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Medford Historical Society Papers, Volume 29., Medford Historical Society. (search)
Mann. Charles H. Loomis. Committees. Publication. Joseph C. Miller, Jr. Miss Katharine H. Stone. Moses W. Mann. Papers and Addresses. Mrs. Ruth D. Coolidge. Charles T. Daly. Miss Lily B. Atherton. Hall Gleason. Edward T. Bigelow. Membership. The Entire Membership. Library. Moses W. Mann. Charles T. Daly. Hon. William Cushing Wait. Historic Sites. Miss Ella L. Burbank. will C. Eddy. Moses W. Mann. Samuel C. L. Haskell. Genealogy. Miss Elizabeth R. Carty. Henry E. Scott. Mrs. John H. Googins. Heraldry. Dr. Charles M. Green. Charles B. Dunham. John Albree. House. Melvin W. Pierce. Frank B. Blodgett. Albert W. Ellis. Andrew F. Curtin. By-Laws. Joseph C. Miller, Jr. Miss Elizabeth R. Carty. Hall Gleason. Membership list. March, 1926. John Albree, Swampscott. Miss Lily B. Atherton. Life MemberHon. Charles S. Baxter. Frederick N. Beals. Walter H. Belcher. Life MemberEdward T. Bigel
Medford Historical Society Papers, Volume 29., The Cradock house, past and future. (search)
n as it does today, apparently, for Captain Peter brought up a family of seven sons and seven daughters in the Cradock house, but this family was well to do and Captain Peter was captain of the military company and for thirteen year's Medfords first representative lo the General Court. At all events, father or son built the new brick house, and Captain Peter was probably the first to dwell in it, somewhere between 1677 and 1680. I like to think that perhaps he took there his first bride, Elizabeth, in 1670, and that there was born in 1676 Anna, the first birth recorded on the extant Medford records. At all events, it must have been standing ready for his high-born second wife, Mary Cotton, who came in 1684 to him with the blood of two New Hampshire governors and a poetess in her veins, for she was granddaughter of Ann Dudley, the poetess. Her father had the splendid name of the Reverend Seaborn Cotton, and belonged undoubtedly to that distinguished family of ministers. The first