U. 1834, M. D. 1837]; Martha Eddy, bap. 19 June, 1814, m. Miles T. Gardner [H. U. 1834], of Dedham, 24 May, 1838; Mary Caroline, bap. 8 Sept. 1816, d. 24 Nov. 1820, a. 5; Sarah Maria Wellington, bap. 7 June, 1818; Married 28 Aug. 1849, Howland Holmes [H. U. 1843, M. D. 1848], who since 1861 has resided in Lexington. William Francis, bap. 9 July, 1820—the William W. who m. Elmira Peirce, 22 Dec. 1840. See Eddy. William the father, then at Lunenburg, executed a deed on June 16, 1858, of certain land situated in West Cambridge, to George H. Gray, John Field, Reuben Hopkins and John Osborn, all of West Cambridge, permanent trustees in trust for the use and maintenance of a high school or academy. It having long been <