Hello, I thought I had posted a query about this family a month or so ago, but I just checked the archives and didn't see any mention of MASTERS recently. I am looking for information on the family of: William MASTERS, b~1800, d1855 Mrs. Mary C. (?) MASTERS, b~1801, d1875 I know about their daughter, Mary Ann MASTERS, b~1830, and that she married Thomas O. HUTCHINSON in 1851. The HUTCHINSON family was of Winchester, and they probably married there. But, they were related to the CROSBY and many other families in Arlington (West Cambridge). I am very interested in finding out if William and Mary MASTERS had other children. Thomas and Mary HUTCHINSON had only 2 children, Thomas Masters HUTCHINSON and Mary Ann HUTCHINSON, and they never married. They died in Winchester in 1933 and 1936. (Thomas M. worked at the State House in his later years.) Thank you for your time. Betty (near Lowell, MA) P.S. This is the family in the gravesite in Winchester, which I previously mentioned. P.S.2 Someone just gave me a "helpful hint" on how to increase the size of the print in an e-mail I receive ! Unfortunately, this "helpful hint" just increased the size of the print in the e-mails I send out ! For Windows XP, could someone tell me how I put the size of the print back to where I had it? :o)
Hello, I have come across a situation in my HUTCHINSON research which might be of interest to others. A little background is that George HUTCHINSON of 1600's "Charlestown and Winchester" bought large areas of land, and it seems a good part of his property remained in family hands into the 1900's ! Through the 1800's and up to my great-grandmother's death in 1958, the larger of the 2 HUTCHINSON Farms in Winchester were lived on by HUTCHINSON family members. (The other farm across the street seems to have been sold "outside the family" in the 1920's, probably for money reasons, or lack thereof.) The last people to live in the larger HUTCHINSON Farm were Tom and Mary HUTCHINSON and their only children, unmarried siblings, Tom and Mary HUTCHINSON. They, along with Mrs. HUTCHINSON's parents are buried in a large plot at the Wildwood Cemetery in Winchester. Mary's parents were William and Mary (?) MASTERS. The last death among these people was in 1936. I have a cousin and his wife who "in years to come" will need a place of burial. And, in the same cemetery, the plot of his grandparents, G. Sanford and Louise (RICE) KIDDER, only has a spot for one coffin left. Last month I had remembered that my sister and I had never looked for the gravesite of Tom and Mary HUTCHINSON, and I obtained the information from the Cemetery office. It turns out that this extended family had bought a large plot, and it has room for 2 more coffins ! Yesterday, I drove to Winchester to look at the gravestone and take a photo. The cemetery office was open, so I went in to ask questions. I asked if this gravesite could be used by "relatives" of Tom and Mary HUTCHINSON. He looked and there is only one sheet of paper in the file for this gravesite, and he had already sent me the Xerox copy. There is no mention of a "current owner" of the site. And, he said that, without a DEED in hand, he will not allow any "full" burials there. * As I've mentioned before, my sisters and I lived on that farm during the 1940's, up to 1952. So, we know that Grandma KIDDER inherited that farm, and that her disabled son and his wife lived there with her up until her death in 1958. Now, if everyone was good at "keeping paperwork neat and handy," the DEEDS to the two gravesites should have been in the same folder or envelope. But, as far as I know, no one can find the deed to the HUTCHINSON gravesite, among the papers we have in our possession for our great-uncle, Clinton KIDDER. Tom and Mary HUTCHINSON, the unmarried siblings, had no descendants. And, I don't recall at this moment whether