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Boo! Some Scary Stories for Halloween!

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Derry, New Hampshire's Civil War Monument

Here is a list of spooky ghost stories, ghost towns, witches, body snatchers, and other scary stories from the Nutfield Genealogy blog over the past six years!


The Murder of Josie Langmaid, Pembroke, NH, posted October 14, 2009: http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2009/10/murder-of-josie-langmaid-pembroke-new.html

The Haunted Pinkerton Tavern, Derry, NH, October 28, 2009 (since demolished):  http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2009/10/pinkerton-tavern-ghosts.html

The Haunted Coach Stop Restaurant, Londonderry, NH, January 22, 2010: http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2010/01/coach-stop-restaurant-and-tavern.html

The Lady in Black at Fort Warren, Boston, MA  February 15, 2010: http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2010/02/fort-warren-boston-harbor.html  

Tammy Younger, the Witch of Dogtown, February 22, 2010:  http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2010/02/tammy-younger-witch-of-dogtown.html  

A visit to the Rebecca Nurse Homestead, March 9, 2010: http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2010/03/visit-to-rebecca-nurse-homestead.html  

Body Snatchers, 1819, posted April 30, 2020:

Ghosts at the Towne Family Burial Ground, Londonderry, NH  September 28, 2010: http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2010/09/tombstone-tuesday-towne-family-burial.html  



The Ghost Town of Chinese Camp, California, September 5, 2011:

The Abandoned Ghost Town of Monson, NH  September 6, 2012:  http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2014/10/haunted-hannah-jacks-tavern.html  

Haunted Hannah Jack’s Tavern, Merrimack, NH  October 30, 2014:  http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2014/10/haunted-hannah-jacks-tavern.html  

A visit to “Blood Cemetery”   October 31, 2014:http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2014/10/halloween-visit-to-blood-cemetery.html  

Enjoy! 

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Published under a Creative Commons License
Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "Boo!  Some Scary Stories for Halloween!", Nutfield Genealogy, posted October 29, 2015, (  http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2015/10/boo-some-scary-stories-for-halloween.html: accessed [access date]). 

November 2015 Genealogy and Local History Calendar (Including Historical Thanksgiving Feast Information)

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October 31, Saturday, 9am, NEHGS Irish Genealogy Study Group, at the New England Historic Genealogical Society, 99 – 101 Newbury Street, Boston, Massachusetts.  The Irish Study group meets on the last Saturday of the month to discuss research problems and share solutions. www.americanancestors.org

October 31, 2015, 10am - 3pm, New Hampshire Society of Genealogists, annual meeting, at the Holiday Inn, Concord, New Hampshire, with guest speaker Nancy Charest to present twice, first on Civil War Papers and then after lunch on advanced online research techniques.  A continental breakfast will be available in the morning and a lunch buffet.  $15 members, $20 non-members.  You must register in advance by emailing Hal Inglis at hal@inglis-unltd.com or call (603) 664-9080.  Seating is limited so please register early. 

November 1, Sunday, 6:30 pm, Cradle to Grave: Lamplight Tour of the Coffin House and First Parish Burying Ground, at the Coffin House, 14 High Road, Newbury, Massachusetts.  Tour the 1678 Coffin House, and then the burial ground.  Hear tales of murder, heroism, and heartbreak.  $15 Historic New England members, $30 non-members. For more information 978-462-2634.

November 3, Tuesday, 7pm, Brick Walls?  Try This, at the Chelmsford Public Library's McCarthy Meeting Room, Chelmsford, Massachusetts, presented by Peg Plummer and sponsored by the Chelmsford Genealogy Club.  Free to the public. 

November 3, Tuesday, 7pm, Poor Houses and Town Farms:  The Hard Row for Paupers, at the Wilton Public & Gregg Free Library, 7 Forest Road, Wilton, New Hampshire. A presentation by Steve Taylor.  Free to the public.  Contact Mary Ann Moran at 603-654-7415 for more information.

November 4, 11, and 18, 6 -9pm, Picture It: Publish a Family Keepsake, at the New England Historic Genealogical Society, 99 – 101 Newbury Street, Boston, Massachusetts, Cost $125, A three week workshop to walk you through the steps of creating an 8” x 11” annotated photo book.  The experts at NEHGS will guid you as you define the scope of your project, scan and organize photos, layout your story and images, and print a one-of-a-kind publication.  Students are encouraged to bring a laptop.  Questions 617-226-1226. Register today at http://shop.americanancestors.org/products/picture-it-publish-a-family-keepsake?pass-through=true&utm_source=twgnewsletter&utm_medium=newsletter&utm_campaign=twg761

November 4, Wednesday, Stirring Up the Past:  Puritan Beliefs About Food, at the New England Historic Genealogical Society, 99 – 101 Newbury Street, Boston, Massachusetts.  FREE. Presented by Judy Lucey and Dr. Lori Stokes. This event is co-sponsored by the Partnership of Historic Bostons and NEHGS as part of the 2015 Charter Day celebrations. Register here: http://www.eventbrite.com/e/stirring-up-the-past-puritan-beliefs-about-food-registration-18114986412  

November 4, Wednesday, 11am, Mary Todd Lincoln: Wife and Widow, at the Marion Gerrish Community Center, 39 West Broadway, Derry, New Hampshire, presented by living historian Sally Mummey. Contact Andrea Lee for more information 603-434-4073. Free to the public.

November 4, Wednesday, 7pm, Researching the History of Your House, at the Watertown Public Library's Watertown Savings Bank Room, 123 Main Street, Watertown, Massachusetts, Free to the public, presented by House Historian Marian Pierre-Louise of Fieldstone Historic Research. 

November 5, Thursday, 5:30pm, Film Screening of “America’s Forgotten Heroine: Ida Lewis, Keeper of the Light”, at the Newport Historical Society, 127 Thames Street, Newport, Rhode Island, $5, www.newporthistory.org  This historical documentary focuses on the life of the country’s most famous lighthouse keeper and unlikely heroine. Please RSVP as seating is limited. 

November 6, Friday, noon - 1pm, Mapping Your Ancestors, part of the First Friday Lecture Series at the New England Historic Genealogical Society, 99 - 101 Newbury Street, Boston, Massachusetts.  Presented by Evan Thornberry, Cartographic Reference Librarian of the Norman B. Leventhal Map Center at the Boston Public Library.  Free and open to the public.  Register here:  http://shop.americanancestors.org/products/mapping-your-ancestors?pass-through=true 

November 6, Friday, 7pm Our National Thanksgiving: With Thanks to President Lincoln and Mrs. Hale, at the Claremont Opera House, 58 Opera House Square, Claremont, New Hampshire, Call 603-542-4433 for more information.  Steve and Sharon Wood present a living history program about Sarah Josepha Hale’s 30 year effort to have Thanksgiving declared a national holiday and the proclamation by Lincoln that made her dream a reality.  Free to the public.


November 6 and 7, Tide Mills Institute 11th Annual Conference: “Tide Mill Archaeology and Heritage” to be held in the Cummings Center, Beverly, Massachusetts (site of a 17th century tide mill). For more information see the website http://www.tidemillinstitute.org/44.html

November 7, Saturday, , 8:30 am - 4:30 pm. Massachusetts Society of Genealogists, Inc. Annual Meeting & Program, at Marlborough Country Club, 200 Concord Rd., Marlborough, MA. Join us for our 40th anniversary, with great speakers, Barbara Mathews, Drew Bartley, Thomas MacEntee (via webinar), exhibitors, door prizes, networking. Our raffle prize is three DNA test kits. Registration opens Tuesday, September 8. http://www.msoginc.org/msogwp/events-2/annual-meeting/

November 7, Saturday, 1pm, Discover Mount Auburn – Walking Tour, at the Mount Auburn Cemetery, 580 Mount Auburn Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. $5 members, $10 nonmembers.  This tour will focus on stories of history, monuments and the lives of those buried here.

November 8, Sunday, 1:30 - 3:30pm, Road to Independence Live Wax Museum, at the Portsmouth Public Library, Portsmouth, New Hampshire.  Free to the public.  Local children, dressed in period costume, will act as historical figures in a live exhibit.  Presented by the National Society of the Children of the American Revolution. 

November 8, Sunday, 2 pm, Welcome to the Graveyard ~ Focus on Ashland Cemeteries, at the Ashland Historical Society, 2 Myrtle Street, Ashland,  Massachusetts, hosted by The Gravestone Girls, and sponsored by the Ashland Cultural Council. Free to the public.

November 9, Monday, 6 - 7:30pm, The Value of Open Public Records, at the Commonwealth Room of the Boston Public Library, Copley Square, Boston, Massachusetts, sponsored by the Massachusetts Genealogical Council and the Boston Public Library.  This is a panel of experts (Robert Ambrogi, Melinde Lutz Byrne, and Leah McGrath Goodman) who will discuss how open public records benefit our society.  Free to the public. 

November 9, Monday, 7pm 12,000 Years ago in the Granite State, at the Nashua Public Library, 2 Court Street, Nashua, New Hampshire, sponsored by the NH Humanities Council, Free to the public, Presented by Robert Goodby, this talk is about how the depth of Native history was revealed when tan archaeological dig in Keene discovered traces of four structures dating to the end of the Ice Age. 

November 10, Tuesday, 4 – 5:30pm, Our Ancestors in the Revolution: Telling the Story to Family Members,  at the Boston Public Library, Copley Square, 700 Boylston Street, Boston, Massachusetts, presented by Barbara Matthews.  Free to the public. www.bpl.org

November 10, Tuesday, 7pm, Paddy on the Net:  Irish Genealogy Databases with Michael Brophy, at the Andover, Massachusetts Memorial Hall Library.  Contact 978-623-8401 x 31 for more information.  Sponsored by the Friends of MHL. 

November 10, Tuesday, 6pm, (light refreshments at 5:30) Jordan Marsh – Boston’s First Department Store, at the Old South Meetinghouse, 310 Washington Street, Boston, Massachusetts, $12 general admission, $10 for members of Old South Meeting House, VSA/NE, or the Boston Preservation Alliance.  A raffle is included with price of admission.  Co-sponsored by the Victorian Society of America, New England Chapter and the Boston Preservation Alliance.  This will be a “sneak peek” at author Anthony Mitchell Sanmarco’s upcoming book on Jordan Marsh.  Also, a special opportunity to see memorabilia from Sanmarco’s extensive archive documenting Jordan Marsh’s colorful history.

November 11, Wednesday, Veteran’s Day at Old Sturbridge Village, 1 Old Sturbridge Village Road, Sturbridge, Massachusetts, Special activities celebrating the nation’s military history. Free to all active and retired veterans and their families, see the webpage for more information: https://www.osv.org/

November 12, Thursday, 7pm, Colonial Midwifery, at the Hamilton-Wenham Public Library, 14 Union Street, South Hamilton, Massachusetts.  Presented by Dr. Abby Chandler, she will discuss the role of the midwife as medical assistant, and also as a legal representative in Puritan society which closely scrutinized births for impropriety.  She will present her extensive research on the training, professional and personal lives of many Essex County midwives, including Wenham residents, Elizabeth and Mary Kimball.  Free to the public. 

November 12, Thursday, 8:30 am to 5pm, Reimagining the Cemetery as Museum, at the Mount Auburn Cemetery, 580 Mount Auburn Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Free, registration closes on October 23rd. This program is designe for professionals and students working with or for historic cemeteries and landscapes http://mountauburn.org/2015/cemetery-as-museum/

November 14, Saturday, 9am - 12:30pm, Taking Your Family History Hobby to the Next Level, at the New England Historic Genealogical Society, 99 - 1010 Newbury Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Presented jointly with staff from NEHGS and the New England Association for Professional Genealogists (NEAPG). Learn how to hone your genealogical skills, write for a journal, and even begin your own study project. $25, Free to NEAPG members. Register online http://shop.americanancestors.org/products/taking-your-family-history-hobby-to-the-next-level?pass-through=true 

November 14, Saturday, 2pm, How to Discover Your Family and Community History, part of the “Exploring the World War One Home Front” series at the National Heritage Museum in Lexington, Massachusetts.  This workshop will support you in exploration of family stories from the World War 1 era, and help you find the documents and resources to uncover your family narrative.  Free to the public, registration required by November 5th, contact programs@monh.org

November 14, Saturday, 11am, Second Saturday @ Museum, at the New Hampshire Aviation Historical Society, 27 Navigator Road, Londonderry, New Hampshire, www.nhahs.org A video presentation of Robert Fornam’s experiences in WWII to be shown for the first time. Bob, a B-17 copilot, was shot down on his second mission, captured and spent 19 months in a German prison camp.  Included with regular admission.

November 14, Saturday, 4pm, Musical Concert at the Newent Congregational Church, 12 South Burnham Highway, Lisbon, Connecticut, featuring the vocal group Nrembega Harmony led by Professor of Religion at Wellesley College Stephen Marini.  He will also speak about the history of early hymnody in Connecticut.  The music will feature music by Daniel Read and other Connecticut composers of the late 1700s.  It will be the "world premiere of several unpublished tunes from Daniel Read.  $10 per ticket, please call and reserve tickets by calling Rev. Carboni at 860-639-9444. There will be a dinner in the Parish Hall following the concert $10 per person, please make a dinner reservation in advance with Rev. Carboni.  

