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Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Massachusetts in the Army and Navy during the war of 1861-1865, vol. 1, Mass. officers and men who died., List of Massachusetts officers and soldiers killed in action. (search)
ville, S. C.,June 17, 1862. Sheehy, John,28th Mass. Inf.,Gettysburg, Pa.,July 3, 1863. Sheen, Patrick,16th Mass. Inf.,Manassas, Va.,Aug. 29, 1862. Sheergold, William J.,5th Batt. Mass. L. A.,Bottom's Bridge, Va.,June 8, 1864. Shehan, James,9th Mass. Inf.,Malvern Hill, Va.,July 1, 1862. Sheldon, Thomas,54th Mass. Inf.,Fort Wagner, S. C.,July 18, 1863. Shelley, Michael,57th Mass. Inf.,Wilderness, Va.,May 6, 1864. Shepard, Lewis C.,1st Co. Mass. S. S.,Cold Harbor, Va.,June 3, 1864. Shepard, Samuel,56th Mass. Inf.,Before Petersburg, Va.,June 27, 1864 Shepardson, John,36th Mass. Inf.,Before Petersburg, Va.,July 17, 1864. Sheppard, Henry,21st Mass. Inf.,New Berne, N. C.,March 15, 1862. Sherburne, Felix,15th Mass. Inf.,Wilderness, Va.,May 8, 1864. Sheridan, James Name and rank. Private understood when not otherwise stated.Command.Engagement.Date. Sheridan, James, Sergt.,11th Mass. Inf.,Before Petersburg, Va.,Oct. 2, 1864. Sherman, Daniel P.,1st Mass. Cav.,Aldie,
3. Sheehan, Dennis,16th Mass. Inf.,Gettysburg, Pa.,July 2, 1863. Sheehan, Martin,9th Mass. Inf.,Wilderness, Va.,May 5, 1864. Sheehan, Timothy,1st Mass. H. A.,Spotsylvania, Va.,May 19, 1864. Sheehey, William,28th Mass. Inf.,Secessionville, S. C.,June 17, 1862. Sheehy, John,28th Mass. Inf.,Gettysburg, Pa.,July 3, 1863. Sheen, Patrick,16th Mass. Inf.,Manassas, Va.,Aug. 29, 1862. Sheergold, William J.,5th Batt. Mass. L. A.,Bottom's Bridge, Va.,June 8, 1864. Shehan, James,9th Mass. Inf.,Malvern Hill, Va.,July 1, 1862. Sheldon, Thomas,54th Mass. Inf.,Fort Wagner, S. C.,July 18, 1863. Shelley, Michael,57th Mass. Inf.,Wilderness, Va.,May 6, 1864. Shepard, Lewis C.,1st Co. Mass. S. S.,Cold Harbor, Va.,June 3, 1864. Shepard, Samuel,56th Mass. Inf.,Before Petersburg, Va.,June 27, 1864 Shepardson, John,36th Mass. Inf.,Before Petersburg, Va.,July 17, 1864. Sheppard, Henry,21st Mass. Inf.,New Berne, N. C.,March 15, 1862. Sherburne, Felix,15th Mass. Inf.,Wilderness, Va.,May 8, 1864.