William and Mary MASTERS had other children. They died in 1855 and 1875, so we're talking about people who died many years ago ! So, a summary is: There is a large gravesite at the Wildwood Cemetery which has room for 2 more coffins, and it appears that "no one" will be able to use that gravesite for any "full" burial -- forever ! And, I was wondering if anyone else had ever come across a similar situation. Betty (near Lowell, MA) FYI: Tom HUTCHINSON, the son, did a lot of research on his family-tree, and so did his cousin's daughters: Miss Edith RICE and Mrs. Louise (RICE) KIDDER. My mother did more research (long-hand), and my sister and I have started it up again ! "Grandma KIDDER" was our great-grandmother, and during the 1930's she inherited the farm from her mother's cousins. It was "full" of .. items from the early 1900's, especially in the large attic. And, the DEED to the HUTCHINSON gravesite "should have been" among the papers passed down to my great-uncle. * I have learned that you can have "Urns" placed in a gravesite with "few questions asked." (3 per coffin area)
Hi Mark, and Janice, We had company last weekend, and the lady mentioned she was going to a funeral in a Woburn cemetery, but she couldn't remember where it was. I did a little, on-line searching and found it ! But, the nice surprise is that the web site I found "also" included copies of the records from the cemetery ! It was part of the "Ye Olde Woburn" web site ! Wouldn't it be nice if "all" old cemeteries in the area put their records on-line ! Betty (near Lowell, MA) ----- Original Message ----- From: "Mark" <markmein@optonline.net> To: <MAMIDDLE-D@rootsweb.com> Sent: Friday, May 05, 2006 6:11 PM Subject: Re [WOBURN [was MAMiddle] > Janice, > We have people in early Woburn (Wyman, Pierce, Butler, Cutter) so I'd > be interested in your transcription of the Sewell book on the Earliest > Families. > > Thanks for all you do for us, > > Mark Waldron > New York > > Farns10th@aol.com wrote: > >> >> Subject: >> Re: [MAMiddle] >> From: >> Farns10th@aol.com >> Date: >> Thu, 4 May 2006 18:23:00 EDT >> To: >> MAMIDDLE-L@rootsweb.com >> >> To: >> MAMIDDLE-L@rootsweb.com >> >> >>Earliest Families of Woburn >> Genealogical Notices of the Earliest Inhabitants of Woburn and Their >> Families >>The History of Woburn, Middlesex County, Mass., from the grant of its >>territory to Charlestown, in 1640, to the year 1860., Sewall, Samuel, >>1785-1868. >> >> I have transcribed the Earliest Families of Woburn (Samuel Sewell >> ook) - >>which is a NotePad file of 200 kbs - and free for the asking. Janice >> >>______________________________ >> >> > > ______________________________
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/AFB.2ACE/1855.1.1.1 Message Board Post: You can search new york deaths at this site http://www.italiangen.org/databaselist.stm
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/AFB.2ACE/1855.1.1 Message Board Post: Yes! Thank you! I really need info about his death in 1914- New York. Thanks again
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/AFB.2ACE/1855.1 Message Board Post: Is This him? 1850 United States Federal Census Record Name: John Maher Age: 2 Estimated birth year: abt 1848 Birth place: Ireland Gender: Male Home in 1850 (City,County,State): Natick, Middlesex, Massachusetts Parents names are Daniel and ann
Thank you for answering my 1910 census question I greatly appreciate it. Since I was not able to read it on heritage quest. I hope everyone has good luck with their research. Aine
