Browsing named entities in Historic leaves, volume 6, April, 1907 - January, 1908. You can also browse the collection for Andrew or search for Andrew in all documents.

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Historic leaves, volume 6, April, 1907 - January, 1908, Company E, 39th Massachusetts Infantry, in the Civil War.—(Ii.) (search)
teen miles, at Morrisville. The next day we had an all day's march, sixteen or seventeen miles, and halted at night four miles from the railroad station. November 9, at 5 p. m., we marched for Licking Run, about fifteen miles away, and reached there late at night, in the midst of a snowstorm. About an inch of snow was on the ground. The men were pretty well demoralized and, to put it mildly, there was considerable grumbling. My commission as second lieutenant, Company H. signed by Governor Andrew, and dated October 20, reached me the next day. November 10. I stopped grumbling. November 23. We marched from 7.30 a. m. to 11 p. m., arriving at Rappahannock Station. (The orders for all this marching and counter-marching were issued by General Meade to the corps commanders.) We remained here until November 26, when we crossed the Rappahannock at 8 a. m. By 6.30 p. m. we had crossed the Rapidan, also, thus traversing the peninsula between the two rivers on our way eastward
Historic leaves, volume 6, April, 1907 - January, 1908, Original English inhabitants and early settlers in Somerville.—(Ii.) (search)
If there are more, they are unknown to me. Caleb Crosswell, 1700, son of Thomas, had possessions on both sides of the Road to Cambridge, and probably lived there. His four sons did not live in Somerville. They were Thomas, who was a barber; Andrew, a gentleman; Benjamin, a saddler; and Joseph, a wig-maker and clergyman. A diversity of occupations, surely. Jean, or John, Mallet, about 1703, of Powder House fame, may have lived in Somerville, as he had ten acres of land here. He had four or five sons and two daughters. His son Andrew had a house and ten acres of land east of Winter Hill. The family became extinct in this vicinity in the fourth generation. Peter Tufts, about 1727, son of John, was of the third generation of the Peter Tufts family of Malden, and lived at Milk Row. The descendants in Somerville of the senior Peter Tufts and his wife, Mary Pierce, the progenitors of the family on this side of the Atlantic, are through their sons James and John and daughter E
Index Adams, Henry, 7. Adams, John, 52. Adams, Joseph, 50, 52, 53. Adams, Major, Joseph, 52. Adams, Rebecca, 50. Adams, Sanford, 6, 14. Alewife Brook, 26, 53. Allen, Alfred, 55. Allen, Benjamin F., 12. Allen, Hiram, 11, 34. Allen, Hiram, Jr., 11. Allen, Lucy, 11. Allen, Margaret, 11. Alsop's Farm, 56, 57. Alston Street, 9. American Flag, The First, 81. American Navy, The, 84. Amesbury, Mass., 1. Anderson, 56. Andersonville Prison, 22. Andrew, Governor, 43. Antietam Bridge, 20. Arlington, D. C., 18. Arlington, Mass., 26. Armory, The, 81. Army of the Potomac, 44, 56. Arnold, J. Frank, 8. Arnold, Leonard, 8, 10. Arnold, William J., 56. Associated Charities, 75. Austin, Richard, 29. Avery, Mathew, 30. Ayer, John F., 74, 76. Ayer, William, 28. Bachelder, Abigail, 29. Bachelder, William, 29. Baker, Rev., Charles, 39. Baker, William, 30. Baker, William A., 18. Baltimore, Md., 77. Banks, Governor, 38. Banks, Hon. N. P., Jr., 42. B