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and seven; corps headquarters and artillery brigade, no officer, forty-four; Third division, Twentieth army corps, hospital, two; Second division, Twentieth army corps, hospital, six; cavalry brigade, Captain Ketleman, seventy-five; department of the Cumberland, Lieutenant Pond, fifty; artillery brigade, Fourteenth army corps, Lieutenant Flusky, thirty-three; reserve artillery, Lieutenant Oslum, ten; post teams, (Captain Hade's,) no officer, twenty; Second division, Fourth army corps, Lieutenant Hatfield, twenty; General Thomas's headquarters, no officer, thirty-three; hospital department Twenty-third army corps, no officer, two; Lieutenant Lyon, Twenty-third army corps, no officer, nine; First Missouri engineers, Lieutenant John Murphy, ten; Lieutenant Erdman, department of Cumberland headquarters, no officer, twenty-five; First Michigan engineers, Captain McCraith, eighteen; ordnance wagon, Third division, no officer, twelve; Captain A. E. Edwards, chief quartermaster, no officer, f
rding to its purpose. Brown and Macintosh, English patent 14,131 of 1852, describes a mode of making paper and articles of paper in hollow molds or frames with permeable surfaces, and within which a partial vacuum is obtained. The mold has preferably a covering of felt, upon which the fiber is deposited while the water passes through, and this felt is removed from the former with its deposited paper envelope. See also American patent of French and Frost, 1856; Brown and Smith, 1851; Hatfield, 1862. Fig. 3533 illustrates the principle of action. A former of the shape required — in this case a rectangular lamp-shade — is made of wire-gauze C stiffened with internal strengthening plates. The figure shows a mold B with a hollow handle, connecting by a flexible tube with an air-pump. The pulp is collected upon the foraminous surface, through which the water passes as the air is exhausted from the interior of the former. The sheet of pulp is discharged by the internal pressure
Antedated. Feb 9, 1869. 89,074.Retkirt, Apr. 20, 1869. 91,267.Repetti, June 15, 1869. 91,466.Mayer, June 15, 1869. 92,816.Gattman, July 20, 1869. 94,214.Jacobi, Aug. 31, 1869. 95,075.Bradley, Sept 21, 1869. 95,097.Dwelle, Sept. 21, 1869. 95,201.Cuddy, Sept. 28, 1869. 97,355.Dale et al., Nov. 30, 1869. 97,936.Lewis et al., Dec. 14, 1869. 104,434.Cuddy et al., June 21, 1870. 105,431.Cuddy, July 19, 1870. 108,433.Bartlett, Oct. 18, 1870. 108,571.Dwelle, Oct. 25, 1870. 109,125.Hatfield, Nov. 8, 1870. 112,606.Lewis, March 14, 1871. 112,607.Lewis, March 14, 1871. 112,608.Lewis, March 14, 1871. 113,014.Brumlen, Mar. 28, 1871. 114,405.Burridge, May 2, 1871. 116,604.Lewis, July 4, 1871. 118,794.Davison, Sept. 12, 1871. 120,556.Wheeler, Oct. 31, 1871. 120,916.Wadsworth, Nov. 14, 1871. 122,404.Pollock, Jan. 3, 1872. 125,153.Whiting, April 2, 1872. 127,395.Wheeler, May 28, 1872. 136,446.Meylert, Mar. 4, 1873. 137,474.Osgood, April 1, 1873. 140,721.Milner, July 8, 1
William Schouler, A history of Massachusetts in the Civil War: Volume 2, Chapter 9: Hampshire County. (search)
o each volunteer who shall enlist for three years in the military service and be mustered in to the credit of the town. Voted, That it is the wish of the citizens that volunteers enlisting from Amherst associate with the volunteers from Hadley, Hatfield, Leverett, Pelham, Sunderland, and Granby, in forming a company. August 25th, Voted to pay a bounty of one hundred dollars to each volunteer who enlists in the nine-months service, and is credited to Amherst, provided that the whole number requsufficient to pay each drafted man who furnished a substitute a sum not to exceed three hundred dollars, said tax-list to be delivered to the collector without a warrant, and the money so collected to be paid pro rata to those entitled to it. Hatfield furnished one hundred and forty-six men for the war, which was a surplus of seven over and above all demands. Two were commissioned officers. The whole amount of money appropriated and expended by the town on account of the war, exclusive of S
tchburg 625 Florida 73 Foxborough 501 Framingham 405 Franklin 502 Freetown 137 G. Gardner 628 Georgetown 188 Gill 265 Gloucester 191 Goshen 341 Gosnold 168 Grafton 630 Granby 342 Granville 302 Great Barrington 74 Greenfield 266 Greenwich 343 Groton 408 Groveland 194 H. Hadley 345 Halifax 546 Hamilton 196 Hancock 77 Hanover 550 Hanson 547 Hardwick 631 Harvard 633 Harwich 41 Hatfield 346 Hawley 268 Haverhill 198 Heath 269 Hingham 551 Hinsdale 79 Holden 635 Holland 303 Holliston 410 Holyoke 305 Hopkinton 412 Hubbardston 636 Hull 553 Huntington 348 I. Ipswich 202 K. Kingston 554 L. Lakeville 556 Lancaster 638 Lanesborough 80 Lawrence 202 Lee 81 Leicester 639 Leominster 642 Lenox 84 Leverett 271 Lexington 414 Leyden 272 Littleton 419 Lincoln 416 Long
