Browsing named entities in Medford Historical Society Papers, Volume 30.. You can also browse the collection for Isaac Hall or search for Isaac Hall in all documents.

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p of the rider Paul Revere, who notified Captain Isaac Hall. It is not known when the Medford minutigail was a thirteen-year-old daughter of Capt. Isaac Hall. Belinda was an old slave of Colonel Roy Abigail. Thirteen-year-old daughter of Capt. Isaac Hall. Harry Bond. Blacksmith from Mystic Ae.) Bond. Ah, Master Hall, a word with you! Hall. What men are those? Bond. Maiden men. They aps to Cambridge. (Sound of distant cannon.) Hall. Whichever way they march back to the shelter oelcome a chance to do battle with them here. Hall. Yes, Bond, you would fight, I know, as bravelyGive 'em back their powder! (Exit shouting.) Hall. Would I too were young, but I can serve on thef guns and of fife and drum drawing nearer.) Hall. The moments drag in our suspense. Porter. Wnd bullets were all gone—so he came home—and Hall. Take breath, lass, yet quickly as thou canst. uests of our president in the old home of Capt. Isaac Hall. The usual features of the day were incr[3 more...]<
His son Henry remained in Medford wounded, probably at the home of his brother Eleazer; but was at the battle of Bunker Hill. Henry Putnam married Hannah Boardman. children: Henry, b. 1737 (by a curious error the record dates his birth as 1747), bapt. at the church in Salem Village, 2 Dec., 1753. Eleazer, Eleazer had a daughter Mary, who married Mr. Aaron Cutter of Arlington. See Cutter Geneal. (G. H. Cutter, Arlington, Mass.) b. 5 June, bapt. 13 Aug., 1738. Was in Capt. Isaac Hall's company, and received credit for five days service on the Lexington alarm. Elijah, b. 23, bapt. 26 July, 1741. Probably the Elijah who was graduated from Harvard College, 1766. Roger, b. 10, bapt. 16 Oct., 1743. John, b. 11 Oct., bapt. 13 Oct., 1745; administration on his estate granted to his father, with Caleb Brooks and Thomas Reed as bondsmen, 9 May, 1763. (According to the Perley Putnam Mss., this John had removed to St. John. Billings, b. 11 May, 1749. Benjam
eted. The growth was slow until the Fellsway line of the Elevated road was completed. Since then it has been rapidly increasing. In 1869 there were but seven houses on the farm. They were: Blanchard (old house); house corner Middlesex and Riverside avenues; Mansion house, Bradbury avenue; J. E. Wellington's, Middlesex avenue; yellow house on Third street, in rear of new school house; Davis house, corner Middlesex avenue and Fourth street; Clover house, corner Riverside avenue, opposite Hall. After the bridge was finished seven more were built, all within two or three years. They were: Thompson house, Third street; Wood house, Fourth street; Kittredge house, Fifth street; Croswell house, Fourth street; Mitchell house, Fourth street; Ball house, Fourth street. The chapel on Fourth street was the outgrowth of song services held originally in the homes of different residents. The movement gathered momentum, and after the school house was moved from Salem street, the services