November 15 -20, Sunday – Friday, Uncovering Your Family History- A Genealogical Immersion, at the Kripalu Center for Yoga & Health, Stockbridge, Massachusetts.  Join in at a genealogical retreat with Joshua Taylor.  See this webpage for details:  http://kripalu.org/program/view/UCFH-151/uncovering_your_family_history_a_genealogical_immersion

November 15, Sunday, 2 - 4pm, Genealogy Workshop: The Unofficial Family Archivist, at the Portsmouth Public Library, Portsmouth, New Hampshire, this is a monthly meeting on a variety of genealogical and family history topics.  Today's topic will be "A Guide for Creating and Maintaining Family Papers, Photographs, and Memorabilia" presented by Melissa Mannon.  

November 15, Sunday, 2pm Our National Thanksgiving: With Thanks to President Lincoln and Mrs. Hale, at the St. James Masonic Lodge, 77 Tide Mill Road, Hampton, New Hampshire, Call 603-929-0781 for more information.  Steve and Sharon Wood present a living history program about Sarah Josepha Hale’s 30 year effort to have Thanksgiving declared a national holiday and the proclamation by Lincoln that made her dream a reality.  Free to the public.

November 17, Tuesday, 7pm – 8:30pm,  Genealogy,at the Peter Rice Homestead, 377 Elm Street, Marlborough, Massachusetts, presented by the Marlborough Historical Society.

November 18, Wednesday, 1pm, The Great Salem Fire of 1914: Stories within the Story, sponsored by the Peabody Historical Society, at the Smith Barn, Felton Street, Peabody, Massachusetts.  $5 non members, free for members.  http://events.salem.org/event/the_great_salem_fire_of_1914_stories_within_the_story#.VfG69RFVhBc

November 18, Wednesday, 7pm 12,000 Years ago in the Granite State, at the at the Milford Town Hall, 3rdFloor, 1 Union Square, New Hampshire, sponsored by the NH Humanities Council, Free to the public, Presented by Robert Goodby, this talk is about how the depth of Native history was revealed when tan archaeological dig in Keene discovered traces of four structures dating to the end of the Ice Age. 

November 19, Thursday, 7pm, Family Stories: How and Why to Remember and Tell Them, at the First Presbyterian Church, 73 Main Street, Antrim, New Hampshire. Free to the public, contact Stephen Ullman 603-588-2005.  Presented by storyteller Jo Radner, who will share some foolproof ways to mine memories and interview relatives for meaningful stories and oral history.


November 20, Friday, 1pm, Terra Firma: From Bunker Hill to Yorktown, at the Massachusetts Historical Society, 1154 Boylston Street, Boston, Massachusetts, a lecture by Ronald Grim, curator of maps at the Norman B. Leventhal Map Center at the Boston Public Library.  Free to the public.

November 23, Monday, 6pm, Lucy Stone, at the Massachusetts Historical Society, 1154 Boylston Street, Boston, Massachusetts, A talk by Sally McMillen, a history professor from Davidson College about this famous American woman suffragist, to go along with her book, “Lucy Stone: An Unapologetic Life”.  $10 fee. To register call 617-646-0578 or visit www.masshist.org/events.  There is a pre-talk reception at 5:30pm.

November 24, Tuesday, 1:30pm, Intro to Genealogy, at the Haverhill, Massachusetts Public Library.  Learn to use the special collections room, which has a wealth of genealogy and local history resources.  Advance registration required, call 978-373-1586. 
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November 26, Thursday,  HAPPY THANKSGIVING:
It’s not too early to plan for a Thanksgiving dinner in New England.

This is the link for Thanksgiving feasts at Plimoth Plantation in Plymouth, Massachusetts. Reservations REQUIRED.  Choose between the two a buffet feast or the classic “America’s Thankgiving Dinner” (many are already sold out!) visit this link below: 
http://www.plimoth.org/dining-functions/thanksgiving-dining-special-events/thanksgiving-dining  or call 1-800-262-9356  ext. 8353, 8364, 8365

OR

This is the link for the two different Thanksgiving feasts at Old Sturbridge Village in Sturbridge, Massachusetts.  https://www.osv.org/events/upcoming-events/ Again, reservations are required for a Traditional Thanksgiving feast at the Bullard Tavern (call 508-347-0285), or a buffet at the Oliver Wight Tavern (11am to 6pm call 508-347-0285).

ALSO
Salem Cross Inn, Route 9, 260 West Main Street, West Brookfield, Massachusetts holds a traditional thanksgiving dinner, with hearth cooking.  Call 508-867-2345 for reservations. $10 non-refundable deposit per person to hold your spot. http://salemcrossinn.com/events/events-holiday-calendar/

Other famous landmark restaurants that serve Thanksgiving Dinner (all prix-fixe, reservations required):

Legal Seafood, most locations open for Thanksgiving, choice of roast turkey or stuffed lobster and other delicious offerings.

Top of the Hub, 52nd floor of the Prudential Tower in Boston, 4 course Thanksgiving menu, call 617-536-1775

Omni Parker House Hotel, 60 School Street, Boston, Thanksgiving buffet, with seatings at 12 noon and 2:30pm call 617-725-1660

Concord’s Colonial Inn, Concord, Massachusetts, call 978-369-9200


Longfellow’s Wayside Inn, 72 Wayside Inn Road, Sudbury, Massachusetts 978-443-1776

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November 28, Saturday, 9am, NEHGS Irish Genealogy Study Group, at the New England Historic Genealogical Society, 99 – 101 Newbury Street, Boston, Massachusetts.  The Irish Study group meets on the last Saturday of the month to discuss research problems and share solutions. www.americanancestors.org



December 1, Tuesday, 7pm, Finding Cousins Using DNA, at the Chelmsford Public Library's McCarthy Meeting Room, Chelmsford, Massachusetts, presented by Pam Holland and sponsored by the Chelmsford Genealogy Club.  Free to the public. 

December 2, Wednesday, 7pm, Family History Research Workshop, at the Watertown Public Library, 123 Main Street, Watertown, Massachusetts. Free to the public, but please register- space is limited to 8 people. Call (617) 972-6436. Presented by local genealogical researcher Liz Kolster. 

December 2, Wednesday, 6:30pm, Family Stories: How and Why to Remember and Tell Them, at the Plaistow Public Library, 85 Main Stree, Plaistow, New Hampshire. Free to the public, contact Brianna Sullivan 603-382-6011.  Presented by storyteller Jo Radner, who will share some foolproof ways to mine memories and interview relatives for meaningful stories and oral history.

December 3, Thursday, noon, Lunch and Learn: Victorian Era Nutrition, at the Visitor Center at Plimouth Plantation, Plymouth, Massachusetts, speaker Tani Mauriello will explain how families 150 years ago made healthy food choices.  Free to members, $8 non members. Register here: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/lunch-and-learn-victorian-nutrition-speaker-tani-mauriello-tickets-15617325842

December 4-6, 11- 13, 18 – 20, Friday to Sunday, 5pm – 10pm, Christmas by Candlelight, at Old Sturbridge Village, Sturbridge, Massachusetts. An enchanted evening of gingerbread, roasted chestnuts, music, dance and a slight ride (weather permitting).  Meet Father Christmas and Santa Claus.  $15 admission for entrance, see the website https://www.osv.org/events/upcoming-events

December 5 and 6, Saturday and Sunday, Candlelight Stroll, at Strawbery Banke Museum, Portsmouth, New Hampshire. $20 adults, $10 children, $50 for families, Tickets can be pre-purchased by phone 603-433-1107


December 5, Sunday, 12pm – 2pm, Music in the Meetinghouse, at the Rocky Hill Meeting House, 4 Old Portsmouth Road, Amesbury, Massachusetts.  UMass Lowell’s Connexion singers bring the meetinghouse alive with holiday music from the period in which it was built.  No restroom.  Building is unheated.  Call with concerns or for more information  978-462-2634.  Free to Amesbury residents and Historic New England members, $5 nonmembers.


Surname Saturday ~ Parkhurst of Boston and Watertown, Massachusetts

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Parkhurst / Parkis / Parkes / Parkisse / P’rust

Not all immigrants to the New World stayed here. Many went back and forth.  My ancestor Isaac Allerton  (1586 – 1659)made as many as five voyages back and forth to England.  Another ancestor, Rev. Thomas Mayhew (1621 – 1657), died on a trip back to England when his ship disappeared and he was never seen again. Another ancestor, Rev. Stephen Bachiler, went back to England to escape an unfaithful wife, and died there in 1656. The subject of this post, George Parkhurst (1588 – 1675), my 10th great grandfather, also returned to England after living here in New England for more than 10 years.

No one knows exactly when George Parkhurst arrived in Massachusetts.  We don’t even know if his first wife, Pheobe, immigrated to Massachusetts.   His first record of owning property was 1642 in Watertown, when a highway was laid out near his house. In 1644 he married a second wife, Susanna, widow of John Stimson of Watertown.   

George had nine children with his first wife, Pheobe, and five more with his second wife.  Of his children,  Deborah, my 10thgreat grandmother, married John Smith of Watertown and went to Martha’s Vineyard,  and Elizabeth, my 9thgreat grandmother, married Emanuel Hilliard and lived in New Hampshire and then married second to Joseph Merry and went to Martha’s Vineyard, too.   The names of all the children were puzzled out by William H. Whitmore in an article in the NEHGS Register, Volume 27, pages 364-369 “The Dalton and Batcheller Pedigree”. 

On 23 May 1655 George petitioned the General Court for permission to return to England.  His second wife, Susanna had already gone back to England with six of her children (five from George).  George wanted to go back to aid his elderly wife.  He was about 67 years old.  A few weeks later, a deed was recorded on 13 June 1655 when he sold his land, his last record in New England.

It is thought that the “Old George Parkhurst” buried 18 June 1675 in Ipswich, England is my 10th great grandfather.  He was probably living with his cousin Nathaniel Parkhurst, who was taxed there in 1674.

Some resources for George Parkhurst information:

Fifty Great Migration Colonists to New England & Their Origins, by John Brooks Threlfall, 1990, pages 256-288.

The New England Ancestry of Alice Everett Johnson, 1899 – 1986, by Willard Marshall Bollenback, Jr. , 2003, pages 275-276.

"The Family of George Parkhurst of Watertown and Boston, Mass.", by Edson Salisbury Jones, NEHGS Register, Volume 68, page 370 - 375.

Also,  The History of Martha’s Vineyard by Dr. Charles E. Banks, Volume II, pages 111 – 113.  You can also use the Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire, and The Ancestry of Margaret Brooks Threfall, by John Threlfall, 1985.

My PARKHURST lineages:

Generation 1:  George Parkhurst, born about 1588 in Ipswich, Suffolk, England and died about 1675 in Ipswich, England;  married first about 1612 in England to Pheobe Leete; married second about 1644 in Watertown, Massachusetts to Susanna, widow of John Stimson.  Eleven children with Phoebe, five more with Susanna.  I descend from two daughters of Phoebe, Deborah and Elizabeth.

Lineage A:

Generation 2:  Deborah, born 1 August 1619 in Ipswich, England, died about 1686 on the island of Martha’s Vineyard; married about 1638 in Watertown to John Smith.  He was born about 1616 and died before 16 June 1674 in Edgartown, Massachusetts on the island of Martha’s Vineyard.  Five children.

Generation 3:  Deborah Smith m. Nathaniel Batchelder

Linage A1:

Generation 4: Nathaniel Batchelder m. Elizabeth Foss
Generation 5: Josiah Batchelder m. Sarah Page
Generation 6: David Batchelder m. Elizabeth Swett
Generation 7: Elisha Batchelder m. Sarah Lane
Generation 8: Jonathan Batchelder m. Nancy Thompson
Generation 9: George E. Batchelder m. Abigail M. Locke
Generation 10: George E. Batchelder m. Mary Katharine Emerson
Generation 11: Carrie Maude Batchelder m. Joseph Elmer Allen
Generation 12: Stanley Elmer Allen m. Gertrude Matilda Hitchings (my grandparents)

Lineage A2:

Generation 4: Abigail Batchelder m. John Dearborn
Generation 5: Elizabeth Dearborn m. John Garland
Generation 6: Elizabeth Garland m. Richard Locke
Generation 7: Simon Locke m. Abigail Mace
Generation 8: Richard Locke m. Margaret Welch
Generation 9: Abigail M. Locke m. George E. Batchelder (see above)

Lineage B:

Generation 2: Elizabeth, born 18 May 1628 in Ipswich, England, died 6 October 1727 in Edgartown on the island of Martha’s Vineyard; married first to Emanuel Hilliard on 10 April 1640 in Watertown and had four children;  married second on 14 December 1659 in Hampton, New Hampshire to Joseph Merry. Four children.

Generation 3: Elizabeth Hilliard m. John Mayhew (son of Rev. Thomas Mayhew mentioned above)
Generation 4: John Mayhew m. Mehitable Higgins
Generation 5: John Mayhew m. Ruth Davis
Generation 6: Mary Mayhew m. Caleb Rand
Generation 7: Mary Rand m. Asahel Bill
Generation 8: Reverend Ingraham Ebenezer Bill m. Caleb Rand Bill
Generation 9: Isabella Lyons Bill m. Albert Munroe Wilkinson
Generation 10: Donald Munroe Wilkinson m. Bertha Louise Roberts (my grandparents)

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Published under a Creative Commons License
Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "Surname Saturday ~ Parkhurst of Boston and Watertown, Massachusetts", Nutfield Genealogy, posted October 31, 2015 ( http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2015/10/surname-saturday-parkhurst-of-boston.html : accessed [access date]).

