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Historic leaves, volume 4, April, 1905 - January, 1906, Charlestown schools without the Peninsula Revolutionary period. (search)
w owned by the city of Somerville. Mr. Russell died in 1797. His will, dated May 27, was probated June 7 of that year. Our notes on the name of Gardner are exceedingly meagre for a family of so much prominence. It seems to have started in Woburn. Richard Gardner, of that town, and his son Henry were the grandfather and father, respectively, of Henry (1698-1763), who lived at the upper end of Charlestown. His brother was the Rev. John Gardner, of Stowe. By his wife Lucy, daughter of John Fowle, he had five sons, Edward, Samuel, John, Henry, and James. Edward Gardner, born in Charlestown March, 1739, married Mehitable Blodgett, of Lexington, and died January 23, 1806. It was he whose name figures in these pages. His brother Samuel, born 1741, died at the age of fifty. He, also, as we have attempted to show, rendered valuable service to his section of the town. James, the youngest son of Henry Gardner, according to the family genealogist, graduated from Harvard College, and
wn clerk's uncle, Samuel Phipps. His wife was Elizabeth, daughter of Captain Eleazar and Ann (Foster) Phillips, a victualler and prosperous business man in Charlestown; owned wharf, slaughter house, warehouse, farms, wood lots, and negroes. Matthew Leaky was a laborer in Boston, who married a daughter of and was administrator on the estate of the widow Miriam Fosket. Ab. Bunker was Abigail, widow of Captain Benjamin Bunker, the innkeeper. She was a daughter of John and Anna (Carter) Fowle, the tanner. Jonathan Call was a baker, son of Thomas and Elizabeth (Croswell) Call. His place was near the Neck, resting on the western slope of Bunker Hill. By his wife, Sarah Boylston, he had a family of sixteen children. He was the fourth generation of Calls in Charlestown who had been bakers, as was his brother, Caleb. Joseph Frost was a native of Billerica, son of Dr. Samuel Frost. He married the widow of John Whittemore, the turner, who was a daughter of Richard Hall, of Dor
51. Fort Macomb, 50, 55, 57. Fort Macon, 32. Fort Monroe, 27. Fort Pike, 50. Fort St. Philip, 49, 50, 53. Fosdick, James, 15, 21. Fosket, Abigail, 85. Fosket, Jonathan, 85. Fosket, Meriam (Miriam), 82, 85, 87, 88. Fosket, Thomas, 85. Fowle, Anna (Carter), 89. Fowle, John, 20, 89. Foxcroft, Francis. 78, Francis, Nathaniel, 21. Francis, Nicholas, 14. Franklin Street. Somerville, 71. French Revolution, 42. Frost, Joseph, 85, 87, 89. Frost, Dr., Samuel, 89. Frothingham, Fowle, John, 20, 89. Foxcroft, Francis. 78, Francis, Nathaniel, 21. Francis, Nicholas, 14. Franklin Street. Somerville, 71. French Revolution, 42. Frost, Joseph, 85, 87, 89. Frost, Dr., Samuel, 89. Frothingham, Captain, Benjamin. 41. Frothingham, James K., 74, 90, 91, 92, 94, 96. Frothingham, Joseph, 82, 85. Frothingham; Miss Mary. 91. Frothingham, Nathaniel, 82, 85. Frothingham, Captain, Richard, 45. Frying-pan Shoals, 31, 35. Fuller, Mr., 67, 68. Gage, General, 86. Galley, Augustus (ship), 87. Gardner, Edward, 17, 18, 20, 22. Gardner, Henry, 18, 20. Gardner, James, 18, 20. Gardner, John, 20. Gardner, Rev., John, 20. Gardner, Lucy, 20. Gardner, Richard, 20. Gardner Row School,