n, 37th Mass. Inf., 479 Shea, Patrick, 479 Sheahan, James, 548 Sheay, Michael, 416 Sheedy, Joseph, 416 Sheehan, D. J., 479 Sheehan, Dennis, 416 Sheehan, James, 479 Sheehan, John, 548 Sheehan, Martin, 416 Sheehan, Timothy, 416 Sheehey, William, 416 Sheehy, John, 416 Sheen, Patrick, 416 Sheergold, W. J., 416 Shehan, James, 416 Sheldon, C. W., 479 Sheldon, Thomas, 416 Sheldon, W. E., 563 Shelley, Michael, 416 Shelton, J. P., 479 Shepard, L. C., 416 Shepard, O. L., 25 Shepard, Samuel, 416 Shepardson, John, 416 Shepherd, J. T., 479 Sheppard, Henry, 416 Sherburne, C. G., 479 Sherburne, Felix, 416 Sheridan, James, 417 Sheridan, P. H., 38, 109, 110, 111, 112, 113, 114, 142, 143, 144, 146, 160, 244, 252, 260, 268. Sherman, D. P., 417 Sherman, Francis, 417 Sherman, Frank, 548 Sherman, G. L., 479 Sherman, G. W., 548 Sherman, H. C. R., 417 Sherman, J. D., 417 Sherman, P. H., 548 Sherman, R. C., 417 Sherman, T. W., 25, 248 Sherman, W. T., 5, 28, 86, 61, 67,
Cambridge sketches (ed. Estelle M. H. Merrill), Historic churches and homes of Cambridge. (search)
lege was called Harvard. Its first leader, Nathaniel Eaton, for maltreating his pupils was dismissed, and for a time Samuel Shepard administered the college affairs. In 1664, however, Henry Dunster became president. He was a member of Shepard Churerected on nearly the present site of Dane Hall at Harvard Square. In this same year, before the church was completed, Mr. Shepard died. We have the record of him as the holy, heavenly, sweet-affecting, soul-ravishing preacher. Next to Shepard cShepard came Mitchel, almost equally celebrated for piety and eloquence. Cotton Mather and Richard Baxter praise him highly, and President Increase Mather said to his students, Say, each of you, Mitchel shall be the example whom I will imitate. During thisat last compelled by his parish to resign. With the majority of his church he withdrew from his place and formed the Shepard Congregational Society. This society built, in 1832, a new meeting-house on its present site, and though compelled, by
Lucius R. Paige, History of Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1630-1877, with a genealogical register, Key to the plan of Cambridge in 1635 . (search)
certain whether then occupied by a house or not. 4Rev. Thomas Hooker.Rev. Thomas Shepard. 5John White. Vacant lot.Richard Champney. Vacant lot. 6John Clark. Vacant lot.Thomas Beal. Vacant lot. 7William Wadsworth. Vacant lot.Samuel Shepard. Vacant lot. 8John White.Thomas Danforth. 9John Hopkins. Vacant lot.Mark Pierce. 10John White. Vacant lot.Edward Collins. 11William Goodwin.Samuel Shepard. 12John Steele.Robert Bradish. 13William Wadsworth.Richard Champney. 14Samuel Shepard. 12John Steele.Robert Bradish. 13William Wadsworth.Richard Champney. 14Widow Esther Muzzey.Henry Dunster. House, but apparently not a homestead. 15Daniel Abbott.Francis Moore. 16Daniel Abbott.John Russell. 17Thomas Heate.Thomas Marrett. 18Christopher Cane.William Towne. 19Nathaniel Hancock.Nathaniel Hancock. 20George Steele.Edward Goffe. House, but apparently not a homestead. 21Edward Stebbins.Nathan Aldus. 22Timothy Stanley.William French. 23Jonas Austin.Katherine Haddon. 24John Hopkins.Edmund Angier. 25Thomas Beale.Thomas Beale. 26Rev. Samuel St
Chapter 5: civil History. Arrival of Shepard's company, and some of their names. New municed from New Town in 1635 and 1636; and that Mr. Shepard with another company purchased their housesns which swayed him to come to New England, Mr. Shepard says in his Autobiography, Divers people int for themselves and their company, Life of Shepard, edition of 1832, pp. 42-58. Besides those who are here named by Mr. Shepard, another Mr. Cooke and William French came in the same ship (The Ded. John Russell. Remained here. Samuel Shepard. Remained here. Rev. Thomas Sheparde acres, was divided between Edward Goffe, Samuel Shepard, and Joseph Cooke. Small-lot-Hill, in likoger Harlakenden, and had been very kind to Mr. Shepard in England. He did not comply with the conrms were made to other persons, to wit: to Samuel Shepard 400 acres adjoining and beyond the farm ofain; Mr. Willi: Spencer, leiftenant; Mr. Sam: Shepard, ensign. Ibid., i. 190. Nov. 15, 1637.