My Ancestors in Books: A Compiled Genealogy Bibliography

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Back before I started my own blog in 2009 I was a big fan of Martin Hollick’s Slovak Yankee blog.  It’s nice to see he started writing new posts in 2014 after a long hiatus of about four years.   His blog post “Compiled Genealogy Biography” posted on 20 January 2010 inspired me to write a similar post back then.  I thought it was time to update that post and write a new one. 

I often hear from people “Oh, all your ancestors have been written about in books!”   From this list you can see that this is not true.  Most of my research was done the hard way, by searching vital records, deeds, probate records, graveyards, newspapers and other paper and online resources. Also, finding your ancestor in a book is a clue, but since most of these books are old and unsourced, you still must verify all the generations. I use compiled genealogy books for clues.

Martin’s list contained the compiled genealogy books that contain his closest ancestors.  So I charted out my ancestors to the 7th generation (fourth great grandparents) and listed any book written on their lineages. It’s surprising which ancestors have books, and which don’t.  Perhaps someday I will end up writing an article or book about these surnames.  In the meantime, my blog will have to do…  (To make this list easier to read, I dropped ancestors off the list when they “crossed the pond” )

Great Grandparents :

Albert Munroe Wilkinson-(1860-1908) No book has ever been written on the Wilkinsons of northern New England, descendants of Thomas Wilkinson “of London” who married Elizabeth Caverly in Portsmouth, New Hampshire in 1715. This is my maiden name.

Isabella Lyons Bill(1863 – 1935)  her father appears in The History of the Bill Family by Ledyard Bill, 1867 (see below).

John Peter Bowden Roberts (1865 – 1925) and his wife, Emma Frances Warren ( 1865 – 1927), were immigrants from Leeds, Yorkshire, England in 1915 via Ellis Island. There is no compiled genealogy of either family. I have traced their origins in England back to the late 1700s.

Joseph Elmer Allen(1870 – 1932)  The Allen Family comes from William Allen of Manchester-by-the-Sea, Massachusetts, but this branch has not been documented. There are several books with the first five generations or so of the Allen family, but none that contain my branch of Allens that removed to Essex (a contiguous town) around the time of the American Revolution.

Carrie Maude Batchelder ((1872 – 1963) and her husband Joseph E. Allen are in the Batchelder, Batcheller Genealogy by Frederick Clifton Pierce, published by the author in Chicago, 1898, (with various updates), on page 329. Lists only two children, three more were born after publication.

Arthur Treadwell Hitchings (1868 – 1937) There is no book on the Hitchings/Hitchens family, which goes back to Daniel Hitchins (1632 -1731) of Lynn, Massachusetts. They are well documented in the local history books, and in journal articles.

Florence Etta Hoogerzeil (1871 – 1941) Her grandfather was Peter Hoogerzeil, immigrant to America before 1828. The family was written up by the Netherlands in articles (in Dutch) by Erik A. N. Kon, going back to Arijen Bruynen born about 1631 in Krimpen ann de Lek. No compiled genealogy book. Kon’s work is extensive, including all the known Hoogerzeil/Hogerzeil families and the American branch down to Florence and her Hitchings children.

2x Great Grandparents:

Robert Wilson Wilkinson (1830 – 1874)

Phebe Cross Munroe(1830 – 1895)

Caleb Rand Bill(1833-1902) is named in The History of the Bill Family, edited by Ledyard Bill, 1867, p. 200 along with his wife Ann Margaret Bollman. Daughter Isabella Lyons Bill married Albert Munroe Wilkinson. They are also in the update by Harry Bill, which I have only seen in Nova Scotia libraries, not in the USA.

Ann Margaret Bollman(1835 – 1923) mentioned briefly in the The Diary of Adolphus Gaetz, edited by Charles Bruce Ferguson, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Public Archives of Nova Scotia, 1965. No compiled genealogy of the Bollman family, descendants of Johan Daniel Bollman, a Hessian soldier.

Joseph Gilman Allen(1830 – 1908)

Sarah Burnham Mears(1844 – 1913) There is no book on the Mears family of Essex, Massachusetts. I have traced this line back to Alexander Mears, born about 1750 in London, England, yet have gone no further.  Alexander Mears was a Revolutionary War veteran.

George E. Batchelder(1848 – 1914)  see above and below

Mary Katharine Emerson (1847 – 1932) and her husband, George E. Batchelder are in The Ipswich Emersons, A. D. 1636-1900: A Genealogy of the Descendants of Thomas Emerson of Ipswich, Mass., by Benjamin Kendall Emerson, Boston, David Clapp & Son, 1900, page 306. This page also gives an explanation of her adoption by the Harris family of Boston (her paternal aunt) which solved a great brick wall problem for me!

Abijah Franklin Hitchings (1841 – 1910)

Hannah Eliza Lewis(1844 – 1921) no book on this Lewis family has been found.  This is one of my brick wall lineages, since I have only traced back to her grandfather, Thomas Lewis and wife Amelia (unknown maiden name). I don’t know from which Massachusetts Lewis family he descends.

Peter Hoogerzeil (1841 – 1908), see above

Mary Etta Healey(1852 – 1932) is a descendant of William Healy (1613 – 1683) of Cambridge, but only certain branches of this family are published in books.

3x Great Grandparents:

Aaron Wilkinson(1802 – 1879)

Mercy F. Wilson(1803 – 1883)  The great WILSON researcher, Ken Stevens of Walpole, New Hampshire was working on a compiled genealogy of the Wilsons of Danvers, Massachusetts, but hadn’t published his notes or book before he passed away.  Previous to his death he had assured me that my lineage was correct back to the first immigrant Wilson, Robert Wilson b. 1630 in England and died 18 September 1675 at Deerfield, Massachusetts in the Bloody Brook Massacre. I think he hit a brick wall with the rest of the Danvers Wilsons. I haven’t been able to untangle it, either, beyond my direct lineage to Robert Wilson.

Luther Simonds Munroe(1805 – 1851)  in the History and Genealogy of the Lexington, Massachusetts, Munroes, compiled by Richard S. Munroe, published by the author, 1966, page 71. This goes back to the Scots prisoner of war, William Munroe (1625 – 1718) in Lexington.

Olive Flint (1805 – 1875)  is in the book Genealogical register of the descendants of Thomas Flint, of Salem : with a copy of the wills and inventories of the estates of the first two generations, compiled by John Flint and John H. Stone, Boston, Massachusetts: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1994, and both her parents were Flints (first cousins John Flint and Phebe Flint) so this was easy.

Ingraham Ebenezer Bill (1805 – 1891)- see above

Isabella Lyons(1806 – 1872) – No LYONS compiled genealogy book as far as I know.

Joseph Allen(1801 – 1894)

Orpha Andrews(1804- 1869) is a descendant of immigrants John Andrews (about 1618 – 1708) and Jane Jordan of the Chebacco Parish of Ipswich, Massachusetts (now Essex).   Orpha and her husband, Joseph Allen, are on page 595 of the book The Descendants of Lieut. John Andrews of Ipswich, Essex County, Massachusetts by Betty Andrews Storey, 2009.

Samuel Mears(1823 – 1904) is on page 1491 of The Descendants of Lieut. John Andrews of Ipswich, Essex County, Massachusetts, with his wife, Sarah Ann Burnham.  He was also an ANDREWS descendant (Lydia W.7 Burnham, Asa6, Westley5, Deborah4 Story, Rachel3 Andrews, William2, John1).  No MEARS book as far as I know.

Sarah Ann Burnham(1821 – 1848) see above. There is no BURNHAM complied genealogy.

George E. Batchelder(1822 – 1848) see above for the BATCHELDER book, and below,  

Abigail M. Locke(1825 – 1888) and her husband George E. Batchelder (above) are on page 322 of A History and Genealogy of Captain John Locke (1726 – 1696) of Portsmouth and Rye, New Hampshire and His Descendants, by Arthur H. Locke, Volume 1.

George Emerson(1817 – 1890) see above for the EMERSON book.

Mary Esther Younger(1826 – 1913) – No book has been written about the YOUNGER family of Gloucester, Massachusetts, which I have traced back only to William Younger who married Lucy Foster in Gloucester in 1750.

Abijah Hitchings(1809 – 1864)

Eliza Ann Treadwell(1812 – 1896) This is a well documented family in the Ipswich, Vital Records, dating back to Thomas Treadwell born about 1603 in London, England, died 1671 in Ipswich.  There is a book Thomas Treadwell of Ipswich, Massachusetts and some of his Descendants, by William A. Robbins in the catalog at familysearch.org available on microfilm #1486614, but it Is (strangely) not available at NEHGS or any other local library.

Thomas Russell Lewis(1825 – 1853)

Hannah Phillips(1821 – 1851) – father, James Phillips, is a brickwall

Peter Hoogerzeil(1803 – 1889)- see above

Eunice Stone(1807 – 1886)- there is no STONE family complied genealogy, but the immigrant John Stone (about 1595 – about 1667) was covered in The Great Migration, Volume VI, pages 552 – 553.

Joseph Edwin Healy(1823 – 1862) and his wife, Matilda Weston, are in Mayflower Families Through Five Generations, Volume II, Part II Edward Doty, (a “Silver Book”) compiled by Peter B. Hill, General Society of Mayflower Descendants, 1996, page 185

Matilda Weston(1825 – 1909), see above, and also see page 121 of Mayflower Families Through Five Generations, Volume 14, Family of Myles Standish, 2007, for Matilda, her siblings and parents (another “Silver Book”).

4x great grandparents:

William Wilkinson(? – 1840)

Mercy Nason (b. 1764 in Kittery) I haven’t used a Nason book for this line, it was well documented in vital records, town histories, articles. (But again, is there a Nason book?)

Robert Wilson(1776 – 1893), see above for the WILSON note

Mary Southwick(1777-1854) Genealogy of the descendants of Lawrence and Cassandra Southwick of Salem, Mass.: the original emigrants, and the ancestors of the families who have since borne his name, by James M. Caller and Mrs. M. A. Ober, reprint by Higginsons (originally 1881) This book is old and contains errors, but was a good guide to start.

Andrew Munroe (1764 – 1836), see above for the MUNROE book

Ruth Simonds(1763 – 1840) in the book Genealogical Sketch of William Simonds, by Edward Francis Johnson, 1889, but the family was also written up in the Woburn town histories.

John Flint (1761 – 1836) – see above for the FLINT book


Phebe Flint (1763 – 1846) – see above for the FLINT book

Asahel Bill (1748 – 1814) – see above for the BILL book

Mary Rand (1758 – 1845) in the book Genealogy of Rand: from Robert Rand of Charlestown 1634 to 1867, by Thomas Bellows Wyman, 1867 and in the Martha’s Vineyard history, and Yarmouth, Nova Scotia Genealogies.

Thomas Ratchford Lyons (1780 – 1859)

Ann Skinner (1786 – 1815) again, in the Yarmouth Genealogies, and The Skinner Kinsmen, the descendants of John Skinner of Hartford, Connecticut, by Natalie R. Fernald.

Joseph Allen(1776 – 1861)

Judith Burnham((1782 – 1848)

James Andrews (1763 – 1857) see above for the ANDREWS book.

Lucy Presson (1763 – 1852) This family name changed from Presbury, to Preston to Presson since the 1600’s. There is no book on this family under any spelling.

Samuel Mears (1798 – 1879)

Lydia W. Burnham (1802 – 1864)

Henry Burnham (1783 – 1867)

Sally Poland(1780 – 1861) in the book The Polands of Essex County, Massachusetts, by Lloyd O. Poland, 1981.

Jonathan Batchelder (1800 – 1847)- see above for the BATCHELDER book

Nancy Thompson(about 1804 – after 1847)- she is a brickwall.  I have no idea who her parents may be.  She came from Gilmanton, New Hampshire. 

Richard Locke(1794 – 1864)- see above for the LOCKE book

Margaret Welch(abt. 1796 – 1860) Another brick wall! I don’t know her parents, but she may have been born in Kittery, Maine. 

Romanus Emerson (1782 – 1852)- see above for the EMERSON book 

Jemima Burnham (1783 – 1868)   - no BURNHAM book as far as I know, and look at the four Burnhams I have in this generation alone!  All these Burnhams are from Essex, Massachusetts.  All this complicated intermarriage of Burnhams may be why no one has tackled a Burnham genealogy. 

Levi Younger(1786 – 1858)

Catherine Plummer Jones (1799-1828) formerly a brick wall, now solved! Absolutely no book, but I’ve blogged many times about this one!  Her father was Owen Jones, a customs official from Wales serving in Boston at the time of the American Revolution. 

Abijah Hitchings (1775 – 1868)

Mary Cloutman(1775 – 1853) No CLOUTMAN book.  The first immigrant CLOUTMAN was Thomas Cloutman who married Elizabeth Story in 1672 Salem, Massachusetts.