Janice, We have people in early Woburn (Wyman, Pierce, Butler, Cutter) so I'd be interested in your transcription of the Sewell book on the Earliest Families. Thanks for all you do for us, Mark Waldron New York Farns10th@aol.com wrote: > > Subject: > Re: [MAMiddle] > From: > Farns10th@aol.com > Date: > Thu, 4 May 2006 18:23:00 EDT > To: > MAMIDDLE-L@rootsweb.com > > To: > MAMIDDLE-L@rootsweb.com > > >Earliest Families of Woburn > >Genealogical Notices of the Earliest Inhabitants of Woburn and Their Families >The History of Woburn, Middlesex County, Mass., from the grant of its >territory to Charlestown, in 1640, to the > >year 1860., Sewall, Samuel, 1785-1868. > > >I have transcribed the Earliest Families of Woburn (Samuel Sewell book) - >which is a NotePad file of 200 kbs - and free for the asking. Janice > >______________________________ > >
Lewis PAXTON, head, age 23, b. Ohio, father b. Nebraska, m. b. Vermont, a sea man in the U.S. Navy; Mary, wife, age 2(0?), b. Massachusetts, parents b. Ireland. Mary was employed, too, in "inspection" "Bag & Paper (mfg?). They were enumerated on Cross Street as of May 6, 1910. Regards, Jerry Harrison Albuquerque, NM In a message dated 5/5/2006 12:49:36 P.M. Mountain Daylight Time, R7g98L@aol.com writes: Could someone please look on the 1910 census for me. I have heritage quest but unable to read most of it. I would like if someone can read it where the parents of Lewis were from and his occupation, and the street they lived on. Thank you very much. NAME : Lewis Paxton Age 23 birthplace Ohio. His wife Mary is also listed being born in Ma. County: Middlesex, Watertown Ma. I am trying to figure out if this was my great grandmother and her husband. Thank you Aine
Rosemary Nunnally sent this from The Lowell Sun, 12 January 1966 - Mrs. Julia (Mannion) Burke, native of County Galway, deceased. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Dennis Ahern | Middlesex County Massachusetts Newspaper Abstracts Acton, Massachusetts | http://www.rootsweb.com/~mamidnws/index.html - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Could someone please look on the 1910 census for me. I have heritage quest but unable to read most of it. I would like if someone can read it where the parents of Lewis were from and his occupation, and the street they lived on. Thank you very much. NAME : Lewis Paxton Age 23 birthplace Ohio. His wife Mary is also listed being born in Ma. County: Middlesex, Watertown Ma. I am trying to figure out if this was my great grandmother and her husband. Thank you Aine
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/AFB.2ACE/1855 Message Board Post: Cannot find the birth record for: John William Maher (Also spelled Maher, Meagher) Born in 1848-49 Natick or Framingham I am an NEHGS member and have tried everything I can think of on the search engine- Thanks
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/AFB.2ACE/1854.1.1 Message Board Post: I received information from several people on this group so just wanted to say thank you. This is a very helpful message board with nice people using it.
Thanks Chuck - copied and save it all. Janice
1 of 10 hits on Farrar in my data. Let me know if you want more. The Richardson Memorial 1580 Thomas Richardson Thomas Richardson, 3 (Samuel, 2 Samuel, 1), half-brother of the preceding, son of Samuel, 2 and Sarah (Hayward) Richardson; born in Woburn, Sept. 25, 1684; Married, in Watertown, Sept. 29, 1713, Rebecca Wyman, 3 born in Woburn, Nov. 11, 1693, eldest daughter of Samuel 2 and Rebecca (Johnson) Wyman, of Woburn, and Granddaughter of Francis 1 and Abigail (Reed) Wyman, also of Woburn. + He passed a long life in Woburn. He died there Jan. 12, 1774 aged 93. [Gravestone.] His Wife rebecca, who was a grand daughter of Matthew Johnson, whose father was Capt. Edward Johnson, Author of the "Wonder-Working Providence," "the father of Woburn," died April 11, 1771, aged 78. [79, Gravestone.] His will is dated Nov. 8, 1771. In it he makes bequests to the children of his son Thomas, late of Worcester, Deceased, viz.: Peter of Shrewsbury, who was over fourteen in 1760, etc. To the children of his son Eleazar, deceased. To his son Ralph, of Sutton. To his sons Ebenezer, David, Israel, and Lemuel, of Sutton. To Jonas, Thomas and Sarah Richardson, of Shrewsbury. To Palmer and Lucretia Golding. To Lucretia Richardson, of Worcester. To David Richardson, jr., of Woburn. To his Grandchildren, Eleazar Richardson and Rebecca Collins, of Lynn. Finally, to his son Zebadiah Richardson and children. The Children of Thomas and Rebecca (Wyman) Richardson were: 1706. Thomas, 4 b. Feb. 15, 1713-14; m. Mehitable --. 