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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Benjamin Cutter, William R. Cutter, History of the town of Arlington, Massachusetts, ormerly the second precinct in Cambridge, or District of Menotomy, afterward the town of West Cambridge. 1635-1879 with a genealogical register of the inhabitants of the precinct.. Search the whole document.

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Charles J. Moore (search for this): chapter 6
s in the Town Hall, the procession passed through several of the principal streets, and thence to the cemeteries, where each grave of a soldier of the war was generously decorated with flowers, in accordance with the custom throughout the country. The names of those whose graves were decorated were as follows: Mt. Pleasant Cemetery.—Edward Clark, James Ferguson, Franklin Ford, Samuel Gates, James Gibson, John Grant, Charles G. Haskell, Charles C. Henry, John Locke, Thomas Martin, Charles J. Moore, Henry S. Pollard, S. G. Rawson, Minot Robbins, William W. Snelling, George H. Sprague, William Stacy, George Trask, Nathaniel White, Henry W. Whittemore. 20. Old Burying Ground.—George P. Cotting, William Cotting Tomb; Augustus O. W. Cutter, Nehemiah Cutter Tomb; Albert Frost, Ephraim Frost Tomb: Rev. Samuel A. Smith. 4.—Arlington Advocate. Hiram Lodge.—Of fraternal societies in the town, the most ancient is the Hiram Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons, organized 1797. The Od
Thomas H. Russell (search for this): chapter 6
e following programme was carried out in the Town Hall: Overture.—Maplewood Band, twenty pieces. Prayer.—Rev. William F. Potter. Choral.—To thee, O Country, sixteen male voices. 1st Tenor.—William H. Poole, Edward H. Cutter, B. Delmont Locke, Stephen B. Wood. 2d Tenor.—Warren W. Rawson, William E. Wood, Augustus B. Osborn, George H. Rugg. 1st Bas.—William Proctor, Charles C. Cox, E. S. Fessenden, F. H. Fessenden. 2d Bass.—Herbert H. Ceiley, George A. Field, G. Allen, Thomas H. Russell. Remarks.—C. S. Parker, Chairman Committee of Arrangements. Chorus.—Comrades in Arms, sixteen male voices. Oration.—Rev. J. Lewis Merrill. Selection.—Maplewood Band. Benediction.—Rev. W. J. Parrot. After the exercises in the Town Hall, the procession passed through several of the principal streets, and thence to the cemeteries, where each grave of a soldier of the war was generously decorated with flowers, in accordance with the custom throughout th
William F. Potter (search for this): chapter 6
Hose Co., Warren A. Pierce, Foreman, twenty men. Menotomy H. & L. Truck Co., William N. Winn, Foreman, seven men. Highland Hose Co., E. B. Moore. Foreman, six men. Returned Soldiers and Sailors, Wilson W. Fay, Commander; J. A. Blanchard, E. F. Kenrick, Aids. Cambridge Brigade Band. Mt. Horeb Lodge, No. 19, L. O. I., James Durgin (mounted), Commanding. The following programme was carried out in the Town Hall: Overture.—Maplewood Band, twenty pieces. Prayer.—Rev. William F. Potter. Choral.—To thee, O Country, sixteen male voices. 1st Tenor.—William H. Poole, Edward H. Cutter, B. Delmont Locke, Stephen B. Wood. 2d Tenor.—Warren W. Rawson, William E. Wood, Augustus B. Osborn, George H. Rugg. 1st Bas.—William Proctor, Charles C. Cox, E. S. Fessenden, F. H. Fessenden. 2d Bass.—Herbert H. Ceiley, George A. Field, G. Allen, Thomas H. Russell. Remarks.—C. S. Parker, Chairman Committee of Arrangements. Chorus.—Comrades in Arms, sixteen ma
John Grant (search for this): chapter 6
ction.—Maplewood Band. Benediction.—Rev. W. J. Parrot. After the exercises in the Town Hall, the procession passed through several of the principal streets, and thence to the cemeteries, where each grave of a soldier of the war was generously decorated with flowers, in accordance with the custom throughout the country. The names of those whose graves were decorated were as follows: Mt. Pleasant Cemetery.—Edward Clark, James Ferguson, Franklin Ford, Samuel Gates, James Gibson, John Grant, Charles G. Haskell, Charles C. Henry, John Locke, Thomas Martin, Charles J. Moore, Henry S. Pollard, S. G. Rawson, Minot Robbins, William W. Snelling, George H. Sprague, William Stacy, George Trask, Nathaniel White, Henry W. Whittemore. 20. Old Burying Ground.—George P. Cotting, William Cotting Tomb; Augustus O. W. Cutter, Nehemiah Cutter Tomb; Albert Frost, Ephraim Frost Tomb: Rev. Samuel A. Smith. 4.—Arlington Advocate. Hiram Lodge.—Of fraternal societies in the town, the mo
J. R. Bailey (search for this): chapter 6
tional Lancers, civil officers of the town and state, the legislature, masonic organizations, soldiers of 1812 and the late war, children of the public schools, representation of trades, citizens in carriages, and a cavalcade, in all over a mile and a half in length. It passed through the principal streets, and a collation was afterward partaken of by the school children in a large tent on the common near the Unitarian Church, and by the invited guests in a mammoth tent on the grounds of J. R. Bailey, Esq., on Pleasant Street. Dinner was prepared by J. B. Smith, and speeches were made by Governor Bullock, the Hon. Charles Sumner, Richard H. Dana, Jr., Generals Foster and Osborne, and Commodore Rodgers and General Banks of the late war. A poem, written by Mr. J. T. Trowbridge of Arlington for the occasion, was read by Prof. M. T. Brown. The celebration closed with a regatta of Harvard students on the lake. In the course of his remarks, Hon. Charles Sumner said: In coming here