om Winthrop to Hooker. Letter from Hooker to Shepard. depreciation in the value of property. dancorporation of Billerica Notwithstanding Mr. Shepard and his associates here found sufficient fodest daughter had become the second wife of Mr. Shepard in 1637. How far Mr. Hooker may have been vice, even with urgency, his own letters to Mr. Shepard afford conclusive evidence. Very probably ater, Mr. Hooker wrote an earnest letter to Mr. Shepard, which was long preserved in the library ofe is not to the gentlemen in Cambridge with Mr. Shepard, but to certain others in England, for whom, as appears by another letter from Hooker to Shepard, without date: Touching your business at MataLord sent Mr. Roger Harlakenden and my brother Samuel Shepard to visit me after they had heard of outo me, etc. (Boston Ed., 1832, pp. 54, 55). Mr. Shepard was accompanied to New England by this mostt Cambridge, Feb. 14, 1640-1, as appears by Mr. Shepard's Diary, at which time the project passes o
1645. Clement Chaplin, 1636. Joseph Cooke, 1636-1641. Nicholas Danforth, 1636, 1637. Richard Jackson, 1637-1639, 1641, 1648, 1653, 1655, 1661, 1662. John Bridge, 1637-1639, 1641. Joseph Isaac, 1638. Gregory Stone, 1638. Samuel Shepard, 1639, 1640, 1644, 1645. Nath. Sparhawk, 1642-1644, 1646, 1647. Edward Goffe, 1646, 1650. Edward Jackson, 1647-1654, 1656, 1665-1668, 1675, 1676. Daniel Gookin, 1649, 1651. Speaker in 1651. Edward Collins, 1654-1670. Thomaoffe, 1636, 1637, 1639, 1641, 1643, 1644, 1646-1655. Simon Crosby, 1636, 1638. Barnabas Lamson, 1636. Edward Winship, 1637, 1638, 1642– 1644, 1646, 1648, 1650, 1651, 1662, 1663, 1673, 1682, 1684. George Cooke, 1638, 1642, 1643. Samuel Shepard, 1638. Joseph Isaac, 1638. Thomas Parish, 1639, 1640. Thomas Marritt, 1639-1641, 1644, 1646, 1647. John Moore,* 1639. Thomas Brigham, 1639, 1640, 1642, 1647. Edmund Angier,* 1640. John Stedman, 1640, 1647-1649, 1651, 1653-1
), was admitted freeman 1636, in company with Shepard. Soon afterwards he owned and occupied the eOct. 1650, when he bought the estate of Maj. Samuel Shepard, on the southerly side of Harvard Streeaigie Jan. 1797, and d. 7 May 1844, a. 69. Shepard, Rev. Thomas, s. of William, b. in Towcester,about removing to Connecticut with Hooker. Mr. Shepard was thrice married, 1st in England to Marganathan Mitchell 19 Nov. 1650. The death of Mr. Shepard occasioned a general lamentation and gloom ing begun by Mr. Eaton, was committed to Mr. Samuel Shepard, by the General Court, in Sept. 1639. Hged for the Parliament, Cooke as Colonel, and Shepard as Major. Mitchell in his Church Record, commenced in 1658, says, Major Samuel Shepard and his wife, now living in Ireland, do yet stand in membeople of his charge, and by the community. Mr. Shepard m. Hannah (or Anna), dau. of William Tyng 3tomb which she had caused to be erected for Mr. Shepard. Sherborne, Elizabeth (otherwise written[5 more...]
e to N. Engl. in the Elizabeth and Ann, 1635, then a. 48, and was elected the same year a Selectman of Cambridge. He purchased the estate of William Goodwin at the easterly corner of Harvard and Holyoke streets, which was afterwards sold to Samuel Shepard. He removed, probably in 1636, to Connecticut, of which colony he was Treasurer in 1637, and was an Elder of the church in Weathersfield. Chauncy, Rev. Charles, s. of George Chauncy of Hertfordshire, England, bap. at Yardley 5 Nov. 1592, . Thomas, m. Sarah Fessenden 30 July 1629. Rebecca, m. John Mullis 28 April 1748. Thomas, m. Hannah Hill 22 Feb. 1787. Chesholme, Thomas (sometimes written Chessham, Chesseholme, and Cheeseholme), was admitted freeman 1636, in company with Shepard. Soon afterwards he owned and occupied the estate at the N. W. corner of Dunster and Winthrop streets, where he resided until his death 18 Aug. 1671. He was a tailor, and for several years a Deacon of the Church, and Steward of Harvard College
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