1707. Eleazar, 4 b. May 22, 1715; m. Susanna Carter. 1708. Rebecca, 4 b. Dec. 21, 1716; d. Feb. 13, 1717-18. 1709. Isaiah, 4 b. Oct. 13, 1718; d. Feb. 16, 1722-3 [Gravestone] 1710. Ralph, 4 b. Jan. 3, 1719-20; Married ---. 1711. Matthew, 4 b. April 9, 1721; Feb. 11, 1722-3 1712. Ebenezer, 4 b. Aug. 26, 1722; m. first, Mary Richardson; Second, Sarah Richardson 1713. Rebecca, 4 b. Nov. 12, 1724; d. Feb. 12, 1729-30 1714. David, 4 b. Sept. 15, 1726; m. Rebecca ---. 1715. Zebadiah, 4 b. July 2, 1728; m. First Sarah Barron; second Esther Swan. 1716. Israel, 4 b. July 2, 1730; m. first Elizabeth Hutchinson; second Miriam Wheeler. 1717. Lemuel, 4 b. July 31, 1734; m. Anna Preston. 1718. Sarah, 4 b. Sept. 11, 1737; m. ---Wyman. + Rebecca Wyman, in the text, had three sisters, who all married Richardsons. Her sister Abigail married Jonathan, brother of Thomas in the text. Esther married Reuben Richardson , and Lydia married Oliver Richardson brother of Reuben. Thomas, in the text was in "Lovewells fight" at Pigwacket, May 8, 1725, O. S., and was one of the nine who escaped unhurt. Some account of his remarkable encounter will not here be out of place. During the war with the Abenaquis or Eastern Indians, from 1722 to 1726, the government of Massachusetts, for the protection of the frontiers, offered a bounty of 100 pounds for Indian scalps and captives. In pursuance of this encouragement, Capt. John Lovewell, of Dunstable, with a company of volunteers, undertook three expeditions; one in December, 1724, one in January and February, 1725 and a third in April and May 1725. They were under a commission from the Government of Massachusetts to which Province Dunstable then belonged. About the 16th of April, 1725, Capt. Lovewell, with forty-six men, left Dunstable on a third expedition. They went up the Merrimack River, and its main branch, the Pemigewasset; and, when well up the latter stream, appear to have struck off eastward through the present town of Moultonborough to Ossipee Lake. At the Locality Just named, a man, Benjamin Kidder, of Nutfield [Londonderry], being taken sick, they halted, constructed a rude Fort, for a place of refuge, if needed, and left the sick man, with the surgeon, and eight others, with a considerable amount of provision, in the fort. This reduced their number to 34, Including the captain; two others from disability, having been left at Contoocook, now Boscawen The names of the men who now went forward, and took part in the fight, are these, Capt. John Lovewell, Lieutenants Joseph Farwell, and Johnathan Robins, Ensign John Harwood, Sergeant Noah Johnson, Robert Usher, and Samuel Whiting, All of Dunstable; Ensign Seth Wyman, Corporal Thomas Richardson, Timothy Richardson, Ichabod Johnson, and Josiah Johnson, of Woburn; Eleazar Davis, Josiah Davis, Josiah Jones, David Melvin, Eleazar Melvin, Jacob Farrar, and Joseph Farrar, of Concord; Jonathan Fry, of Andover, Chaplain; Sergeant Jacob Fullam, of Weston; Corporal Edward Lingfield, of Nutfield, now Londonderry; Jonathan Kittredge and Solomon Keys [pronounced Kies], of Billerica; John Jefts, Daniel Woods, Thomas Woods, John Chamberlain [who killed Paugus, the Indian chief], Elias Barron, Isaac Lakin, and Joseph Gilson, of Groton; Ebenezer Ayre, and Abiel Asten, of Haverhill. Four grandsons of Major Johnson are here included. They soon came to the headwaters of the Saco River, thirty