Jabez Treadwell  (1788 – 1840) – see above

Betsey Jillings Homan(1792 – 1874)- There is no HOMAN family compiled genealogy as far as I know.  Betsey is a descendant of the immigrant Edward Homan (1605 – 1675) of Plymouth and Marblehead, Massachusetts.

Thomas Lewis(about 1770 – 1821) – another brickwall ancestor

Amelia Unknown(about 1790 – 1860) – wife of Thomas Lewis, above, and also a brickwall

James Phillips(1792 – 1820) – another brickwall. 

Sarah Cree (1792 – 1835) – There is no CREE compiled genealogy book.  This family dates back to the immigrant Nicholas Cree (born about 1700) who settled in Topsfield, Massachusetts.

Josiah Stone(1763 – 1848) -

Susanna Hix (1768 – 1859) – there is no HIX or HICKS book on this family.  Her parents and grandparents came from the Plymouth, Massachusetts area. 

Comfort Haley(1787 – 1874) – see above for the Haley/Healey lineage in the Mayflower Silver book series.

Rebecca Crosby(1789-?) Her parents are in the Yarmouth Genealogies, an earlier branch of the Cape Cod/ Cambridge Crosbys who are written up in earlier generations in Simon Crosby the emigrant : his English ancestry, and some of his American descendants, by Eleanor Davis Crosby, 1914

Zadoc Weston(1761 – 1849) – see above for the Weston lineage in the Mayflower Silver book series

Mary Clements– a brickwall.  Nothing is known of her origins or parents. She lived in Yarmouth, Nova Scotia with her husband Zadoc Weston. Her stepson, Abram Weston (b. 1815) married a Mary Hannah Clements in 1846.  Cousins? 

---------------------------------

Martin Hollick’s original “Compiled Genealogy Bibliography” post from 20 January 2010 http://mhollick.typepad.com/slovakyankee/2010/01/compiled-genealogy-bibliography.html

My original Compiled Genealogy Bibliography blog post from 8 February 2010

------------------------------

Published under a Creative Commons License
Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "My Ancestors in Books: A Compiled Genealogy Bibliography", Nutfield Genealogy, posted November 2, 2015, ( http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2015/11/my-ancestors-in-books-compiled.html: accessed [access date]). 

Tombstone Tuesday ~ John Treadwell, died 1727, Ipswich, Massachusetts

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This tombstone was photographed at the Old North Burying Ground, Ipswich, Massachusetts


HERE LIES YE BODY
OF MR. JOHN
TREDWELL WHO
DIED DECEMBER
YE 16 1737
IN YE 58
YEAR OF HIS
AGE.


John Treadwell is my first cousin nine generations removed.  His father, Thomas Treadwell (1634 - 1712/3) was the brother of my 8th great grandfather, Nathaniel Treadwell (1637 - 1726).   John Treadwell was the third owner of Treadwell Island, when it was left to him in his father's will.

John Treadwell was the son of Thomas Treadwell and Sarah Titcomb.  He was born on 28 November 1670 in Ipswich, and died 16 December 1727 in Ipswich.  On 23 June 1723 he filed his marriage intention in Ipswich, to marry Mary Fowler, the daughter of Phillip Fowler and Elizabeth Herrick.  Elizabeth Herrick (1647 - 1727) was my 10th great aunt.  In another lineage I descend from Elizabeth's brother Henry Herrick (1640 - 1702).

John Treadwell and Mary Fowler had eight children.

----------------------------

Published under a Creative Commons License
Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "Tombstone Tuesday ~ John Treadwell, died 1727, Ipswich, Massachusetts", Nutfield Genealogy,  posted November 3, 2015 ( http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2015/11/tombstone-tuesday-john-treadwell-died.html:  accessed [access date]).


Weathervane Wednesday ~ "Ain't nothing but a hound dog!"

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Weathervane Wednesday is an on-going series of photographs I post weekly.  I started by publishing weather vanes from the Londonderry area, but now I've been finding interesting weather vanes all across New England.  Sometimes my weather vanes are whimsical, or historical, but all are interesting. Often, my readers tip me off to some very unique and unusual weather vanes, too!

Today's weather vane  is from somewhere in New Hampshire.

Do you know the location of weather vane #233? Scroll down to see the answer!




 Today's weathervane is a two dimensional hound dog.  It was spotted above the US Post Office in Georges Mills, New Hampshire.  This is a small village in the town of Sunapee, and the post office is across from Otter Pond.  We were passing through on our way to Vermont.  You can find this spot not far from exit 12A off of Route 89.

I'm not sure why the post office has a dog on its weathervane.  Perhaps this building had another purpose before being a post office? Perhaps the owner had a hunting dog? 

Click here to see the entire Weathervane Wednesday collection! 

------------------------
Published under a Creative Commons License
Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "Weathervane Wednesday ~ "Ain't nothing but a hound dog!"",  Nutfield Genealogy,  posted November 5, 2015, (  http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2015/11/weathervane-wednesday-aint-nothing-but.html : accessed [access date]). 

New England Genealogy Clubs and Societies

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(scroll to the bottom for state and regional societies)

Genealogy Clubs (that meet on a regular basis)


If you know more genealogy clubs or societies in New England please leave a comment below or email me at vrojomit@gmail.com and I will update this list!

Acton, MA - The Genealogical Roundtable, http://genealogicalroundtable.com/index.html  meets the 4th Monday of the month at 1pm (see the website for events) serves the people of Acton, Ashland, Auburndale, Bolton, Boston, Boxborough, Chelmsford, Concord, Framingham, Harvard, Hudson, Lexington, Littleton, Marlborough, Maynard, Natick, Saugus, Shrewsbury, Sudbury, Waltham, Wayland, Westford, and the surrounding areas. 

Amesbury, MA – A new genealogy club has started, every last Monday of the month.  No registration, come to as many meetings as you would like.  For info contact Margie Walker, Local History Librarian, Amesbury Public Library, Amesbury, MA  978-388-8148 or mwalker@mvlc.org

Andover, MA–  “Discover Your Past Genealogy Club”, Memorial Hall Library, every second Thursday of the month from 10am to 11am.  Everyone is welcome.  See the webpage http://www.mhl.org/about/events/groups/genealogy_club.htm

Barrington, NH Genealogy Club, meets the first Wednesday of the month at 6pm at the Barrington Public Library, 105 Ramsdell Lane, Barrington, NH http://barringtongenealogy.weebly.com/  or email Wendy at genealogyclub@gmail.com

Boston, MA  Boston Area Genealogy Meetup Group  see online at http://www.meetup.com/Boston-Area-Genealogy-Meetup/Join online and receive email messages about many monthly meetups in the Boston area for family historians including treks to local libraries, connections to regional history organizations, lectures, travel to genealogy repositories, cemetery tours, coffee shop meetups and more!

Boston, MA  Monthly Irish Study Genealogy Group, usually every 4th Saturday of the month at NEHGS, 99 – 101 Newbury Street, Boston, Massachusetts between 9:30 and noon in the Education Center (2ndfloor).  Contact Mary Ellen Grogan for more information megrogan@ix.netcom.comand to confirm the meeting time and date.

Boston, MA Wednesday Night Jewish Genealogy, Every 3rdWednesday at NEHGS, 99 – 101 Newbury Street, Boston, Mass. http://www.americanancestors.org/Event.aspx?id=29156

Canton, MA  Irish Cultural Centre, meets at 200 New Boston Drive, Canton, Massachusetts.  The Irish Cultural Centre (icclibrary.info) and the Friends of Irish Research (friendsofirishresearch.org) bring genealogy to the ICC library every third Friday of the month from 7 – 9pm.  Free Wifi in the building.

Chelmsford Genealogy Club, at the Chelmsford, MA Public Library, first Tuesday night of the month at 7PM in the McCarthy Meeting Room, contact Judy Sylvia http://www.chelmsfordlibrary.org/programs/programs/genealogy_club.html 978-256-5521

Derry, NH  Genealogy Roundtable, at the Derry Public Library, 64 East Broadway, Derry, NH  http://www.derry.lib.nh.us/  every first Tuesday of the Month, at 7pm to 8:15pm in the downstairs meeting room.  Contact: Alan Howard at 603-432-6140 for more information.

East Haven, Connecticut Genealogy Club, at the Hagaman Memorial Library, 227 Main Street, East Haven, Connecticut

Haverhill, Massachusetts at the Northern Essex Community College, a free genealogy discussion group on the 1st Tuesday of every month, 10am, in the Library building upstairs in the Pailes room.

Hudson, NH  Genealogy Club, at the Rogers Memorial Library, 194 Derry Road, Hudson, NH http://www.rodgerslibrary.org/  every 2nd Friday of the Month, at 1:30 PM contact 603-886-6030 for more information.  (on summer hiatus until September)

Kennebunk, ME  Genealogy Group, at the Kennebunk Public Library, 112 Main Street Kennebunk, Maine, meets monthly.  No charge for the program.  Call Janet at 207-985-2173 or email kfl@kennebunk.lib.me.us

Littleton, MA Genealogy Club, at the Couper Room in the Littleton, Massachusetts Reuben Hoar Public Library, third Monday of the month. For more information see the website at http://www.littletonma.org/content/19459/19471/26579/26595/default.aspx

Lowell, MA  Greater Lowell Genealogy Club,  http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~maglgc/  meets at the Pollard Memorial Library, Lowell, MA 10AM to 1PM once a month. 

Meredith NH, Genealogy Club  http://www.meredithlibrary.org/genealogy.html

Middletown, CT  Genealogy Club at the Godfrey Library in Middletown, Connecticut

Nashua, NH   RISE Genealogy Groupat the Nashua Public Library, Hunt Room, on the first Friday of the month at 1pm http://www.nashualibrary.org/  (Rivier College Institute for Senior Education, see http://www.rivier.edu/rise/default.aspx?id=1619)

Newton, MA  The Newton Genealogy Club, meets the second Wednesday of each month at 7pm in room A of the Newton Free Library. Contact Ginny Audet newtongenealogyclub@gmail.com

Newton, NH Genealogy Club- Gale Library, Newton, NH, 603-382-4691, 3PM on the third Wednesday of the month. 

North Hampton, NH Genealogy Club, at the North Hampton Public Library, 237A Atlantic Avenue, North Hampton NH 603-964-6326   http://nhplib.org/?p=1386

Plymouth County Genealogists, Inc. meets first Saturday of the month, Sep-Jun at the Washburn Public Library, East Bridgewater, Massachusetts. http://www.plymouthcountygenealogists.org/

Rowley, Massachusetts Genealogy Club, meets the 2ndMonday of each month at the Rowley library, 6 -8pm in the Local History Room.  141 Main Street, Rowley, Massachusetts 978-948-2850
Rye, NH Genealogy Club, at the Rye Public Library, first Tuesday of the month at 2PM.  http://ryepubliclibrary.org/

Shrewsbury, Massachusetts Genealogy Club, meets third Monday of the month at the Shrewsbury Public Library, contact George C. Brown at 508-841-8531 or gbrown@cwmars.org

Southborough, MA Genealogy Club, at the Southborough Library, 25 Main Street, Southborough, MA  508-485-5031 or info@southboroughtlib.org   Third Thursday of the Month.  See the website www.southboroughlib.orgfor a schedule

Tewksbury, MA Genealogy Support Group, 3rd Wednesday of each month at 2pm, at the Tewksbury, Massachusetts Public Library.  

TIARA (The Irish Ancestral Research Association) meets at Brandeis University in Waltham, Massachusetts every second Friday evening of the month. All are welcome. They meet in Room G3 in the Mandel Center for the Humanities. Free parking. http://www.tiara.ie/ 

Townsend, MA Genealogy Group, Townsend, Massachusetts every 2nd Thursday of the month at the Townsend Public Library in meeting hall B.  Use the library subscriptions to Ancestry, Heritage Quest and Historic Maps, borrow a laptop or bring your own.  

Turner’s Falls, MA  Genealogy Gathering, Every First Thursday 6 – 8pm, at the Carnegie Public Library in Turners Falls, Massachusetts.  Informal genealogy sharing after hours at the library with use of the computers and the local history room. Contact the library for more information.

Waldeboro, Maine - The Old Broad Bay Family History Association,  http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~meobbfha/ 

Washington County Historical and Genealogical Society - meets quarterly at Machias, Maine.  Dues $10 - send to Carol Sprague, 301 Ridge Road, Marshfield, Maine 04654.  Queries for the newsletter Weirs and Woods to folknoter@maineline.net

Winslow, Maine-  The Taconnett Falls Genealogy Library, 10 Lithgow Street, Winslow, Maine.  Open 1- 4pm Wednesday and Saturday afternoons in the warmer three seasons.  Open Saturday after 1 - 4pm in the winter.  Also open the third Sunday afternoon of each month, with a meeting, presentation and time for research.  $10 annual dues. https://www.facebook.com/Taconnett-Falls-Genealogical-Library-168467003234582/?fref=ts

Genealogy Societies-

The American Canadian Genealogical Society, has a physical building with a library at 4 Elm Street,  Manchester, New Hampshire open Monday - Saturday and 2 Sundays each month, staffed by volunteers. http://acgs.org/  603-622-1554

The American French Genealogical Society, 78 Earle Street, Woonsocket, Rhode Island, phone 401-765-6290,  http://www.afgs.org/  

Cape Cod Genealogy Societyhttp://blog.capecodgensoc.org

Central Massachusetts Genealogical Society, meets at the American Legion, 22 Elm Street Gardner, Massachusetts every 4th Tuesday of the month at 7pm.  www.cmgso.org

Connecticut Society of Genealogists www.csginc.org  A newsletter, quarterly journal, office and physical library, and many events, bus trips, annual meeting, and more.

