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Another Proclamation wanted. To the Editor of the World: My husband is an officer in the rebel army, and will never lay down his arms while Mr. Lincoln is President. There are many ladies in this State also who have husbands fighting against the North. As there is a proclamation to free the slaves of disloyal citizens, why can't we have a proclamation to free wives from disloyal husbands? Derby, Sept. 28. Eunice. --New-York World, October 10.
1771, aged 3.    SamuelBlanchard d. Sept. 14, 1800, aged 1, c. EuniceBlanchard d. Sept. 18, 1800, aged 1, c. HannahBlanchard d. Feb. 18,Apr. 11, 1787.  233James, b. May 29, 1788. 74-142Ebenezer Hall m. Eunice----, and had--  142-234Martha, b. Apr. 20, 1798.  235Mary, b. Febrles J., b. Nov. 1, 1790.  243George B., b. Oct. 5, 1791.  243 1/2Eunice. 87-160Ebenezer Hall m., March 8, 1796, Eunice, dau. of Capt. IsaaEunice, dau. of Capt. Isaac Jones, of Boston, and had--  160-244Martha, b. Apr. 20, 1798.  245Richard, b. Aug. 22, 1800; m. Mrs. Mary A. Hayward.  246Mary Jane, b. F. s. p.  17Jonathan, m. Eunice Faxon. He had Clara, Loring, and Eunice.  18Grace.  1OSGOOD, David, b. Oct. 25, 1747; m. Hannah Breed, Feb. 3, 1772.  25Nathaniel, b. Jan. 23, 1777; d. July 6, 1779.  26Eunice, b. May 6, 1779; d. Aug. 17, 1785.  27Nathaniel, b. Sept. 15, 1781ad--  276f.-277Ebenezer, b. July 20, 1753; d. Sept. 30, 1760.  278Eunice, b. Oct. 2, 1755.  279Zachariah, b. Dec. 15, 1759.  
erican birth or parentage, I find, besides the slaves and their children, that Jacob Auld, one of the Scotch-Irish, had, by wife Ann, a daughter, Margaret, born Mar. 19, 1750. There seems to have been some Irish families as early as 1745; but these are named in the foregoing list. There remains one class of unwilling settlers in our town,--the Acadians; or French Neutrals, as they are called on our records. Of these exiles from Grand Pre, three are mentioned on the records, as follows:-- Eunice, wife of John Degrusha, was bapt. Feb. 12, 1744. John Le Bosquet, and Sarah, his wife, had-- Joseph, b. Jan. 12, 1781. Rebecca, b. Jan. 19, 1783. John Tebodo had, by Ann his wife,-- Ann, b. July 4, 1757. Elizabeth, b. Nov. 1, 1759. Joseph, b. Feb. 24, 1762. The name of Le Bosquet, preserved in recollection by the Le Bosquet House, has been corrupted into Burkit. Of the others, I know not whether they removed from town, or whether any descendants yet remain.
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Williams, Eleazar -1795 (search)
er the downfall of Robespierre and his fellows, it was declared that the prince died in prison in Eleazar Williams. 1795, while the royalists believed he had been secretly hidden away in the United States. Curious facts and circumstances pointed to Rev. Eleazar Williams, a reputed half-breed Indian, of the Caughnawaga tribe, near Montreal, as the surviving prince, who, for almost sixty years, had been hidden from the world in that disguise. He was a reputed son of Thomas Williams, son of Eunice, the captive daughter of Rev. John Williams, of Deerfield, Mass. He was educated at Long Meadow, Mass., and when the war with England broke out, in 1812, he became confidential agent of the government among the Indians in northern New York. He served in several engagements, and was severely wounded at Plattsburg in 1814. Joining the Protestant Episcopal Church, after the war, he was for a long time a missionary, or lay-reader, among the Oneida Indians, and in 1826 he was ordained mission
15th Corps, to September, 1864. Artillery, 1st Division, 15th Corps, to November, 1864. Artillery Reserve, Nashville, Tenn., to July, 1865. Service. Curtis' advance on Springfield, Mo., January 22-February 12, 1862. Pursuit of Price into Arkansas February 14-29. Battle of Pea Ridge, Ark., March 6-8. March to Batesville, Ark., April 5-May 3; thence to Helena, Ark., May 25-July 14. Expedition from Helena to mouth of White River, August 6-8. Expedition from Helena to Eunice August 28-September 3. Expedition from Helena to Arkansas Post November 16-21, and to Grenada, Miss., November 27-December 7. Mitchell's Cross Roads December 1. Sherman's Yazoo Expedition December 22, 1862, to January 2, 1863. Chickasaw Bayou December 26-28, 1862. Chickasaw Bluffs December 29. Expedition to Arkansas Post, Ark., January 3-10, 1863. Assault on and capture of Fort Hindman, Arkansas Post, January 10-11. Moved to Young's Point, La., January 17-23, and duty
to June, 1864. Defenses of New Orleans, La., Dept. of the Gulf, to April, 1866. Service. Expedition toward Purdy and operations about Crump's Landing March 9-14, 1862. Battle of Shiloh, Tenn., April 6-7. Advance on and siege of Corinth, Miss., April 29-May 30. March to Memphis, Tenn., June 1-13, and duty there till July 24. Germantown and Lafayette Station June 25. Ordered to Helena, Ark., June 24, and duty there till April, 1863. Gorman's Expedition from Helena to Eunice August 28-September 5, 1862. Expedition against Arkansas Post November 16-21. Ordered to Milliken's Bend, La., April 11, 1863. Movement on Bruinsburg and turning Grand Gulf April 25-30. Battle of Port Gibson May 1. Fourteen-Mile Creek May 12. Battle of Champion's Hill May 16. Siege of Vicksburg, Miss., May 18-July 4. Assaults on Vicksburg May 19 and 22. Advance on Jackson, Miss., July 4-10. Siege of Jackson July 10-17. Ordered to New Orleans, La., August 13.