miles or more from their fort at Ossipee, and reached a pond or lake in the present town of Fryburg, by the side of which they encamped. The Pigwacket or Pequaket [Indian] villages were now near at hand. Early in the morning of Saturday, May 8, while at prayers, they heard the discharge of a gun; and soon saw an Indian, they supposed, was placed there for a decoy. Marching toward the Indian, some of the men fired upon him. He returned fire, and the first shot mortally wounded Capt. Lovewell. Ensign Seth Wyman then fired, and killed the Indian. Some delay now took place while the company were looking for their packs, which had been left in the rear, and covertly removed by the Indians. About ten o'clock in the forenoon, a large body of Indians rose, in two parties, in front and rear, and with a hideous yell, ran toward the English with arms presented. The English also presented arms, and ran to meet them. The Captain now dead, and the two Lieutenants soon after disabled by wounds, the command now devolved on Ensign Wyman for the remainder of the day. The fight was maintained with great obstinacy and resolution on both sides; Indians had every advantage, being supposed to be seventy, some say eighty in number, and enclosing the English on both front and rear. The latter, at the outset were, but thirty-four, all told, and of this number nine were slain, soon after the fight began. But the Indians suffered the most; forty of them were killed on the spot; eighteen more died of their wounds, and only twelve escaped injury. Of the thirty-four whites who engaged in the conflict only nine escaped unhurt. viz.: Ensign Seth Wyman, and Thomas Richardson, of Woburn, Daniel Melvin, Eleazar Melvin, and Joseph Farrar, of Concord, Joseph Gilson of Groton, Ebenezer Ayre and Abiel Asten, of Haverhill, and Edward Lingfield, of Londonderry. Nine were badly wounded, Viz.: Timothy Richardson and Josiah Johnson, of Woburn, Noah Johnson, and Samuel Whiting of Dunstable, John Chamberlain, Isaac Lakin, * Eleazar Davis, Josiah Jones of Concord, Solomon Keys, of Billerica. Some of these were made invalids or cripples for life. Ichabod Johnson, of Woburn, son of Capt. Edward Johnson, of that part of Woburn which is now Burlington, was killed; and the blow gave the fond father a shock which brought him to his grave three months after, viz.: Aug. 7, 1725. Some of those who escaped the carnage suffered extremely from hunger, having scarcely tasted food from Saturday morning till Wednesday night on there arrival at Dunstable. The ten men who had been left at the fort quitted on it Sunday morning, being frightened by the report which was brought to them by Benjamin Hassell, who seeing that the English were greatly outnumbered, deserted his companions at the very beginning of the battle, and went to their homes, leaving the exhausted, wounded, suffering men who came out of the fight, to take care of themselves. Those who left the fatal battle ground were twenty in number, of whom eleven were badly wounded, and two died of their wounds before reaching anyplace where their wounds could be dressed. Woburn and the whole country, was in mourning for the precious lives lost in this encounter. But the power of the Indians of New England never recovered from the disaster they sustained. [From Sewell's History of Woburn, pp. 195 et seq., with additions by the compiler] All the towns and rivers mentioned are in what is now New Hampshire except Fryburg which is just over the boarder in Maine. dcr. * John Chamberlain, Isaac Lakin, were listed as being from Groton in an earlier paragraph. It has not been determined if this discrepancy is an error by Vinton or the Sewall history.dcr. Farns10th@aol.com wrote: > Genealogical Notices of the Earliest Inhabitants of Woburn and Their Families > The History of Woburn, Middlesex County, Mass., from the