Your search returned 30 results in 8 document sections:

dge Light Infantry were in camp at South Boston fifty-one days, commencing Sept. 10, 1814. The company consisted of Captain Samuel Child, Jr.; Lieutenant Jonathan C. Prentiss; Ensign Eliab W. Metcalf; Sergeants, John Ruggles, William Hunnewell, Oliver L. Child, Rufus Roberts; Corporals, Jacob H. Bates, Asa Wyman; Fifer, Nathaniel Munroe; Privates, William Bates, Elijah Bellows, David Bowtell, John Brackett, William Brown, James Child, Nathaniel Colburn, Charles Everett, John Fillebrown, Timothy Flagg, Abraham J. Gould, Henry Greenwood, Sewall Hadley, Isaac Herrick, William Hollis, Isaac Kilburn, Richard Larrabee, Cyrus Morse, Harris Munroe, Seth Sanderson, Buckley Stone, Moses Thompson, Charles Walton, Galen Ware, Jonas Wyeth 3d. Besides these, William Burges, James Gilson, John Wheeler 2d, Samuel S. Willard, and Stephen Wyeth, were drafted into the service in August, 1814, and Samuel Carpenter, Peter G. Conant, William C. Davis, Thomas Dean, Jr., Edmund Morrill, Seth Tinkham, and J
William Gamage4 Mr. [John] Winthrop3 Thomas Hastings2 Ebenezer Bradish1 William Darling1 William Howe1 Mr, [Thomas] Marsh1 Deac. [Samuel] Whittemore2 Capt. [Ebenezer] Stedman3 Israel Porter1 John Phillips, Jr.2 Stephen Randall1 Edward Marrett1 John Manning1 Owen Warland4 Doct. [Francis] Moore1 Samuel Hicks1 Edward Prentice1 Samuel Hinds1 James Kettell1 Francis Moore1 Joseph Cooke1 Judge [Edmund] Trowbridge 3 Rev. Mr. [Nathaniel] Appleton1 Jonathan Ireland1 Hunt & Flagg3 Hubbard Russell1 Stephen Sewali1 Rev. Mr. Wiggles worth1 George Douglass1 Ye President [Langdon]1 Person Smith1 ——Bates1 James Frost2 Joseph Read1 Joseph Eares1 Benjamin Bird1 John Baverick1 Philemon Hastings1 Ebenezer Fessenden1 Nathaniel Chadwick1 —— Blacks, 9.155 As far as Menotomy Bridge. Deac. Thomas Hall1 Capt. Ephraim Frost2 Joseph Wellington1 William Bowman1 James Perry1 Ebenezer Prentice1 Ebenezer Prentice, Jr.1 Stephen Robbins3 Thomas W
amuel Whittemore, his brother-in-law, who in December of the same year bought the remainder of the old homestead. 5. John, s. of John (4), m. Elizabeth Nutting 26 Ap. 1748, and had Elizabeth, b. 12 Dec. 1748, d. unm. 1841 or 1842; John, b. 16 Oct. 1750; Jonathan, b. 16 Nov. 1752, grad. H. C. 1770, a physician, regimental surgeon in the Revolutionary War, and d. in Demarara 15 Feb. 1826; Zechariah, b. 28 Feb. 1755, a saddler, res. in Boston, d. 10 May 1842; Sarah, b. 20 Aug. 1757, m. Timothy Flagg 1780, and d. 25 May 1830 (she was mother of Sarah, b. 9 Dec. 1789, m. William Saunders 8 June 1815, d. 6 Nov. 1871; also, of Elizabeth N., b. 19 Jan. 1797, m. Jonas Wyeth 8 Feb. 1820); Samuel, b. 17 Mar. 1760; Rebecca, b. 17 Sept. 1762, m.——Hunt. d. 1852; James, b. 7 May 1765, was a saddler in Bennington, Vt., where he d.——; he is said also to have been a Judge; William, b. 11 Feb. 1767, d. in Canada 1834; Mary, b. 28 Sept. 1771, m.——Sawyer, and d. in Camb. 16 Dec. 1855 (she was m
amuel Whittemore, his brother-in-law, who in December of the same year bought the remainder of the old homestead. 5. John, s. of John (4), m. Elizabeth Nutting 26 Ap. 1748, and had Elizabeth, b. 12 Dec. 1748, d. unm. 1841 or 1842; John, b. 16 Oct. 1750; Jonathan, b. 16 Nov. 1752, grad. H. C. 1770, a physician, regimental surgeon in the Revolutionary War, and d. in Demarara 15 Feb. 1826; Zechariah, b. 28 Feb. 1755, a saddler, res. in Boston, d. 10 May 1842; Sarah, b. 20 Aug. 1757, m. Timothy Flagg 1780, and d. 25 May 1830 (she was mother of Sarah, b. 9 Dec. 1789, m. William Saunders 8 June 1815, d. 6 Nov. 1871; also, of Elizabeth N., b. 19 Jan. 1797, m. Jonas Wyeth 8 Feb. 1820); Samuel, b. 17 Mar. 1760; Rebecca, b. 17 Sept. 1762, m.——Hunt. d. 1852; James, b. 7 May 1765, was a saddler in Bennington, Vt., where he d.——; he is said also to have been a Judge; William, b. 11 Feb. 1767, d. in Canada 1834; Mary, b. 28 Sept. 1771, m.——Sawyer, and d. in Camb. 16 Dec. 1855 (she was m
