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ller'sJames FordJoseph Lee, jun.Boston144.62 421815ShipPersiaGeorge Fuller'sJames FordHenry Austin and othersNew York371.72 43 BrigPantherT. Magoun'sT. MagounWinslow LewisBoston429.68 44 BrigFalconT. Magoun'sT. MagounW. Lewis & T. MagounBoston & Medford236.20 45 BrigPedlarT. Magoun'sT. MagounJoseph CabotBoston125.88 46 ShipCouW. Lewis & T. MagounBoston & Medford236.20 45 BrigPedlarT. Magoun'sT. MagounJoseph CabotBoston125.88 46 ShipCourierT. Magoun'sT. MagounJ. Lee & William RopesBoston388.53 47 Ship T. Magoun'sT. MagounJoseph LeeBoston320 48 ShipAugustaS. Lapham'sC. TurnerE. Brigham, J. & W. WilliamsBoston344.38 49 BrigAvon This vessel was built in the short space of twenty-six days. A privateer.S. Lapham'sC. TurnerBenjamin Rich and othersBoston388.24 5gue & James'sSprague & JamesJoseph LeeBoston180 621817ShipFalcon First ship ever built in town without a daily allowance of ardent spirit.T. Magoun'sT. MagounW. Lewis & T. MagounBoston & Medford273 63 BrigAdriaticT. Magoun'sT. MagounL. Cunningham & Co.Boston145.52 64 Sch.AntSprague & James'sSprague & JamesJacob AmmiBost
ants, the Quartermaster-General and his clerks, from early morning until midnight. An abstract of a portion only of the correspondence will show the nature and extent of a part of the labor performed. April 18.—The Governor writes to Miss A. J. Gill, also to Miss Anna M. Clarke, also to Mary A. G. Robinson, who have offered themselves to be nurses; to Robert B. Forbes, acknowledging the receipt of his Address to the Merchants and Seamen of Massachusetts to organize a Coast Guard; to Dr. Winslow Lewis, who offered to give medical advice and attendance to soldiers' families free of charge. Thanks Leopold Morse, of Boston, for a gift of one hundred pairs of readymade pants for soldiers. To Secretary Cameron, asking for more muskets. April 19.—Governor telegraphs to the Secretary of War, Would you like another regiment composed of Irishmen enlisted specially? Writes to Arthur Hanley, who had inquired if unnaturalized persons would be accepted in the militia, to go ahead. Acknowl
t the Hollis street church, Nancy Lewis, b. 7 May, 1778. His wife died a few months after the wedding, 10 December, 1803. He was a lieutenant in the war of 1812, and resided in Reading. Nancy Lewis and her brother Isaiah were children of Winslow Lewis, and their nephew was the late Dr. Winslow Lewis. After the war J. S. H. Cox married Mrs. Arabelle Percelle, and lived in Charleston, S. C. He had two sons, Roland and William. James Cox lived in New Bedford, where he married a Miss TabDr. Winslow Lewis. After the war J. S. H. Cox married Mrs. Arabelle Percelle, and lived in Charleston, S. C. He had two sons, Roland and William. James Cox lived in New Bedford, where he married a Miss Tabor, a Quakeress. He moved to Ohio, where he died, leaving three sons. His son Lemuel, a beneficiary by Lemuel Cox's will, sold his share in the estate of Lemuel Cox, deceased, to Rufus Bracket in 1827, his cousin Mary Ann Dadley's husband, as did the other grandchildren. Susanna Hickling Cox married, 10 November, 1793, Simon Tufts of Medford, and had Eliza, Rhoda, Harriet L., Simon (b. 29 November, 1800), and Susanna H. Tufts. Eliza married Richard Brownell. Harriet's name was change
ers, too numerous to mention. I find that all the different religious denominations were represented, save the Roman Catholic, and I have not the slightest doubt that if Mrs. Smith had started her school fifty years later, Cardinal Gibbons would have appeared on the board, for she was very energetic and persuasive. Among the instructors were John P. Marshall, A. M., of Tufts College, Ancient Languages; Charles J. White, also of Tufts, Mathematics; Professor Viaux, of Harvard, French; Winslow Lewis, M. D., Anatomy, Physiology, and Hygiene; Professor Papanti, nephew of the famous Papanti, Dancing; and Rev. Edward J. Stearns, Chaplain. The last was looked on with distrust by the younger pupils, being the compiler of a spelling-book in use at the seminary. His duties were not confined to the chaplaincy, as he was instructor in moral science and ancient languages. The principal taught natural science, composition, and belles-lettres. Professor Papanti was succeeded by others, amon