grant of its > territory to Charlestown, in 1640, to the year 1860., Sewall, Samuel, 1785-1868. > > John Farrar was admitted an inhabitant of Woburn at the Town Meeting Feb > 1655/6? to choose town officers for 1656. He is presumed to have been a brother > of Jacob Farrar of Lancaster who appears from the following record in Woburn > Town Book, to have died at Woburn: > "John Ffarer, Sen. died August 14, 1677." His widow, Ann* was married to > John Seirs of Woburn as his 2nd wife on Nov 2, 1680. To John Farrar were born: > (1) Mary b. April 10, 1656. (2) Jacob b. Oct 22, 1657, died of the small-pox > June 1679. (3) Isaac b. Dec 16, 1659, died in a fortnight after. (4) Joanna b. > April 9, 1661, m. Robert Dayle, 1650 (5) Mercy b. April 1, 1663. (6) Hannah > b. Jan 22, 1667/8; m. John Wyman, wheelwright Dec 14, > 1685. (7) Isaac b. July 1, 1671. > > John Farrar died July 11, 1690. His wife's name* and the date of her death > ar not known. > > Insert: Torrey, New England Marriages Prior to 1700 - has several > contradictions as follows: p.259 > Jacob Farrar (1614 to ?) & 1st wife, Grace Dean m. Nov 21, 1640, Halifax, > England. > Jacob Farrar 2 (1614 to 1677) & 2nd wife *Ann ___? who m. (2) John Sears in > 1680 in > England. Lancaster/Woburn. > John Farrar (b.?1611; d. 1690) & 2nd wife (Savage doesnt have 1st wife) > Joanna ___? > (d. 1687 or 1701+); Woburn. > > p.611 - Woburn - cont'd. > > FARRAR. > Isaac Farrar's name not occuring on the Woburn Province Tax Lists for 1714, > 1715, he is supposed to have previously removed from the town. > > > ============================== > New! Family Tree Maker 2005. Build your tree and search for your ancestors at the same time. Share your tree with family and friends. Learn more: http://landing.ancestry.com/familytreemaker/2005/tour.aspx?sourceid=14599&targetid=5429 > > > >
Earliest Families of Woburn Genealogical Notices of the Earliest Inhabitants of Woburn and Their Families The History of Woburn, Middlesex County, Mass., from the grant of its territory to Charlestown, in 1640, to the year 1860., Sewall, Samuel, 1785-1868. I have transcribed the Earliest Families of Woburn (Samuel Sewell book) - which is a NotePad file of 200 kbs - and free for the asking. Janice
Genealogical Notices of the Earliest Inhabitants of Woburn and Their Families The History of Woburn, Middlesex County, Mass., from the grant of its territory to Charlestown, in 1640, to the year 1860., Sewall, Samuel, 1785-1868. John Farrar was admitted an inhabitant of Woburn at the Town Meeting Feb 1655/6? to choose town officers for 1656. He is presumed to have been a brother of Jacob Farrar of Lancaster who appears from the following record in Woburn Town Book, to have died at Woburn: "John Ffarer, Sen. died August 14, 1677." His widow, Ann* was married to John Seirs of Woburn as his 2nd wife on Nov 2, 1680. To John Farrar were born: (1) Mary b. April 10, 1656. (2) Jacob b. Oct 22, 1657, died of the small-pox June 1679. (3) Isaac b. Dec 16, 1659, died in a fortnight after. (4) Joanna b. April 9, 1661, m. Robert Dayle, 1650 (5) Mercy b. April 1, 1663. (6) Hannah b. Jan 22, 1667/8; m. John Wyman, wheelwright Dec 14, 1685. (7) Isaac b. July 1, 1671. John Farrar died July 11, 1690. His wife's name* and the date of her death ar not known. Insert: Torrey, New England Marriages Prior to 1700 - has several contradictions as follows: p.259 Jacob Farrar (1614 to ?) & 1st wife, Grace Dean m. Nov 21, 1640, Halifax, England. Jacob Farrar 2 (1614 to 1677) & 2nd wife *Ann ___? who m. (2) John Sears in 1680 in England. Lancaster/Woburn. John Farrar (b.?1611; d. 1690) & 2nd wife (Savage doesnt have 1st wife) Joanna ___? (d. 1687 or 1701+); Woburn. p.611 - Woburn - cont'd. FARRAR. Isaac Farrar's name not occuring on the Woburn Province Tax Lists for 1714, 1715, he is supposed to have previously removed from the town.