Green. Parker. Thwing. Watson. Heate, 580. Marrett. Herring, 580. Hicks, 580, 1. Andrew. Bates. Bradford. Champney. Fisher. Flagg. Foxcroft. Fuller. Green. Hunt. Larkin. Mills. Mitchelson. Needham. Nutting. Palfrey. Saunders. Sawyer. Sill. Stacy. WWilkins. Williams. Wilson. Winship. Wyman. Sackett, 651. Stedman. Saltonstall, 651. Saunders, 651, 2. Ball. Bancroft. Bartlett. Flagg. Holden. Penniman. Prentiss. Savil. Spear. Whittemore. Willard. Sawtell, 652. Knight. Parker. Post. Satle. Scott, 652. Auh, 702-6. Andrew. Bowman. Brooks. Champney. Cook. Coolidge. Corlett. Cutter. Duntin. Fessenden. Fillebrown. Fiske. Fitch. Flagg. Fox. Francis. Gamage. Gray. Green. Hancock. Hastings. Hill. Jarvis. Kendall. Munroe. Newell. Newman. Parker. Prentice
hildren of Joseph and Joanna (Morse) Eliot were: Joel and Hannah. Joel was born August 30, 1775, and died at Foxboro, Mass., July 23, 1864; his wife, Mary Murray (Flagg) Elliot, was born in Cambridge July 14, 1782, and died in Foxboro January 23, 1865; she was daughter of Timothy and Sarah (Hicks) Flagg, and granddaughter of John Flagg, and granddaughter of John Hicks, a member of the Boston Tea Party, and one of the Cambridge minute-men who fell in defence of the liberty of the people, April 19, 1775, in whose memory the city of Cambridge has erected a monument in the old historic burying ground near Harvard Square, where they are buried. A tablet on Massachusetts Avenue marks the spot wd Mary M. were: Mary Joanna, Joseph, Sarah Elizabeth, Caroline, Charles Edwin, Hannah, Timothy, Joel Augustus, and Nancy Maria. Joseph, son of Joel and Mary M. (Flagg) Elliot, and father of Charles D. Elliot, was born in Cambridge, near Harvard Square, January 1, 1807, and died in Somerville, Mass., July 7, 1874. He married, a
, 54. Elliot, Joel, 78. Elliot, Joel Augustus, 54. Elliot, Joseph, 53, 54, 55. Elliot, Mary Elvira, 32, 56, 62. Elliot, Mary Joanna, 54. Elliot, Mary Murray (Flagg), 54. Elliot, Nancy Maria, 54. Elliot, Sarah Elizabeth, 54. Elliot, Timothy, 54. Elliot, Zenora (Tucker), 53, 55. Elm House, 34. Emory, —, 65, 66. Engli, 64. First Universalist Society in Somerville, 55. Fitchburg, Mass., 26. Fitchburg Railroad, 57, 74, 78. Five Cents Savings Bank, Charlestown, The, 25. Flagg, Sarah (Hicks), 54. Flagg, Timothy, 54. Florence, S. C., 38. Forster School, 50. Fort Bisland, 66. Fort Butler, 68. Fort Darling, 38. Fort St. Philip, 64.Flagg, Timothy, 54. Florence, S. C., 38. Forster School, 50. Fort Bisland, 66. Fort Butler, 68. Fort Darling, 38. Fort St. Philip, 64. Fowle, F. E., 48. Foxboro Centre, Mass., 55. Foxboro, Mass., 53, 54, 55. Franklin, General, 67, 81. Franklin Literary Association, 74. Franklin Street, Arlington, Mass., 48. Freetown, 5. Frost, Elisha, 46. Frost, Rebecca, 20. Fuller, J. F., 58. Gage, General, 52. Gardenville, 32. Gardner, Mary B., 47. Gardne
Moses Warren, Andrew Benjamin, Jonas Lawrence, Josiah Convers, Matthew Pierce, Elijah Mead, Samuel Mullikin, Job Priest, Amos Harrington, Jonas Smith, Jr., Elisha Harrington, Nathan Wright, Isaac Bemis, Timothy Flagg, William Sprague, John Symms, Elijah Cutting, Cutting Clark, Josiah Bemis, Jr., Asa Gould, Amos Fiske, David Smith, George Wellington, John Viles, Habakkuk Stearns, Abijah Fiske, Elisha Stearns, Eliphery saluted his Excellency, who passed on through Waltham, and arrived in New York at noon on the 20th. In October of the same year Washington visited the Eastern States, leaving New York on Thursday the 15th. He lodged and breakfasted at Captain Flagg's in Weston. Captain Fuller's company of Horse met him and escorted him through Waltham and Watertown to Cambridge. He, too, was saluted by the Watertown Artillery as he passed through the town on Saturday, the 24th of October. Twelve days