elen F. Edlefson, Mr. Charles D. Elliot, Mrs. Annie L. Fletcher, Mr. Ellsworth Fisk, Mr. N. E. Fitz, Hon. William H. Furber, Mrs. Martha J. H. Gerry, Mr. Albert L. Haskell, Mr. Frank M. Hawes, Mrs. Helen E. Heald, Mrs. C. E. Henderson, Miss Bertha E. Holden, Mrs. Fannie C. Jaques, Mr. A. M. Kidder, Mr. George A. Kimball, Mrs. Eleanor G. Kirkpatrick, Miss Georgia Lears, Mrs. Martha E. Libby, Mr. Jairus Mann, Mr. David L. Maulsby, Mr. Henry C. Rand, Hon. Francis H. Raymond, Mrs. Raymond, Mr. Edwin F. Read, Mr. Aaron Sargent, Miss Ellen M. Sawyer, Miss Margaret A. Simpson, Mrs. Juliet G. Smith, Miss Susan S. Stetson, Rev. Anson Titus, Miss M. Alice Tufts, Miss Martha Tufts, Mr. Timothy Tufts, Miss Louise A. Vinal, Miss Anna P. Vinal, Miss Edith A. Woodman.
(read before the Somerville Historical Society November 7, 1906.)
Have we any old trees in Somerville?
Yes, a goodly number.
It is difficult to find out the exact facts in many cases, but, counting individual trees, there are o
.
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.
Robinson, Ezra, 60.
Robinson, Frederick, 49.
Rogers, Timothy P., 72.
Roosevelt, President, 8.
Round House, 60.
Rules and Regulations of Charlestown Free Schools, 24-25.
Rules and Regulations for the Government of the Charlestown Free Schools, 68, 69.
R