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The Cambridge of eighteen hundred and ninety-six: a picture of the city and its industries fifty years after its incorporation (ed. Arthur Gilman) 10 0 Browse Search
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ing to take their well-earned repose at their homes hard by the banks of the placid Charles. Among these were Joseph Tinker Buckingham (ne Tinker), The father of Mr. Buckingham was Nehemiah Tinker, but the son took his mother's name by permissMr. Buckingham was Nehemiah Tinker, but the son took his mother's name by permission of the Massachusetts legislature, in 1806. He has been immortalized by Mr. Lowell, in the first series of the Biglow Papers, which was published in the Courier, in 1846-1848, when Mr. Buckingham was its editor. his Folks gin the letter to me anMr. Buckingham was its editor. his Folks gin the letter to me and i shew it to parson Wilbur and he ses it oughter Bee printed, send it to mister Buckinum, ses he, i don't allers agree with him, ses he, but by Time, ses he, I du like a feller that ain't a Feared. It was in the New England Magazine, then under the editorial care of Mr. Buckingham, that Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes published his first Autocrat of the Breakfast-Table paper, mentioned many years afterwards in the first number of The Atlantic Monthly.—editor. who commenced his career in 1795 at t
West Boston, 4, 29, 110, 395; Harvard, 4, 106, 108; Craigie, 29, 30; Prison Point, 29; River Street, 29; Western Avenue, 29. Bridges, streets tributary to, 20. Brighton (Third Parish, Little Cambridge), 9, 16, 236; annexed to Boston, 9. See Third Parish. Broad Canal, 30, 31, 109, 110, 127. Broadway (Clark Road), 37. Broadway Common, 121, 138. Brooks, Phillips, 163, 255. Browne and Nichols school for boys, 212-214. Bryce, James, on American municipal government. 59. Buckingham, Joseph Tinker, 219. Buckley, Daniel A., founder of the Cambridge News, 222. Bunker Hill, the march to, 49. Burial-places, 5, 16; without the common pales, 133; discontinuance, 133; the new ground inclosed, 133; graves of eminent persons, 133; tombs and monuments, 133-136; the milestone, 133; monument to the minute-men, 134; Dr. McKenzie's address at its consecration, 134; inscriptions. 135, 136; its renovation, 137; the Broadway ground opened, 137; disuse, 138; converted into a