John Harrison Wilson, The life of Charles Henry Dana, Chapter 3: community life (search)
ought him many benefits for which he always remained grateful, but the greatest benefit and blessing which it brought him was his life partner and wife. Among the clever and interesting people gathered there were the Macdaniel family, consisting of a widowed mother with her three children, one son and two daughters. They were from Maryland, where the family was long settled. They brought with them an air of refinement which always characterized them. The youngest member of the family was Eunice, an attractive and spirited girl, with black and sparkling eyes, and a slight but erect and energetic figure. If her mind had dwelt in the form of a man, it must have been regarded as a notable one. It impelled her to do her full part not only as a member of the community, but in the long and beautiful life to which it introduced her as a wife and mother. During her stay at Brook Farm, she is said to have had serious intentions of becoming an actress, but notwithstanding this somewhat rom
across the tracks towards him. Immediately afterwards a blue-overcoated figure bristling with knapsack and haversack, and looking like an assortment of packages, came rushing towards us. Fred was overjoyed, you may be sure, and my first impulse was to wipe his face with my handkerchief before I kissed him. He was in high spirits, in spite of the weight of blue overcoat, knapsack, etc., etc., that he would formerly have declared intolerable for half an hour. I gave him my handkerchief and Eunice gave him hers, with a sheer motherly instinct that is so strong within her, and then we filled his haversack with oranges. We stayed with Fred about two hours, during which time the gallery was filled with people, cheering and waving their handkerchiefs. Every now and then the band played inspiriting airs, in which the soldiers joined with hearty voices. While some of the companies sang, others were drilled, and all seemed to be having a general jollification. The meal that had been pr
Smith, Edna25 Munroe Street Smith, Myra25 Munroe Street Smith, Robert25 Munroe Street Snow, Esther25 Joseph Street Southworth, Abbie D.13 Webster Street Spaulding, Florence 44 Tufts Street Spofford, Helen9 Gilman Street Spratt, Mrs. L. D.16 Grant Street Stodder, Edith166 Broadway Stodder, Russell 166 Broadway Strout, Gertrude 17 Flint Street Strout, Florence17 Flint Street Strout, Maud17 Flint Street Strout, Luella 17 Flint Street Stover, Annie 44 Highland Avenue Stone, Mrs. Eunice 9 Heath Street Sylvester, Mrs. Roscoe 28 Montrose Street Taylor, Sarah D.39 Auburn Avenue Taylor, Mildred91 Glen Street Taylor, Bessie44 Broadway Thomas, Mrs. Frank. 1047 Saratoga Street, East Boston Thomas, Eva105 Cross Street Thompson, Lillian 182 Broadway Trickey, Gertrude 104 Flint Street Trickey, Edith104 Flint Street Trochu, Alice 33 Madison Street Turner, Mrs. Frank 12 Austin Street Ulm, Mrs. Albert55 Preston Road Underwood, Estelle 218 Medford Street Underwood, Jen
Historic leaves, volume 6, April, 1907 - January, 1908,
Union Square
and its neighborhood about the year 1846. (search)
as, I believe, owned by the Stone estate, and then, or later, occupied by John C. Giles. I think it stood on the site of the old Revolutionary hostelry known as Piper's Tavern, and it may have been the old tavern building itself. Mr. Giles first built on the westerly side of Prospect street, north of the Fitchburg railroad, and then on Milk street (now Somerville avenue), near Prospect street; from there he moved to Union square. Two of his children were well-known Somerville citizens, Mrs. Eunice (Giles) Gilmore, prominent in Heptorean and other societies, and J. Frank Giles, music printer, and a soldier of the Civil war, who has honored Somerville with his commendatory army record. In front of Mr. Giles' house stood another public pump; the two public pumps, Jordan's and Giles', stared pleasantly at each other across the square, and with outstretched hands vied with one another in extending their aqueous hospitality to thirsty travelers, without money and without price. On t
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