E. S. Fessenden (search for this): chapter 6
ade Band. Mt. Horeb Lodge, No. 19, L. O. I., James Durgin (mounted), Commanding. The following programme was carried out in the Town Hall: Overture.—Maplewood Band, twenty pieces. Prayer.—Rev. William F. Potter. Choral.—To thee, O Country, sixteen male voices. 1st Tenor.—William H. Poole, Edward H. Cutter, B. Delmont Locke, Stephen B. Wood. 2d Tenor.—Warren W. Rawson, William E. Wood, Augustus B. Osborn, George H. Rugg. 1st Bas.—William Proctor, Charles C. Cox, E. S. Fessenden, F. H. Fessenden. 2d Bass.—Herbert H. Ceiley, George A. Field, G. Allen, Thomas H. Russell. Remarks.—C. S. Parker, Chairman Committee of Arrangements. Chorus.—Comrades in Arms, sixteen male voices. Oration.—Rev. J. Lewis Merrill. Selection.—Maplewood Band. Benediction.—Rev. W. J. Parrot. After the exercises in the Town Hall, the procession passed through several of the principal streets, and thence to the cemeteries, where each grave of a soldier of
Thomas Martin (search for this): chapter 6
ter the exercises in the Town Hall, the procession passed through several of the principal streets, and thence to the cemeteries, where each grave of a soldier of the war was generously decorated with flowers, in accordance with the custom throughout the country. The names of those whose graves were decorated were as follows: Mt. Pleasant Cemetery.—Edward Clark, James Ferguson, Franklin Ford, Samuel Gates, James Gibson, John Grant, Charles G. Haskell, Charles C. Henry, John Locke, Thomas Martin, Charles J. Moore, Henry S. Pollard, S. G. Rawson, Minot Robbins, William W. Snelling, George H. Sprague, William Stacy, George Trask, Nathaniel White, Henry W. Whittemore. 20. Old Burying Ground.—George P. Cotting, William Cotting Tomb; Augustus O. W. Cutter, Nehemiah Cutter Tomb; Albert Frost, Ephraim Frost Tomb: Rev. Samuel A. Smith. 4.—Arlington Advocate. Hiram Lodge.—Of fraternal societies in the town, the most ancient is the Hiram Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons, organize
Samuel Gates (search for this): chapter 6
. J. Lewis Merrill. Selection.—Maplewood Band. Benediction.—Rev. W. J. Parrot. After the exercises in the Town Hall, the procession passed through several of the principal streets, and thence to the cemeteries, where each grave of a soldier of the war was generously decorated with flowers, in accordance with the custom throughout the country. The names of those whose graves were decorated were as follows: Mt. Pleasant Cemetery.—Edward Clark, James Ferguson, Franklin Ford, Samuel Gates, James Gibson, John Grant, Charles G. Haskell, Charles C. Henry, John Locke, Thomas Martin, Charles J. Moore, Henry S. Pollard, S. G. Rawson, Minot Robbins, William W. Snelling, George H. Sprague, William Stacy, George Trask, Nathaniel White, Henry W. Whittemore. 20. Old Burying Ground.—George P. Cotting, William Cotting Tomb; Augustus O. W. Cutter, Nehemiah Cutter Tomb; Albert Frost, Ephraim Frost Tomb: Rev. Samuel A. Smith. 4.—Arlington Advocate. Hiram Lodge.—Of fraternal so
hief so great. In those hours, when undisciplined patriots were preparing for conflict with the trained soldiers of England, the careful eye of Washington calmly surveying the whole horizon, selected your hills as the breast-work behind which he was to retrieve the day. The hills still stand firm and everlasting as when he looked upon them, but smiling now with fertility and peace. The Welsh Mountains near Cambridge, and the rear of the lines at Roxbury, were designated for that purpose. Marshall's Washington, vol. II. p. 230. —Memorandum made by Dr. Benjamin Cutter many years since (died 1864). 1871-72. The Arlington Water Works were constructed. Water Commissioners were elected in 1873. Cost of construction to the town, over $300,000. The source of supply is an artificial reservoir located near by in Lexington, which receives the waters of 173 acres, embracing the area known as the Great Meadows in that town. 1872 The town established its public library—transferring
James A. Blanchard (search for this): chapter 6
diers in the old burying-ground. A procession in the afternoon moved in the following order: Chief Marshal, James A. Bailey. Aids—Maj. Robert L. Sawin Lieut. John H. Hardy, Lieut. Edmund W. Noyes. Maplewood Band, John A. Spofford, Leader. William Penn Hose Co., Warren A. Pierce, Foreman, twenty men. Menotomy H. & L. Truck Co., William N. Winn, Foreman, seven men. Highland Hose Co., E. B. Moore. Foreman, six men. Returned Soldiers and Sailors, Wilson W. Fay, Commander; J. A. Blanchard, E. F. Kenrick, Aids. Cambridge Brigade Band. Mt. Horeb Lodge, No. 19, L. O. I., James Durgin (mounted), Commanding. The following programme was carried out in the Town Hall: Overture.—Maplewood Band, twenty pieces. Prayer.—Rev. William F. Potter. Choral.—To thee, O Country, sixteen male voices. 1st Tenor.—William H. Poole, Edward H. Cutter, B. Delmont Locke, Stephen B. Wood. 2d Tenor.—Warren W. Rawson, William E. Wood, Augustus B. Osborn, George H. Rugg.
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