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HISTORY OF THE TOWN OF MEDFORD, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, FROM ITS FIRST SETTLEMENT, IN 1630, TO THE PRESENT TIME, 1855. (ed. Charles Brooks) 4 4 Browse Search
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing) 1 1 Browse Search
Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 3 1 1 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in HISTORY OF THE TOWN OF MEDFORD, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, FROM ITS FIRST SETTLEMENT, IN 1630, TO THE PRESENT TIME, 1855. (ed. Charles Brooks). You can also browse the collection for March 7th, 1853 AD or search for March 7th, 1853 AD in all documents.

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ice that he dissolves his relationship to that religious society, and it is thereby dissolved. The vote in Medford was one hundred and five yeas and twelve nays. Another amendment was proposed in 1840, relating to the basis of representation in the Senate and House of Representatives. On this thirteenth act of amendment of the Constitution of Massachusetts, Medford voted eighty-one yeas and one nay. In 1852, a Convention was called for revising the Constitution of the State; and, March 7, 1853, William Hoskins was chosen delegate. Nov. 14, 1853: The town voted on the acceptance of the amended draft of the Constitution as follows:--  Yes.No. Proposition No. 1338351. Proposition No. 2339352. Proposition No. 3334356. Proposition No. 4342349. Proposition No. 5346346. Proposition No. 6355345. Proposition No. 7340351. Proposition No. 8341347. We seem to be in the midst of prophetic political saltations. The secret, sudden, and effectual dismemberment of the Whig,
artments.Either of them at option of pupil, with aprobation of master. 4.Whately's Logic. 5.Mechanic's Engineering and higher Mathematics. 6.Botany. 7.Geology, or Natural History, generally. 8.Chemistry. 9.Physiology, completed. The several classes shall also have exercises in English Composition and Declamation. May 12, 1849: Voted that both the schools at the West End shall be annual schools. March 4, 1850: Voted to build a schoolhouse on the south side of the river. March 7, 1853: For support of schools, $5,400. Same day, voted to build a new schoolhouse in Salem Street. March 10, 1851: Voted to build a schoolhouse in the west part of the town, and that $2,000 be appropriated for said purpose. The inhabitants of West Medford, desirous of having a schoolhouse more ample in its dimensions and more classic in its appearance than the town's appropriation would procure, cheerfully united in adding to it, by subscription, the sum of nine hundred dollars. This sum
as a burying-ground. The town acceded; and then ordered that the land be laid out in lots, that a proper fence be built around it, and that trees be planted in such number and order as to make the enclosure appear as such a place should. March 7, 1853: Voted to remove the pound on Cross Street, and extend the burial-ground to the line of said street, and build thereon a suitable iron fence, with stone basement. The next movement for another burying-ground was March 6, 1837, when the towo future generations. The committee declined further service; and Messrs. Sanford B. Perry, Paul Curtis, Edmund T. Hastings, George T. Goodwin, and James R. Turner, were chosen to attend to all further business connected with the subject. March 7, 1853, the town instructed the committee to build a receiving-tomb, to lay out roads and paths, to erect fences, and make such improvements as they see fit. Oct. 13, 1853: The committee made their first report. They recommended that it be calle