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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
Lucius R. Paige, History of Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1630-1877, with a genealogical register 2 0 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in The Cambridge of eighteen hundred and ninety-six: a picture of the city and its industries fifty years after its incorporation (ed. Arthur Gilman). You can also browse the collection for Andrew J. Green or search for Andrew J. Green in all documents.

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hools, but Dr. Holmes states that at that date there were in the town besides the Grammar School, a little to the westward of the Episcopal church, two schools in each of the three parishes. There were, therefore, at that time, in Cambridge as now constituted, three schools. Mr. Paige gives the names of thirteen schoolhouses standing in 1845. He adds that the earliest record of the election of a school committee which he was able to find was in 1744. In 1834, the schools were graded. Mayor Green, in his inaugural address, in 1853, claimed for Cambridge the honor of having introduced this system into the Commonwealth, and of having carried it to its greatest degree of completeness. Within the limits of what now constitutes Cambridge there was in 1750 a single church. Between that date and the incorporation of Cambridge as a city, seventeen religious societies were organized, the details concerning which have been collated by Mr. Paige, and are to be found in his chapter on Ec
ome to Boston from Halifax and engaged in the printing business, decided to venture the publication of a weekly newspaper in Cambridge. The first number of this sheet, which he called The Cambridge Chronicle, appeared on Thursday, May 17, 1846, issued from an office over the grocery store of the late Joseph A. Holmes on the corner of Main and Magazine streets. The initial number contained a full account of the inauguration of the new city government on the previous Monday, May 7, with Mayor Green's speech in full occupying four and a half columns. The paper was successful, in a moderate degree, from the first, but Mr. Reid was in poor health and died January 4, 1847, and the Chronicle passed into the possession of Mr. John Ford, in February of that year. In January, 1855, the office was removed to the corner of Main and Temple streets, and in 1858 Mr. George Fisher purchased the Chronicle and conducted it until 1873, when he sold the property to Mr. Linn Boyd Porter, under whose
those who have served as trustees of the bank appear the names of Moses Clarke, Knowlton S. Chaffee, Joseph H. Tyler, Isaac F. Jones, John H. Leighton, William Hunnewell, John Conlan, Edward W. Bettinson, Thomas S. Hudson, John M. Tyler, Daniel R. Sortwell, Israel Tibbetts, and Enos Reed. The present board of officers is: president, John C. Bullard; vice-presidents, Lewis Hall, Silas B. Buck, and Alvin F. Sortwell; treasurer and secretary, William E. Lloyd; trustees, James M. Price, Andrew J. Green, Benjamin F. Thompson, Gustavus Goepper, John McSorley, William Goepper, James G. Ferguson, Frank H. Marshall, M. J. Harty, Edward H. Thompson, David Proudfoot, William R. Adams. From its incorporation until the year 1873 the bank occupied the rooms of the Lechmere Bank. At that time the estate on Cambridge Street formerly occupied by Dr. Anson Hooker was purchased, and a banking-room fitted up on the lower floor. Here the bank continued until the taking of the land by the county
. city clerk. Edward J. Brandon. assistant city clerk. Albert M. Pear. city messenger. Francis L. Pratt. clerk of committees. John McDUFFIE. city auditor. Harry T. Upham. city treasurer. William W. Dallinger. Board of health. E. Edwin Spencer, M. D., Chairman. Charles Harris. Edmund M. Parker. City Physician, E. Edwin Spencer. M. D. Clerk. James B. Soper. Health Officer, Edwin Farnham, M. D. assessors. Joshua G. Gooch. Samuel L. Montague. Andrew J. Green. assistant assessors. Warren Ivers. John M. Davis. Daniel B. Shaughnessy. Arthur M. Stewart. Edwin K. Hall. School committee. William A. Bancroft. Mayor, ex officio Chairman. Ward One. Frank W. Taussig. William T. Piper. Elizabeth Q. Bolles. Ward Two. Robert O. Fuller. Caroline L. Edgerly. Alphonso E. White. Ward Three. Edward B. Malley. William H. Clancy Anne Clark Stewart. Ward Four. Mary E. Mitchell. Charles F. Wyman. William A. Munroe. War
in, Rev. Nathaniel, 236. Government, municipal, on what it depends, 78; elimination of partisanship in, 78; non-partisanship in Cambridge, 78, 79; machinery of, in Cambridge, 80. Government. of the City of Cambridge, 401-405. Graded schools introduced by Cambridge, 33. Grand Army in Cambridge: William H. Smart Post 30; Charles Beck Post 56; P. Stearns Davis Post 57; John A. Logan Post 186, 287. Grand Junction Railroad, 314. Gray, Dr. Asa, 73; his works and his trees, 74. Green, James D., first mayor of Cambridge, 62. Greene, Samuel, old-time printer, 333, 336; works printed by, 336. Harbor Master, 404. Hartford, Conn., founded, 6. Harvard, name given to the college at the New Town, 8. See College and Harvard University. Harvard Annex. See Radcliffe College. Harvard Bank, 305, 306. Harvard Branch of the Fitchburg Railroad, 396. Harvard Bridge, 4, 106, 108. Harvard Hall, burning of, 17, 18; General Court meets in, 20. Harvard, Rev. Joh