Essex Society of Genealogists, third Saturday of each month at 12 noon for a social hour followed by a 1pm business meeting, except for January, June, July and August.  Meets in Lynnfield,  Massachusetts at the Centre Congregational Church, 5 Summer Street, Lynnfield Center, Massachusetts. http://www.esog.org/

Maine Genealogical Society - www.maineroots.org   Nine chapters around the state, quarterly journal, yearly conference.

Massachusetts Society of Genealogists, Inc.  Five chapters: Bristol, Martha’s Vineyard, Merrimack Valley, Middlesex and Worcester.  Go to www.msoginc.org    

New England Historic Genealogical Society, website and a five story library located at 99 – 101 Newbury Street, Boston, Massachusetts.  www.americanancestors.org 

New Hampshire Society of Genealogists  www.nhsog.org  Yearly meeting and a quarterly journal.

Rhode Island Genealogical Society   www.rigensoc.org   Member meetings, bus trips, and a quarterly journal. 

South Shore Genealogical Society, at the John Curtis Free Library, Rt. 139, Hanover, Mass at 1:30pm ever second Saturday of the month from September to June.

Genealogical Society of Vermont  www.genealogyvermont.org Spring meeting and a quarterly journal.

Vermont Genealogy Library
377 Hegeman Ave.
Fort Ethan Allen
Colchester, Vermont
http://vtgenlib.org/about/index.php


Western Massachusetts Genealogical Society, first Wednesday of every month at the Agawam Senior Center, 954 Main Street, Agawam, Massachusetts. 


If you know more genealogy clubs or societies in New England please leave a comment below or email me at vrojomit@gmail.com and I will update this list!

Thanks!

Surname Saturday ~ FOSS of New Hampshire

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The Piscataqua River Region of New England, 1667, by John Scott,
from the British Library
http://britishlibrary.typepad.co.uk/.a/6a00d8341c464853ef01a3fca57e7b970b-800wi

FOSS

For many years I have read in books and online that John FOSS and his brother were Danish crew members of a ship to New England.  They both stayed in New Hampshire.  Another myth says that John deserted the British Navy from a warship in Boston Harbor.  Here is an excerpt from a Foss genealogy typewritten manuscript at the New Hampshire Historical Society Library [Genealogy of the Foss Family, by Guy Scoby Rix, 1917] “Johan (John) Foss, son of Lauritz Davidson Foss, (see page 3) was born in Ribe, Denmark, July 23, 1638.  He went to England with his brother Peter, and thence came to New England.  A tradition exists that he came to Boston in a British war vessel, landing in Boston by jumping overboard, swimming ashore, and escaping further service.”  This seems like very specific information, but it is all untrue.

In the New England Historic Genealogical Society Register, Volume 144, page 32, there is an article about the Jackson family, and in it Mary Jackson, born about 1615, married on 14 February 1632 in Paignton, Devonshire to Stephen Fosse.  Her son, John, born about 1633, came to Portsmouth, New Hampshire to be with his great uncle, John Jackson (there was only a 25 year age difference).  John Foss was a caulker, and Jackson was a cooper in Portsmouth.

John Foss married Mary Berry, the daughter of immigrant William Berry and his wife Jane.  They had about 12 children.  John married second to Mary Chadbourne and third to Elizabeth Crawford.  He was granted land in Portsmouth in 1657, and admitted an inhabitant of Dover on 1 January 1665/6.  He was a selectman in 1698 and died in 1699.

I descend from his daughter Elizabeth Foss, who married Nathaniel Batchelder, grandson of Rev. Stephen Bachiler, about 1685 in Hampton, New Hampshire. 

For more information on the FOSS family of New Hampshire, see The Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire by Noyes, Libby and Davis; “Two John Jacksons from Dartmouth, Devon” by John Plummer in the 1990 New England Historic Genealogical Register, Volume 144, page 33, Berrys by the Beach by Sylvia Fitts Getchell, 1980; and The History of the Town of Rye, by Langdon B. Parsons, 1905 [reprint 1992 by Heritage Press]

My FOSS genealogy:

Generation 1: Stephen Fosse married on 14 February 1632 in Paignton, Devonshire, England to Mary Jackson, daughter of John Jackson and Christian Furneis, baptized on 7 August 1615 in Paignton. 

Generation 2: John Foss, baptized on 25 November 1633 in Paignton, died 17 December 1699 in New Castle, New Hampshire; married first to Mary Berry, daughter of William Berry and Jane Unknown.  Married second to Mary Chadbourne, third to Elizabeth Crawford.  About 12 children with Mary Berry.

Generation 3: Elizabeth Foss, born about 1666 in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, died in 1746; married about 1685 to Nathaniel Batchelder, son of Nathaniel Batchelder and Deborah Smith.  He was born 24 December 1659 in Hampton, New Hampshire and died about 1745 in Hampton Falls.  Nine children.

Generation 4: Josiah Batchelder m. Sarah Page
Generation 5: David Batchelder m. Elizabeth Swett
Generation 6: Elisha Batchelder m. Sarah Lane
Generation 7: Jonathan Batchelder m. Nancy Thompson
Generation 8: George E. Batchelder m. Abigail M. Locke
Generation 9: George E. Batchelder m. Mary Katharine Emerson
Generation 10: Carrie Maude Batchelder m. Joseph Elmer Allen
Generation 11: Stanley Elmer Allen m. Gertrude Matilda Hitchings (my grandparents)

---------------------------------

Published under a Creative Commons License
Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "Surname Saturday ~ FOSS of New Hampshire", Nutfield Genealogy, posted November 7, 2015 ( http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2015/11/surname-saturday-foss-of-new-hampshire.html : accessed [access date]).

Hooksett, New Hampshire ~ Veteran's Park

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These photographs and transcriptions of the names on the memorials are part of 
the new Honor Project website:   http://honorrollproject.weebly.com/    
Transcribing the names on these veterans honor rolls makes their names available to 
search engines and for family, relatives and friends searching the internet. 



ERECTED BY THE CITIZENS OF HOOKSETT
TO THE MEMORY OF
THOSE MEN AND WOMEN WHO SERVED
IN THE ARMED FORCES IN WORLD WAR II

Gordon E. Aiken           Ralph G. Follansbee              Richard Mitchell
Leah Albers                Raymond P. Follansbee         Robert Mitchell
  Frank Albin               Stanley M. Follansbee           Herman J. Moncrieff
Matthew Albin           Joseph O. Fremeau             Ralph S. Morgan
William E. Allen               William P. French                Oscar Morin  
Clarence P. Amadon             Andrews P. Gagne              Stanley Morse
Armand A. Archambault                 Raoul L. Gagne              Henry A. Moul     
Gerald R. Archambault             Marcell Gagnon                   John J. Moul
Lionel R. Archambault                  Stanley W. Gavis              Roger Moul  
Paul M. Archambault                   John H. Gaw                 Thomas Moul  
Marcel Arsenault                    Ernest Gelinas                William E. Moul
Charles L. Atkins               Maurice J. Gilbert               M. Helen Mulaire
Leland V. Atkins                     Charles Godzyk                 Rene Mulaire        
Paul Atkins                         John Godzyk                   Roger Mulaire
Herbert R. Austin                  Michael Godzyk            Victor J. Mulaire, MD
Herbert W. Bee                     Nicholas Coley               Jean G. Mulligan
Leo G. Belisle                     George L. Goulet           Robert O. Murray
Leon C. Bemis                Albert L. Grandmont          William F. Murray
Albert J. Biron                 Clayton Gray                *Omer W. Nadau
Paul L. Biron             William H. Greenough           Ralph H. Nadeau
Sterling V. Blakeley             Leo H. Grenier             Raymond E. Nadeau
Richard F. Bodkin                Roger Grenier                Thomas O. Nadeau
Leon Boisvert                William A. Gryseels           Richard A. Nedeau
Maurice Boisvert             Charles F. Hardy                Grace M. Newcomb
*Norman Boisvert              Alexander K. Hayes         Carleton R. Newell  
Charles Bourbeau                  Arthur J. Hayes           Stanley D. Newton 
   Dennis P. Bourgeois             Edward M. Hayes          Bartholemeu H. Nordle
Wilfred E. Brousseau               Ralph J. Hayes                  John A. Nordle     
Willie Brousseau               Vincent C. Hayes              Louis F. Nordle
George E. Bullard                   Gerard J. Hebert               Forris W. Norris   
Earl E. Burbank                  Roger G. Hebert                Elbert C Noyes
Elton R. Burbank                Romeo T. Hebert            Leonard A. Noyes
George D. Burbank             Theodore A. Hebert          Edward K. Otterson
Kendell E. Burbank             Xavier F. Hebert               Joseph M. Pellerin
Edward J. Butler, Jr.            Joseph E. Heroux           Lawrence H. Perrigo
Joseph J. Byk                     Arnold S. Herron                  Homer Piche
Archie B. Campbell            Edward Herron                    Arnold Piper
Harry W. Campbell              Judson E. Herron                 *James Place   
   Neil G. Campbell                   Richard Herron               Edward N. Plourde
Robert D. Campbell               Edith L. Hunt                      Gilman Poor
Antoinette M. Carrier             *Robert T. Jacob                     Samuel Poor   
Maurice E. Carrier               Edmund E. Kaffel               Parker H. Rice
Philip H. Carrier                    Henry Kaffel                   Armand A Rivard
Roger N. Carrier                   Mitchell Kaffel                 Lloyd B. Robie 
Wilfred J. Carrier                    Walter Kaffel                   Maurice H. Robie
Gerard O. Cartier                    Alfred J. Kelley                 Maurice A. Roy
  Harold Champagne                 Henry L. Kennett           John D. Sacco,  DMD
Albert R. Charette                  Guy C. Kimball, Jr.               Earl B. Sargent
Alpha A. Chevrette                   Ivory C. Kimball                   Guy R. Sargent  
Gerard Chevrette                    Ray A. Kimball               Leo N. Sasseville
  Roger I. Chevrette                  Theodore Koehler         Napoleon T. Sasseville
Arthur W. Chochran, Jr.         Armand D. Labbee               John Senechek  
*George Corey                       Arthur J. Labonville             *Michael Senechek
Joseph P. Courchene               Phillip I. Lafleur               William L. Senechek
Edward Courchesne               Romeo J. Lafleur           Enver J. Silkman   
Robert R. Couturier               Gerald J. Fafond                  Theodore Skora
Edward Dauteuil                  Leo P. Lafond                    Arthur Smith
Carroll A. Demers               Maurice H. Lafond                Milton Smith
   Ernest E. Demers                    Maurice P. Lafond                 Norman S. Smith
 Wendell E. Demers                   Roland Lafond            Dennis St. Germain
     Jean B. Despins                     Wilfred Lafond             Leon J. St. Germain
      Louis M. Dlugosz             William H. Lambert        Maurice J. St. Germain
Arthur J. Donati                      Ray E. Langer               William Stobie
Alvin W. Downing               Carlton J. Langley             Emanuel Talbot
Alphee O. Duhaime               Leo G. Laroche         Burnouf P. M. Tebo
Armand L. Duhaime              Roger Laroche              Charles L. Tebo
David G. Duhaime               Rudolph LaSalle              Jeanne S. Tebo
Ralph M. Dukeshire           William H. LaValley              Elmer R. Thiem   
    Harvey DuPuis                    Harry LeMay                       David Tibbetts
     Maurille Dupuis                 Roger E. LeMay          Kenneth W. Tibbetts
Lloyd B. Elliott             Edmund L'Esperance          Fred W. Toule
      Forrest S. Evarts              Paul M. L'Esperance          Joseph A. Trembley
Russell J. Evarts                 Lucien Levesque          William F. Tuttle
William V. Faust, Jr.             Edward P. Lineham          *Martin P. Vugts 
  Oscar Felix, Jr.                    Arthur J. Locke              Lawson S. Wagner
Edward Fisher                 Robert L. Macey            Ralph L. Whipple
  Henry Fisher                            Ivan P. Maine             Roland Woodbury
Norman S. Fisk                  Wilfred J. Marston            Frank Zabratowski
Albert Fletcher               Robert M. McCloskey         Burnard Zapora
Edward C. Fletcher                  David McDougall                Theodore Zapora
Mildred Fletcher                *Earl W. Miller                Nichoas Zela
Robert C. Fletcher            Frank E. Miller                     Peter Zela
Thomas M. Fletcher               Robert E. Miller              Russell Zela
Arnold S. Follansbee              Adelard Mitchell             *Joseph Zukosky
Norman K. Follansbee              Raymond Mitchell        Theodore W. Zydon
*MADE THE SUPREME SCRIFICE