ew, one of the earliest inhabitants, resided in 1635 on the northeasterly side of Eliot Street, about midway between the westerly end of Winthrop Street and Brighton Street. He owned several other lots in various parts of the town. He sold his estates here to Capt. George Cooke 20 Dec. 1636, and rem. to Connecticut. He rem. yet again, in 1659, to Hadley, where he d. 1684, leaving six sons and three daughters. Of his sons, Andrew, Robert, and John, settled in Middletown, Conn.; Daniel, in Hatfield, and Jacob and Isaac, in Hadley. 2. Daniel, s. of Andrew (1), resided in Hatfield, where he d. 1692, leaving seven sons and seven daughters; the sons were Daniel, Andrew, John, (b. 1677), Abram, Samuel, Ebenezer, and Nathaniel. 3. Daniel, s. of Daniel (2), was of Hatfield, where, besides daughters, he had sons Joseph and Jonathan, who removed to Hardwick; Joseph was a Capt. in the French War, and subsequently rem. with his family to Cummington; Jonathan was an innholder and had sons
ew, one of the earliest inhabitants, resided in 1635 on the northeasterly side of Eliot Street, about midway between the westerly end of Winthrop Street and Brighton Street. He owned several other lots in various parts of the town. He sold his estates here to Capt. George Cooke 20 Dec. 1636, and rem. to Connecticut. He rem. yet again, in 1659, to Hadley, where he d. 1684, leaving six sons and three daughters. Of his sons, Andrew, Robert, and John, settled in Middletown, Conn.; Daniel, in Hatfield, and Jacob and Isaac, in Hadley. 2. Daniel, s. of Andrew (1), resided in Hatfield, where he d. 1692, leaving seven sons and seven daughters; the sons were Daniel, Andrew, John, (b. 1677), Abram, Samuel, Ebenezer, and Nathaniel. 3. Daniel, s. of Daniel (2), was of Hatfield, where, besides daughters, he had sons Joseph and Jonathan, who removed to Hardwick; Joseph was a Capt. in the French War, and subsequently rem. with his family to Cummington; Jonathan was an innholder and had sons
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 13: (search)
Chapter 13: Voyage from Lisbon to Falmouth. immediate departure for Paris. society. Talleyrand. return to London. Lord Holland. Sir J. MacKINTOSHintosh. John Allen. Lord Brougham. Hatfield. Woburn. Cambridge. To Mr. Elisha Ticknor. Lisbon, November 4, 1818. . . . . Your letter, my dear father, has much alarmed me about my mother. . . . I pray you to speak on this subject with perfect plainness to me. Do not let me be unprepared for this blow, if indeed it awaits me. I know that what you say does not necessarily convey this dreadful implication, and I trust it is only my feelings to-day that have inferred it where it was not intended to be expressed, but I grow cold as I think of it, even among the possibilities of the future. November 7. I have never felt so disheartened and discouraged since I left home. . . . . This is chiefly owing to the sad news I have received here, Of the death of his brother-in-law, Mr. Woodward, and of his mother's i
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), chapter 26 (search)
H., 3 note, 4, 5, 6, 334, 385 and note; Elisha Ticknor dies there, 2, 335. Hanover, visits, 77. Harcourt, Rev., William Vernon, 424, 435, 436, 437. Hardenberg, Prince, 485. Harness, Rev., William, 411, 416 note. Harper, General, Robert, 351 Harrison, George, 193 note. Hartford Convention, 12-14. Hartford, visits, 14. Harvard College, G. T. nominated to a Professorship in, 116; accepts, 120; enters on Professorship, 319-326; attempted reforms in, 353-369, 379, 399-401. Hatfield. See Salisbury. Hatton, visits, 52. Haven, Miss, 68. Haven, N. A., 123 note, 316 note, 336, 337; letters to, 23, 49, 68, 338, 354, 359; letter from, 354 note, 377 note; death of, 377; memoir of, 377, 380. Hawthorne, Nathaniel, 389. Hayne, Colonel Robert Y., 351. Hazlitt, William, 293, 294. Heber, Richard, 264, 267. Heeren, Professor, 80. Heidelberg, visits, 124. Hercolani, Prince, 166, 183. Herder, Baron von, 478. Herman, Professor, 108, 112. Hertzberg, Countess, 467.
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), chapter 30 (search)
416 note, II. 371. Harper, Charles Carroll, II. 65. Harper, General, Robert, I. 351. Harpers, Messrs., II. 255. Harris, Leavitt, II. 113 and note. Harrison, George, I. 193 note. Harrowby, Second Earl of, II. 323. Hartford Convention, I. 12-14. Hartford, visits, I. 14 Harvard College, G. T. nominated to a Professorship in, I. 116; accepts, 120; enters on Professorship, 319-326; attemptedreforms in, 353-369, 379, 399-401; views for, II. 422, 423; made Ll. D. in, 508. Hatfield. See Salisbury. Hatherton, Baron and Baroness, II. 871. Hatton, visits, I. 52. Haven, Miss, I. 68. Haven, N. A., I. 123 note, 316 note, 336, 337, II. 436; letters to, I. 23, 49, 68, 338, 354, 359; letters from, 354 note, 377 note; death of, 377; memoir of, 377, 380. Hawthorne, Nathaniel, I. 389, II. 400. Hawtrey, Dr., II. 372, 379. Hayne, Colonel Robert Y., I. 351. Hayward, Abraham, II. 371, 372, 378, 382 Hayward, Dr., II. 310, 464. Hayward, Dr. G., II. 469. H
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