Well, I have a lot of info about the descendants of Jacob Farrar d. Woburn, MA, 14 Aug 1677. Can you give more proof about his ancestors? That would be awesome! Best wishes, Karen Hanson Sullivan -----Original Message----- From: Thomas Sharon [mailto:sharon.thomas@co.taylor.wi.us] Sent: Thursday, May 04, 2006 5:07 PM To: MAMIDDLE-L@rootsweb.com Subject: [MAMiddle] I am looking to find information about the Farrar family that originated with William Farrar who was born in England in 1550. Wife of Margaret Bannister. His grandson, Jcob Farrar was born in England but died in Woburn MA. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks sthomas1@tds.net ============================== Jumpstart your genealogy with OneWorldTree. Search not only for ancestors, but entire generations. Learn more: http://www.ancestry.com/s13972/rd.ashx
ALLEN, Abram; 74; ENG>Maynard MA; Concord Enterprise; 1910-9-21; dja DRISKALL, William; ; Acton MA; Concord Enterprise; 1925-6-10; dja JONES, ? "wid of Elnathan" ( ); 85; Acton MA; Concord Enterprise; 1925-6-10; dja GIBBS, Harry F Sr; 75; Acton MA; Concord Enterprise; 1925-6-17; dja SLUYSKI, Nicholas; 16; Maynard MA; Concord Enterprise; 1925-6-17; dja TOOHEY, Agnes Miss; 63; Acton MA; Concord Enterprise; 1923-4-25; dja GRIMES, John; 87; Acton MA; Concord Enterprise; 1895-12-12; dja SNOW, Maria ( ) [BLANCHARD]; ; Lawrence MA; Concord Enterprise; 1898-11-17; dja GRIMES, Anne "Mrs James" ( ); ; Acton MA; Concord Enterprise; 1898-11-17; dja BARKER, Joseph; 91; Acton MA; Concord Enterprise; 1898-11-24; dja CONANT, Luther; 91; Acton MA; Concord Enterprise; 1922-11-15; dja HAYNES, Sidney D; 67; Sudbury MA; Concord Enterprise; 1922-11-15; dja BURROUGHS, Samuel R; 79; Acton MA; Concord Enterprise; 1922-11-15; dja BURROUGHS, Samuel R; 79; Acton MA; Concord Enterprise; 1922-11-22; dja CARR, Edwin; ; Carlisle MA; Concord Enterprise; 1906-8-15; dja WHEELER, Florence (NOYES); ; Acton MA; Concord Enterprise; 1906-8-15; dja MURRAY, Mary J (KEENAN); 63; CLA IRL>Maynard MA; Concord Enterprise; 1911-7-5; dja HAYNES, Elias E; ; Concord MA; Concord Enterprise; 1894-6-28; dja HAYNES, Lottie; 51; Worcester MA; Concord Enterprise; 1894-7-5; dja HOLDEN, Walter Ozro; ; Acton MA; Concord Enterprise; 1915-9-8; dja BENNETT, Beatrice Miss; 3; Acton MA; Concord Enterprise; 1915-9-8; dja BENNETT, Harold; 6; Acton MA; Concord Enterprise; 1915-9-8; dja ROBBINS, Barnum "Varnum"; ; Winthrop MA; Concord Enterprise; 1915-10-27; dja WHITNEY, Charles; 52; Acton MA; Concord Enterprise; 1915-10-27; dja McGRATH, Katherine ( ); 65; WAT IRL>Bedford MA; Concord Enterprise; 1915-2-17; dja KEYES, Marcus Morton; 75; Dorchester MA; Concord Enterprise; 1915-2-17; dja HEARN, William; ; Stow MA; Concord Enterprise; 1915-2-17; dja BOUSQUET, Sarah ( ); 61; Acton MA; Concord Enterprise; 1915-3-3; dja KEYES, George R; ; Acton MA; Concord Enterprise; 1916-1-12; dja PATTERSON, George; 82; IRL>Marlboro MA; Concord Enterprise; 1916-1-12; dja LOUNSBURY, Helen Miss; 3; Acton MA; Concord Enterprise; 1916-1-12; dja STEVENS, Frank R; ; Reading MA; Concord Enterprise; 1916-1-12; dja MORELLO, Joseph; 30; ITA>Concord MA; Concord Enterprise; 1916-1-19; dja BROWNE, Mary W Miss [TUTTLE]; ; Lynn MA; Concord Enterprise; 1916-1-19; dja PENNELL, Edmond H; 62; Medford MA; Concord Enterprise; 1916-1-26; dja MALEY, Catherine "Mrs Edward" ( ); ; IRL>Maynard MA; Concord Enterprise; 1916-1-26; dja