Browsing named entities in Historic leaves, volume 5, April, 1906 - January, 1907. You can also browse the collection for Benjamin Rand or search for Benjamin Rand in all documents.

Your search returned 5 results in 3 document sections:

iffin1/2 House & Brickyard10.93 J Clark6.39 J ward4.44 J Kidder8.33 J SowdenHouse Barn &c3336.94 A Stone1/2 House5.74 S Perry2.50 H Shapley2.50 A Richardson2.50 D Angier2.50 J Lovett2.50 J Taylor1/2 House & Brickyard11.57 J Blanchard11.23 D Davis2.50 J H Hill2.50 32 Tenants) Non-resident Landholders Benjamin JoyHouse Barn140113.20 Wm Buckley Jotham Johnson Non-resident LandholdersHouses &cAcresTax A Davenport6924.08 N Goddard86.59 S. Watson62.38 T. Foster3344.17 Benj. Rand5 A. Cutter3 1/22.27 Wm Hunnewell1 T. Goddard W. C. Phipps J Phipps N. Austin A. Ward1019.44 Wm Frost22 1/28.54 F. Sawyer42.59 L. TappanBleachery & Printing64.80 ————— (18 N. R. Landholders)829$792.86 11301236.17 ————— 1959$2029.03 Swan, Reed & Wyman20080. ————— Acres 2159$2109.03 Remonstrants against a Seperation of the Town of Charlestown. Names of Resident LandholdersHouses &cAcresTax A BabcockHouse & Store18 1/257.36 Edward CutterHou
y side of the street, the one shown in the frontispiece, which was made from a picture taken in war-time, is still cared for by a member of the Rand family. Benjamin Rand set out the row of maples next to the street, on the parsonage lawn, some time between 1850 and 1860. Columbus Tyler afterwards set out many others of differexties it was a resort for enthusiasts in botany. A little further north, where the power-house now is, was another cedar pasture, owned, as were the woods, by Benjamin Rand, of North Cambridge. Mrs. Rand was wont to say that probably many a sermon had been rehearsed in the cedar pasture. In the rear of the houses on Hall avenueMrs. Rand was wont to say that probably many a sermon had been rehearsed in the cedar pasture. In the rear of the houses on Hall avenue is a group of these cedar trees, twelve in number, which may or may not have been set in place, they are so nearly on the boundary line. They seem like stranded waifs from the past looking on in wonder at the prosperity around them. A large cherry tree on Cameron avenue has for a long time attracted the attention of an occasio
16, 22. Pope, Rev. Augustus R., 59. Prescott Street, 81. Preston Road, 56. Primary Schools, 95. Prospect Hill, 65, 73. Prospect Hill District, 74, 92. Prospect Hill Grammar School, 93, 97, 99 Prospect Hill Park, 55. Prospect Hill Primary, 95. Prospect Hill School, 75, 76, 77, 78, 79, 83, 98. Prospect Hill Schoolhouse, 55, 70. Putnam, Betsey, 72, 81. Putnam, Joanna S., 81. Pythian Block, 55. Quincy, Josiah, 7. Quincy, Mass., 9. Quincy Place, Boston, 4. Rand, Benjamin, 13, 59, 62. Rand, Caleb, 100. Rand, Henry C., 53. Rand, Thomas, 11, 58, 61. Rand, Thomas, Jr., 10. Rand, Widow, 58. Rand, William, 11. Ravine Woods, 34. Raymond, Francis II., 53. Raymond, Martha L., 53. Rea, Mrs., Hannah, 17, 72. Read, Edwin F., 53. Reasons in Favor of a Separation of Somerville from Charlestown, 40-45. Redwoods, 8. Reynolds, Charlotte, 96, 99. Richardson, A., 12. Robinson's Bookkeeping, 98. Robinson's Elements, 25. Robinson, Enoch, 60.