1861              CITIZENS OF HOOKSETT            1865
WHO SERVED IN THE CIVIL WAR

Abbott Christopher
Averill W.G.
Bates Sidney T.
Baker Amos
Baker William D.
Bartlett John
Bartlett James
Bennett John
Bean Edward D.
Blodgett Henry
Briggs America
Brooks Woodbury
Carlin Dennis
Carr Parker
Carbee Henry C.
Chase E. C.
Clay George H.
Clay Bradley
Clay Warren
Clay Thomas
Clark James
Clark Mayhew
Clark Edward
Clement H. A.
Crooker Philip E.
Davoase James
Dearborn Horace
Dimick Charles N.
Ducham Moses
Ducham Peter
Duprey Peter
Duprey Joseph
Duprey Edward
Dunbar Stephen
Eaton Henry
Eastman William
Farmer Erastus
Farmer Matthew
Farnum George W.
Farnum Benjamin F.
Fishk A. Eugene
Fitts Jerald
French James M.
George Daniel
George Alden G.
George Rufus K.
Gage Horace P.
Gile Henry H.
Goodale Silas T.
Gould Stephen O.
Griffin Peter
Hall John A.
Head George H. L.
Howard John
Hoyt Charles C.
Ingalls Charles H.
James Charles W.
Jewell Frank C.
Jones Clinton
Keafe Dennis
Kelley W. M.
Kimball Edward P.
Lakin Francis
Lawrence Henry A.
Lawrence Nthan K.
Leary Thomas
Leighton John B.
Lesciene Francis
Lindsey John
Lindsley John
Lillin David C.
Lincoln Othis B.
Martin Augustus
Martin Daniel S.
Martin Frederick
Mason John A.
Mallard George H.
Mathen Morris
Manger James M.
Mahoney Dennis
McDuffee James C.
Mitchell Frank
Miller Joseph
Miller Silas G.
Morris Richard
Moulton Charles H.
Nutting Ebenezer H.
Ormston Joseph
Ordway Frank D.
Otterson William
Parker Horace H.
Peabody George W.
Perica Paul
Poor Eri
Poor Samuel
Porter Charles P.
Porter George F.
Prescott James F.
Prescott John H.
Pronk Edwin
Putnam Silvanus B.
Quimby John, Jr.
Ramsey William
Riley John, Jr.
Riley Daniel
Richardson Byron
Robinson William H.
Robinson Charles
Robertson George H.
Robie Edward A.
Roake William h.
Rowell Warren C.
Rose Frank
Sentor Franklin
Schmidt William
Silver Sullivan
Smith William
Smith S. Stone
Steavens Ransom D.
St. John Joseph
Tabor Charles L.
Terrier Lewis
Thomasson William R.
Thompson Samuel
Titus Jerome B.
Towle John F.
Towle Geoge W.
Verville Joseph
Wallace James S.
Wallace Herman R.
Wattles John S.
Wentworth Charles J.
White Peter
William Maxime
Wood Nathan B.


ERECTED BY THE CITZENS
OF HOOKSETT
TO THE MEMORY OF MEN WHO SERVED IN
1914                                 THE WORLD WAR                               1919

Austin Ralph H.
Ayotte Wilfred
Bascom Albert S.
Batchelder Clinton D.
Bazan Lionel B.
Beaudet George
Beudet Thomas
Beulac Donat
Beulac Elias
Beuregard Theodore T.
Blair Walter A.
Breen Patrick
Burbank Clifton
Burbank Raymond P.
Campbell Alfred
Campbell Wilfred J.
Cantara Albert
Carleton raymond P.
Casey Joseph A.
Cheverette Ovila
Cook George A.
Couchene Henry
Couchene Irene
Couchene Leo
Cournoyer Alphonese
Courteau Arthur
Courteau Fred
Coutourier George
Coutourier Joseph G.
Eastman Roland
Fairbanks Chester
Gay Wilfred H
Goodwin Guy
Goulet Amand
Grandmaison Joseph
Guertin Nelson
Harrison Robet B.
Hayes Thomas J.
Heath George E.
Hickey Wm. P.
Hines Joseph Jr.
Houston Ernest
Houston Hormidas
Howard Frank
Howe James A.
Hubbard Herbert
Jacobs Napoleon
Jameson Henry H.
Kahum Otis
Keating Frank R.
Kimball Ralph O.
Kimball Roy S.
LaFleur Leo
LaFond Ephrem
LaFond John B.
LaRose Franklin
LaSalle Rudolph
Lawrence Henry C.
LeMay Alfred
Main Matthew E.
Martell George
Martell Hormidas
Means Joseph W.
Merrill George Edson
Merrill George Edward
Mitchell Eugene H.
Morse Clayton Harold
Mulligan George
Neill Robert A
Neill Archibald
Neill John
Ottterson Maurice F.
Poor Benjamin C.
Poor Harld
Pothier Onesime
Roberge Thomas F.
Roberge Francis
Robie Harley A.
Ruden Samuel
Rushton Francis H.
Sleeper Cyril F.
Sleeper Lester M
Stewart Osroe
Strickford Arthur A.
St. Hillaire Ariste
Thibeault Arthur
Togus Leopold T.
Turbin Thomas T.
Tyrell George T.
Vanasse Nestor
Verville Frank
White Chauncy W.


IN MEMORY OF
CORP. GEORGE E. MERRILL
CO. H 128TH INFANTRY 32ND DIV.
KILLED IN ACTION AT THE
BATTLE OF THE ARGONNE OCT. 15, 1918
BURIED IN FRANCE
DEDICATED BY THE GEORGE E. MERRILL
POST NO. 37 AMERICAN LEGION
NOVEMBER 11, 1933



------------------------------------------------
Published under a Creative Commons License
Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "Hooksett, New Hampshire ~ Veteran's Park", Nutfield Genealogy, posted November 9, 2015 (  http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2015/11/hooksett-new-hampshire-veterans-park.html : accessed [access date]).

Ten Things to Know About Researching a Pilgrim in Your Family Tree

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The Mayflower II
at berth in Plymouth Harbor, Massachusetts

The big National holiday in November is Thanksgiving, and so for November 10th I’m presenting another list of 10 important facts about Pilgrim genealogy research.  This is the time of the year many people start to look for a Pilgrim in their family tree.

It is estimated that over 35 million people are descended from at least one of the 102 passengers who arrived in Plymouth, Massachusetts on board the famous ship Mayflower in 1620.  According to GenealogyBank, 12% of Americans are descended from the Mayflower. Don’t you think that is an amazing number, considering that half of the passengers died within the first three months?  Odds are good that YOU might be descended from the Mayflower passengers, too.

#1:   You probably won’t find your Pilgrim ancestor in time for Thanksgiving if you start now.  But better late than never!  At least you can discuss your family history at Thanksgiving dinner, and start gathering some clues from the oldest family members.  Perhaps you will have a great research story to tell everyone at Thanksgiving next year!

#2:   Start with yourself and work backwards.  You won’t have success if you pick a Pilgrim from the Mayflower passenger list and try to work forward through time. There are too many potential descendants, and it would be a big waste of time to follow all the incorrect lineages for the estimated 14 or 15 generations needed to reach back to 1620.

#3: You may already have a clue in your family tree. The 102 passengers on the Mayflower had some distinctive names like STANDISH, BREWSTER and BRADFORD, but they also had common surnames like BROWNE, COOKE, ROGERS, and WHITE.  To see a complete passenger list, click on this link: https://www.themayflowersociety.org/about-the-pilgrims20/the-pilgrims

#4:  Is there a branch of your family from colonial era (pre-1776) New England?  Were any of them born in Massachusetts?  Were any of your ancestors born in Plymouth County, Massachusetts?  This can be a big clue that might lead to finding a Pilgrim.

#5: The Mayflower Society has a large project to publish a set of books known as the “Silver Books”, which contain the first five generations of descendants from each Mayflower passenger known to have issue.  This project is mostly complete; with a few surnames still being researched (these names “in progress” are published as “pink books).  If you can connect to an ancestor in one of these books, five generations of research will have already been done for you!

#6:  The Mayflower Society also maintains records of every lineage application ever submitted for membership.  Before proving your lineage, send a “preliminary application” to the Society in Plymouth, and they will check the records to see if your lineage has already been proved. If you are lucky, you may have had many generations of your lineage already proven in these files.

#7: Plymouth Colony was very small.  In the first hundred years several Mayflower passengers married each other, even more of their children married each other, and dozens of grandchildren of passengers married each other. If you find you are related to one passenger, keep looking and you might find several more Mayflower Pilgrims in your family tree.

#8:  Although the Mayflower passengers are some of the most intensively researched genealogy subjects in America, there are also many lasting myths about them.  Many books and web pages claim that someone’s ancestor was a passenger on the Mayflower.  Look up to #3 on this list to see the “official” list of passengers.  Caleb Johnson has a webpage with some of the most common fake Mayflower genealogy.  Check it out here: http://web.archive.org/web/20070611110521/http://members.aol.com/calebj/hoaxes.html

#9:  If you find a Pilgrim in your family tree, please consider joining the Mayflower Society.  Registering your pedigree from a Mayflower passenger is part of the creation of one of the biggest, most researched, and most documented, family trees in United States history.  Having your family tree on file will insure that your future descendants can make a cousin connection and be part of the Society, too.  Membership is open to any man, woman or child who can document their descent from one or more of the Mayflower passengers. For more information, please see the General Society of Mayflower Descendants website at this link: https://www.themayflowersociety.org/

#10:  The Pilgrims and their story belong not just to the descendants, but to all Americans.  The story of survival, cooperation with each other, collaboration with the Native Americans, Thanksgiving and the founding of a new colony is part of American history. “The Pilgrims are America’s Family” is a quote from the current Governor General of the General Society of Mayflower Descendants, Lea Sinclair Filson.  

Good luck!  Maybe you will be one of my new Mayflower cousins!  I am descended of the following Mayflower passengers- Capt. Myles Standish, Isaac Allerton, Mary (Norris) Allerton, Remember Allerton, John Howland, John Tilley, Joan (Hurst) Tilley, Elizabeth Tilley, George Soule, and Edward Doty.

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If you are interested in the story of the Plymouth Colony and the Mayflower, there will be two new movies premiering on television this month:

National Geographic Channel “Saints and Strangers”, a four hour event November 22 and 23

preview video clip

PBS “American Experience: The Pilgrims” by Ric Burns, November 24

Please check these resources for more information:

The General Society of Mayflower Descendants  www.themayflowersociety.org
Pilgrim Hall Museum, Plymouth, Massachusetts   http://www.pilgrimhallmuseum.org/
Plimoth Plantation Museum,Plymouth, Massachusetts   http://www.plimoth.org/
Caleb Johnson’s Mayflower website http://mayflowerhistory.com/  
Sail 1620, by the Pennsylvania Society of Mayflower Descendants  http://www.sail1620.org/
The Leiden Archives, The Netherlands  http://www.pilgrimarchives.nl/
The Leiden American Pilgrim Museum  http://www.leidenamericanpilgrimmuseum.org
The Scrooby Pilgrim Heritage Center http://www.leidenamericanpilgrimmuseum.org/index.htm
The Harwich Mayflower Project   http://www.harwichmayflower.com/


---------------------------------
Published under a Creative Commons License
Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "Ten Things to Know About Researching a Pilgrim in Your Family Tree", Nutfield Genealogy, posted November 10, 2015 ( http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2015/11/ten-things-to-know-about-researching.html : accessed [access date]). 

Weathervane Wednesday ~ A Fish by the Sea

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Weathervane Wednesday is an on-going series of photographs I post weekly.  I started by publishing weather vanes from just the Londonderry area (Nutfield), but now I've found interesting weathervanes from all across New England.  Some of the weathervanes are whimsical, or historical, but all are interesting.  Often my readers will send me some photos of very unique and unusual weathervanes from all across the United States and the rest of the world!  If you know an interesting or historical weathervane, please let me know.

Today's weather vane is from Massachusetts.

Do you know the location of weather vane #234?  Scroll down to see the answer!








This weathervane was photographed at Juniper Cove, off Columbus Avenue in the Salem Willows area of Salem, Massachusetts.  It isn't located on top of a roof, cupola or barn, but at the end of a private boat dock.  This is an appropriate place for a fish, don't you think?

This three dimensional fish (anyone know what kind of fish?) has developed a nice patina over the years.  I couldn't get close enough to tell if it was copper or some other metal, because Juniper Cove is completely empty of water and full of deep mud at low tide.

Juniper Cove at Wikipedia   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juniper_Cove 

Click here to see the entire collection of Weathervane Wednesday posts!

-------------------------------
Published under a Creative Commons License
Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "Weathervane Wednesday ~ A Fish by the Sea", Nutfield Genealogy, posted November 11, 2015, ( http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2015/11/weathervane-wednesday-fish-by-sea.html :  accessed [access date]).

Veteran's Day 2015 ~ Honor Roll Project Contributions

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Derry, New Hampshire Veteran's Honor Rolls in MacGregor Park

Thank you to all the volunteers who contributed to the Honor Roll Project for Veteran’s Day / Remembrance Day 2015.  These volunteers spent many hours of their own time taking photos of war memorials and honor rolls, posting them on their blogs, and transcribing the names.  These transcriptions make the names available for search engines, and the names can be found by family, descendants and friends.

This project started in 2010.  Since then dozens of honor rolls have been included, and thousands of names transcribed from all across the United States, and five other countries!

Please check out the new website http://honorrollproject.weebly.com/

Here are the new contributions:

Connecticut
New Haven, 9th Regiment Connecticut, Civil War by Jeanne Bryan Insalaco
Indiana

Kentland, Newton County World War II (Part 1)  by Deborah Ygerlehner Sweeney

Kentland, Newton County World War II (Part 2)  by Deborah Ygerlehner Sweeney

Maine

Harpswell, World War I and World War II, by Barbara Poole

Orr’s Island, World War II, by Barbara Poole
(scroll down to the end of the story about the library)

Massachusetts

Bedford, MA, 43 Revolutionary War Soldiers, by  Barbara Poole 

Billerica, Massachusetts, World War 1 and World War II, Barbara Poole

Lexington,  the Lexington Minutemen April 19, 1775,  by Barbara Poole

Woburn, Revolutionary War Soldiers buried at Park Street Burial Ground, by Barbara Poole

New Hampshire

Merrimack, New Hampshire, World War II, Janice Webster Brown

Sutton, World War I, by June Butka

Sutton, World War II, by June Butka

Sutton, Korean War, by June Butka

Sutton, Vietnam War, by June Butka

New York

Red Hook, Dutchess County, New York, World War I, World War II, Korea, Vietnam, from Schalene Dagutis

Cohoes (First Ward), Albany
World War I, World War II, Korea and Vietnam from Schalene Dagutis

Center Moriches, Suffolk County, World War I and World War II, by Jane E. Wilcox
http://www.4getmenotancestry.com/roll-of-honor-in-center-moriches-suffolk-county-long-island-new-york/

Sand Lake, Rensselaer,
Revolutionary War, Civil War, World War I, World War II, from Schalene Dagutis

Villages of Kinderhook and Valatie, Columbia, New York, from Schalene Dagutis
World War I, World War II, Korea, Vietnam

North Carolina

 Lenoir Country World Ward Memorial Kinston by Schalene Dagutis http://tangledrootsandtrees.blogspot.com/2015/11/lenoir-county-north-carolina-world-wars.html

Utah

Layton, Veteran’s Park, World Wars I and II, Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, by Dawn Fitzpatrick

Virginia

Leesburg, Vietnam War, by John D. Tew

Fairfax City, by Scahlene Dagutis
First Casualty of the Civil War

And our international contributors:

Australia

Hamilton, Victoria,  Honour Board World War I and World War II, by Merron Riddiford

Stockton, New South Wales
World War I names and memorials, by Michelle Watson

A message from Australian Alex Daw
For honour rolls in the Moreton Bay Region near Brisbane, Queensland, Australia check out the History and Heritage catalogue module on the library's catalogue here https://library.moretonbay.qld.gov.au/cgi-bin/spydus.exe/MSGTRN/OPAC/ARC?HOMEPRMS=ARCPARAMS or download the Once Upon a War Time MBR WWI App from iTunes or your Play Store as per here https://www.moretonbay.qld.gov.au/subsite.aspx?id=138126#mbrwwi 


Canada

Owen Sound, Ontario, International Order of Odd Fellows World War I Cenotaph, by Janet Iles
Blogger Lorine Massey reminded me of these two wonderful Canadian websites:
The Books of Remembrance, Veterans Affairs Canada (searchable)

Canadian Virtual War Memorial, Veterans Affairs Canada

Essex Great War Cenotaph and Honor Roll, Essex, Ontario, by Earline Hines Bradt
http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2015/11/essex-honour-roll-great-war-essex.html


Germany

Ferschweiler, Germany,  World War I and World War II, by Cathy Meder-Dempsey

German War Memorials explained by Karen Biesfeld (blog post in English)

German War Memorial Website (in English)

United Kingdom

Wells, Somerset, England "The Last Fighting Tommy" by Polly Kimmitt
http://pk-pollyblog.blogspot.com/ 


Essex Honour Roll, Great War, Essex, Ontario, Canada

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Essex Honour Roll 1914 Great War 1918 location: Talbot Street, Essex, Ontario, Canada * indicates supreme sacrifice Dedicated Nov.11th, 1929 

Allison, Stanley
Auld, W. Allen
Batten, Wallace
Beaman, A. Del
Blake, Edward
*Blake, George
Bowers, Percy
Brett, R. Ruddy
Bricker, Harold
Brien, J. W.
Campbell, James
Carr, Fred
Chase, John
Chevalier, Joseph
Church, Victor
*Church, Walter
Church, William
Clarke, Howard
Clarke, Lewis
Clarke, Nelson
Cock, L. E.
Coote, Arthur
Cousins, Everett
*Crowe, William
Crozier, William
Davies, Gordon
Dean, Howard
Dell, Harry
Dell, Richard
Dewhirst, W.
Dodge, Jackson
Elfrord, Oscar
*Farough, Norman
Ferguson, L.
Fleming, Peter
Flint, Elton
Goslin, William
*Green, Andrew
Grey, Thomas
Haggins, Raymond
Halliday, Thomas
Hannan, Earl
Hart, Enos
Hastings, Alex
*Hastings, Hugh
Hayes, George N.
Hayes, Harry Jr.
Heil, James
Hess, David Jr.
Hill, Ernest
Hill, Frank
*Hines, Flemming (Fleming spelled wrong on Honour Roll, correct on Cenotaph)
Hoskins, Dell
Huggard, Robert
*Hughes, Thomas
Hunter, Frank
Irwin, Harry
Irwin, Edward
Johnston, C. Grover
Johnston, Hugh R.
Johnston, J. Roy
Johnston, William
Jones, Alex
*Joyce, D. (not on Cenotaph)
Kendrick, Miss A.
Kendrick, Wesley
Kennedy, Robert B.
Keown, Frederick
Knight, Charles
*Knight, Clayton
Laing, Donald G.
Laing, Stuart
Laing, William O.
Laird, Bruce
*Laird, Burns
Laird, Wallace
Lane, W.
*Lannigan, John
Leak, Fred
Lee, Percy W.
Levi, Arch.
Lewis, Fred
Lickman, Lorne
Linton, John C.
Little, Samuel
Lloyd, James
Locke, John
*Maloney, James
*Mansell, Earl
Mansell, William
Massey, Harold
McEwan, Bert
McGhie, Charles
McKinnon, Emerson
McAfee, Louis C.
Meston, Arthur
McGuigan, John
Meston, Harold
Middleton, R. Elgin
Miracle, H. H.
Miesener, Chas.
Mitchell, Alfred
Morrow, James
Morrow, James, Jr.
Mowat, Alex.
*Myles, Oliver
Naylor, Alger
Nayor, Arch.
Nesbitt, W. J.
Neuendorf, Pearlo
Newton, Frank
Nichols, Ross R.
O'Harra, Robert Jr.
Oldfield, John
*O'Neil, Norman R.
O'Neil, Reginald
O'Neil, Roy
O'Neil, Russell
Percival, Joseph
Pettypiece, R.
Plant, Arthur H.
Pimm, Victor L. (Pymm on Cenotaph)
Piper, Chester
*Piper, Victor
Prior, Harry
Purvis, Dolway
Queen, James
Ransom, Arthur
*Raymont, Frank
*Rhyndress, Arch.
*Riggs, Thomas
Riley, Ernest
Robinson, Gerald
Robinson, Harold
Rose, Harry
Rupert, David A.
Russell, Hubert
Sadler, Fred
Sadler, Irwin C.
Scaife, John
Scott, E. S.
Seymour, Newton
Shepley, Gordon
Shuel, Anthony
Shuel, Banford
Shuel, Robert
*Skinner, Wm.
Slote, Leonard
Slote, Thomas S.
Smith, George C.
Smith, Murray T.
Smith, Oliver L.
Snyder, Verne
Stewart, Asa G.
Stone, George
Stone, Wilmot
Stottard, Roy
Tackaberry, H.
Taylor, Frank L.
*Taylor, Robert
Terry, Joseph
Thomas, David
Thompson, Cecil
*Tink, Stanley
Turner, Hugh J.
Valade, Mrs. Lydia
Vance, Claude
Vance, Walker
Van Every, Russell
*Wagner, Arch. I.
Ward, Clare
Ward, Eric
Warren, Howard
Wells, Ernest
Westlake, Chas.
Whitney, Ellmer D.
Wigle, Clive
Wigle, Warren
Williams, James
Wilson, John B.
*Wolfe, Earl
Wolfe, Leonard
Wolfe, William
Woltz, Lewis
Wood, Douglas
Wortley, John
Wortley, Joseph
Wyatt, Rex
Wyman, Hugh
Young, Frank




The Honor Roll and Cenotaph were photographed and transcribed by Earline Hines Bradt of Ontario, Canada for the Honor Roll Project http://honorrollproject.weebly.com/

The New Hampshire Presidential Primary Season Begins, and a Little History, too

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A New Hampshire Citizen doing his duty

2016 marks the 100th anniversary of the New Hampshire presidential primary, but the filing period for candidates began last week.  The actual primary day happens, by law, in New Hampshire at least seven days before a similar election in any other state.  It is not just tradition, but on the books.  The Secretary of State, William Gardner, sets the date, which is tentatively 9 February 2016.  But that date can change, and historically has been creeping earlier and earlier.  For generations it was held in mid-March before the presidential election.  Our “First in the Nation” status is a source of pride in the tiny Granite State.

On 21 October 2014 Governor Maggie Hassan appointed five bipartisan members to form a Presidential Primary Centennial Anniversary commission. Back in February 2015 there was an event at the Newseum in Washington, DC to celebrate the New Hampshire Presidential Primary centennial.  There was a big celebration on September 15 at the New Hampshire State Library with speakers from both sides of the aisle, media personalities and political science professors.  We’ll be hearing more about similar events this as we close in on primary day.

New Hampshire State Representative Stephen Bullock of Richmond proposed the first bill that created the primary election.  The first presidential primary was March 1916.   This year, any candidate who signs up to run in primary can sit at Bullock’s desk in Bill Gardner’s office (remember, he is the Secretary of State) to sign the necessary paperwork.  And pay the $1000 fee.   The first two candidates to sign up on November 4th were Donald Trump and Martin O'Malley. 

And I’m still waiting to hear how the closed Balsams Hotel, in Dixville Notch, will host their famous election usually held at one minute after midnight on primary day.   Since the hotel is closed, half of the voters are no longer residents of this polling district.  Will Dixville Notch uphold the tradition? What happens to their famous ballot box? These are important questions!

New Hampshire Primary 100th website   http://nhprimary100.org/ 

“Ballot Boxes, Desk, Descendants part of History in Primary Centennial Celebration”, by Holly Ramer of the Associated Press, posted October 29, 2015, 

“Pieces of N.H. Primary History On Display During Filing Period”, by Casey McDermott, at New Hampshire Public Radio, posted 3 November 2015

NECN Interactive 2016 New Hampshire Primary Candidate Tracker:  http://www.necn.com/news/politics/New-Hampshire-Candidate-Tracker-295977311.html


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Published under a Creative Commons License
Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "The New Hampshire Presidential Primary Season Begins, and a Little History, too", Nutfield Genealogy, posted November 12, 2015 ( http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2015/11/the-new-hampshire-presidential-primary.html: accessed [access date]). 

David Colglazier of Londonderry, New Hampshire Wins Historic Preservation Award

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NEMA Executive Director Dan Yaegar (left) presents David Lee Colglazier of Londonderry, NH, with the 2015 NEMA Excellence Award during a ceremony on November 6, 2015

David Lee Colglazier of Londonderry, NH, has won the 2015 NEMA Excellence Award for museum practice.   David’s varied work in the field of historic preservation makes him very deserving of this prestigious award.

David Lee Colglazier, former conservator at Old Sturbridge Village and museum consultant, won an Excellence Award for his dedication and involvement in the New England museum community. In his more than forty years’ in the field Colglazier has held numerous positions including a reviewer of the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) Conservation Support grants, Co‐Chair of the NEMA Conservators’ Professional Affinity Group, Londonderry Historical Society trustee, and an advocate for historic preservation. As part of the Londonderry Heritage Commission, Colglazier recently sponsored a bill in the New Hampshire legislature that would provide a tax credit to homeowners who restore or preserve historic houses.

ʺThis award is a testament to David’s passion, commitment, and vision in his work for and with New England’s museums. His work makes us better as a community of museum professionals and as a field,” said NEMA Executive Director Dan Yaeger in announcing the honor. “We are proud to acknowledge the accomplishments as an outstanding example of leadership and service to our museum colleagues, visitors, and partners.”

The NEMA Excellence Award competition recognizes individual members for excellence in museum practice, whether they’re behind‐the‐scenes or on the front lines, the unsung heroes or the superstars. Nominated by their peers, nominees represent a range of a worthy practices, acts of outreach, kind deeds, and sustained commitments to going above and beyond, regardless of job description. Winners were recognized at the 97th Annual NEMA Conference in Portland, Maine, November 6, 2015.

NEMA inspires and connects people engaged with the museum field, i provides tools for innovative leadership, and empowers museums to sustain themselves as essential to their communities. For nearly 100 years, the New England Museum Association has been the only organization in New England serving museums of all sizes and the dedicated people who work for and with them.

To learn more about the New England Museum Association, go to www.nemanet.org.

 NEMA Executive Director Dan Yaegar (left) presents David Lee Colglazier of Londonderry, NH, with the 2015 NEMA Excellence Award during a ceremony on November 6, 2015

New England Museum Association
22 Mill Street, Suite 409
Arlington, MA 02476
781-641-0013                  
www.nemanet.org



Surname Saturday ~ BERRY of Rye, New Hampshire

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A mini reunion of BERRY descendants in Kittery, Maine 2014

BERRY

William Berry was sent to New Hampshire around 1631 by Captain John Mason.  He must not have been a permanent settler until later because he does not show up in Anderson’s Great Migration series of books. By 25 May 1640 he was living at Strawberry Bank.  He was a freeman on 18 May 1642 in Newbury, Massachusetts, where he was a proprietor on 7 December 1642.  At the town meeting in January 1648/9 it was “granted that Wm Berry shall have a lot upon the neck of land upon the South side of the Little River at Sandy Beach.”  He was granted another lot of land on 13 January 1652 at Sandy Beach, which is now Rye, New Hampshire.

He must have died before 28 June 1654 when his widow, Jane was granted administration of his estate.  Two sons, James and John Berry, and a grandson, Joshua Foss agreed to a division of his land on 13 June 1717.

The Berry Family Cemetery in Rye Is located about a quarter mile from  Route 1 (Lafayette Road) on Breakfast Hill Road. http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~langolier/berry_rye.html

Some BERRY resources:

Descendants of William Berry of Rockingham County, NH for Four Generations, by June Berry, Kearns, UT, 1993

The Berrys by the Beach, by Sylvia Fitts Getchell, Newmarket, NH: Newmarket Press, 1980

A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England, by James Savage, 1909

Pioneers of Maine and New Hampshire, by Charles Henry Pope, 1908       
     
History of the Town of Rye, NH from Its Discovery and Settlement to December 31, 1903, by Langdon B. Parsons, 1905.

"Descendants of William Berry of Strawberry Bank - Rye, NH" Facebook Group  https://www.facebook.com/groups/460907980677056/    

My BERRY lineage:

Generation 1:  William Berry, born about 1610 in England, died before 28 June 1654 in Portsmouth, New Hampshire; married before 1634 to Jane Unknown. Seven children, and I descend from three of them.  His widow Jane remarried to Nathaniel Drake.

Lineage A:

Generation 2:  Elizabeth Berry, born about 1636 and died after 1708; married about 1652 to John Locke.  He was born about 1627 in England and died 26 August 1696 in Rye, New Hampshire.  Eleven children.

Generation 3:  John Locke m. Elizabeth Unknown
Generation 4: John Locke m. Sarah Unknown
Generation 5: Richard Locke m. Elizabeth Garland
Generation 6: Simon Locke m. Abigail Mace
Generation 7: Richard Locke m. Margaret Welch
Generation 8: Abigail M. Locke m. George E. Batchelder
Generation 9: George E. Batchelder, Jr. m. Mary Katharine Emerson
Generation 10: Carrie Maude Batchelder m. Joseph Elmer Allen
Generation 11: Stanley Elmer Allen m. Gertrude Matilda Hitchings (my grandparents)

Lineage B:

Generation 2:  Mary Berry, born about 1634, died between 1706 and 1710 in Rye, New Hampshire; married John Foss.  He was baptized 25 November 1633 in Paignton, Devonshire, England, and died 17 December 1699 in New Castle, New Hampshire. Eleven children.

Generation 3: Elizabeth Foss m. Nathaniel Batchelder
Generation 4:  Josiah Batchelder m. Sarah Page
Generation 5:  David Batchelder m. Elizabeth Swett
Generation 6: Elisha Batchelder m. Sarah Lane
Generation 7:  Jonathan Batchelder m. Nancy Thompson
Generation 8:  George E. Batchelder m. Abigail M. Locke (see above)

Lineage C:

Generation 2:  James Berry, born between 1650 and 1652 in Strawbery Banke or New Castle, New Hampshire, died after 1712; married about 1673 to Eleanor Wallis, daughter of George Wallis and Eleanor.  She was born about 1652 in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Five children.

Generation 3: Samuel Berry, born between 1660 and 1680, died 19 June 1750; married to Abigail Webster, daughter of Stephen Webster and Hannah Ayer.  Four children.

Generation 4: Jotham Berry. Born about 1711, died after 1790; married on 11 November 1731 in Rye, New Hampshire to Mary Bates, daughter of William Bates.  She was born about 1712.  Two children. Jotham married second on 16 April 1780 to Tryphene Philbrick, widow of John Saunders.

Generation 5:  Rachel Berry, baptized on 3 July 1743 in Rye, died 9 November 1806 in Rye; married on 6 December 1764 in Rye to Ithamar Mace, son of John Mace and Sarah Frost. He was born about 1729 on the Isles of Shoals and died before 9 November 1806. Three children.  Rachel married second to Joseph Hall about 1781 in Rye.

Generation 6: Abigail Mace m. Simon Locke (see above)

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Published under a Creative Commons License
Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "Surname Saturday ~ BERRY of Rye, New Hampshire", Nutfield Genealogy, posted November 14, 2015 (  http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2015/11/surname-saturday-berry-of-rye-new.html: accessed [access date]).

Baby's Lullaby, by Bertha Roberts Wilkinson

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My daughter and my new granddaughter


Baby’s Lullaby

Softly the night shadows steal across the sky,
Back to their home nests, the birds swiftly fly.
The flower are folding their petals so soft.
The sea is the only one loud and storm tossed.

But. baby of mine, the storm will subside
And the splashing will cease with the ebb of the tide.
So Mother will gently rock baby to rest
Then send you to sleep with the sun in the west.

Then the moon will shine on with her gentle light
To guide you my darling on Fairy Land’s flight.
The angels will take you and sing to you sweet,
Then bring you back home in their magic fleet.

When Mother will take you once more in her arms
You will tell her the wonders, the love and the charms.
How they showed them to you through wonderful dreams
Then brought you back safely from out of your dreams.


This poem was written by my grandmother, Bertha Louise (Roberts) Wilkinson (1897 - 1990).  My grandmother attended school only until about age 12 in Leeds, Yorkshire, England.  She had to go to work at age 12 as an under nurse to a children's nanny in a vicarage in Leeds.  She immigrated to Massachusetts, through Ellis Island, in 1915.  She didn't marry my grandfather, Donald Munroe Wilkinson (1895 - 1977) until 1926, when she was nearly 30 years old.  In an oral history of her life she recorded on tape she said that she was anxious to marry and have children, but her parents were ill and she had to care for them.  Her first baby, my Uncle Robert, was born after her father had died and the same year her mother passed.  My father was born when she was nearly 40 years old. 


Bertha Wilkinson


She must have loved being a mother to her own babies after being a nursemaid.  I'm sure she would have loved to meet her great great granddaughter, my own grandchild, pictured above.  Grammy Bertha wrote many poems, and I have posted them here for Bill West's Genealogy Poetry Challenge.  This year is the 7th annual poetry challenge.  You can find more information at this link: 
http://westinnewengland.blogspot.com/2015/09/the-seventh-annual-great-genealogy.html   




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Published under a Creative Commons License
Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "Baby's Lullaby, by Bertha Roberts Wilkinson", Nutfield Genealogy, posted November 16, 2015, (  http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2015/11/babys-lullaby-by-bertha-roberts.html: accessed [access date]).

Tombstone Tuesday ~ Priests buried at St. Patrick's Cemetery, Hudson, New Hampshire

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These tombstones were photographed at St. Patrick's Cemetery, Hudson, New Hampshire.


RT. REV.
MONSIGNOR
MATTHEW J.B.
CREAMER
PASTOR OF
ST. PATRICK'S PARISH
1906 - 1936
DIED
OCTOBER 1, 1936
IN HIS EIGHTIETH
YEAR   R.I.P.

According to the website for St. Patrick parish in Nashua, New Hampshire, the church was founded in 1901, and the building was completed in 1909.  Monsignor Creamer was the very first priest of this parish.  The St. Patrick cemetery was purchased by the community in 1856 on land across the Merrimack River from Nashua, in the town of Hudson. 


Monsignor Creamer's impressive Irish cross monument was located inside a large flat grassy roundabout in the cemetery.  It was only after I got out of my car to photograph his tombstone when I noticed that the grass circle was full of flat monuments to other priests.  They all had served in local Catholic churches near Nashua. 



REV. DENIS P. DOWNEY                         REV. LAUNCELOT F. QUINN
PASTOR OF OUR LADY OF MERCY            PASTOR OF ST. CHRISTOPHER PARISH
MERRIMACK, NH                                                   NASHUA, NH
BORN jAN. 14, 1903 - DIED NOV. 24, 1992          BORN JUNE 22, 1904- DIED JAN. 7, 1960
R.I.P.                                                                   R.I.P.



RT. REV. MSGR. JOSEPH R. O'CONNOR
PASTOR OF ST. PATRICKS PARISH
1957 NASHUA N.H.  1965
BORN JUNE 14, 1888 - DIED OCT 27, 1965
ORDAINED DEC. 21, 1918
R.I.P.

I'm not a Roman Catholic, nor were any of my ancestors since The Reformation in the 1500s.  I haven't really explored many Catholic cemeteries either.  I found this cemetery to be beautiful, with carvings and statuary not usually seen in austere Puritan New England burial grounds.  I was fascinated when I found this section of the cemetery where these priests were buried.  It is poignant to me that they are buried together with their brethren, instead of with their families.  The only other time I have photographed Roman Catholic religious was a post I did of the mausoleum to the Sisters of Mercy in Windham, New Hampshire.  You can see that post at this link:  http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2013/09/tombstone-tuesday-sisters-of-mercy.html  

St. Patrick Parish history  http://www.stpatricksnashua.org/67 


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Published under a Creative Commons License
Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "Tombstone Tuesday ~ Priests buried at St. Patrick's Cemetery, Hudson, New Hampshire", Nutfield Genealogy, posted November 17, 2015 (  http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2015/11/tombstone-tuesday-priests-buried-at-st.html: accessed [access date]).

Weathervane Wednesday ~ A Mermaid Swimming by the Cove

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Weathervane Wednesday is an on-going series of photographs I post weekly.  We  started by publishing weather vanes from the Londonderry area, but now We've been finding interesting weather vanes all across New England.  Sometimes my weather vanes are whimsical, or historical, but all are interesting. Often, my readers tip me off to some very unique and unusual weather vanes, too! If you know an interesting or historical weathervane, please let me know.

Today's collection of weather vanes is from Massachusetts.

Do you know the location of weather vane collection #235?  Scroll down to see the answer!







Juniper Cove, with a rising tide
Today's weathervane was see on top of a private home near Juniper Cove, on Columbus Avenue in Salem, Massachusetts.  It is not located on a tower or cupola.  This is a very beautiful three dimensional copper mermaid.  The weathervane is very bright and shiny, so it is probably fairly new.

The house is located right on the waterfront next to Juniper Cove, so the mermaid seems very appropriate for this spot.

Click here to see another weathervane photographed at Juniper Cove:
http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2015/11/weathervane-wednesday-fish-by-sea.html 


Click here to see the entire Weathervane Wednesday collection!

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Published under a Creative Commons License
Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "Weathervane Wednesday ~ A Mermaid Swimming by the Cove", Nutfield Genealogy, posted November 18, 2015, ( http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2015/07/weathervane-wednesday-mermaid-swimming.html : accessed [access date]).

2015 New Hampshire Thanksgiving Proclamation

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Today, November 18, 2015, at the statehouse in Concord, New Hampshire, Governor Maggie Hassan proclaimed the Thanksgiving holiday as November 26, 2015.  Members of the New Hampshire Mayflower Society sponsored the celebration and were in attendance at the ceremony.

Members of the NH Mayflower Society, Gov. Hassan (holding the proclamation), and members of the Governor's Council
at the Statehouse in Concord, New Hampshire 


The State of New Hampshire
By Her Excellency
Margaret Wood Hassan, Governor

A Proclamation

THANKSGIVING DAY
NOVEMBER 26, 2015

WHEREAS,  In 1621, Pilgrim Governor William Bradford issued the first Thanksgiving proclamation to recognize a day of reflection and celebration, to be shared between the Pilgrims and Native Americans; and

WHEREAS, President George Washington proclaimed the first National Day of Thanksgiving in 1789; and

WHEREAS, Beginning in 1827, Sarah Josepha Hale, a famous author and poet from Newport, New Hampshire, wrote thousands of letters advocating for a national celebration of Thanksgiving; and

WHEREAS, The tradition of giving thanks became official in 1863- at the height of the Civil War- when President Abraham Lincoln declared that the fourth Thursday in November should be set aside for personal remembrance as "A Day of Thanksgiving", and each president since has issued a Thanksgiving Day proclamation; and

WHEREAS, Thanksgiving marks the commencement of the holiday season, bringing increased expressions of love, compassion and service, and

WHEREAS, Thanksgiving has grown into one of our Nation's most honored days, a time celebrated with families and friends when we can express gratitude for our many blessings;

NOW, THEREFORE, I, MARGARET WOOD HASSAN, GOVERNOR of the state of New Hampshire, do hereby proclaim NOVEMBER 26, 2015, as THANKSGIVING DAY in the State of New Hampshire, and I encourage all residents to reflect upon the many offerings of life for which each of us, individually and collectively, can be grateful.

Given this 16th day of November, in the year of
Our Lord two thousand and fifteen, and the
independence of the United States of America,
two hundred and forty.

(signed) Maggie Hassan 
Margaret Wood Hassan
Governor


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