Chapter 51 of 51 · 10554 words · ~53 min read

CHAPTER XXXXIX

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The habits of our people in the use of tobacco have been somewhat changeable. The use outside of medicine and surgery has been confined to smoking, chewing, snuffing and dipping. The last is practiced by applying moistened snuff with a brush to the gums, and has never been resorted to in New England to any considerable extent. I am inclined to think that it has been chiefly confined to the poor whites in the South. Snuff taking is a habit introduced into New England at a comparatively recent period, and of course was unknown to the aborigines. Its use had, however, a rapid growth, when once introduced, and in my youth was common among our people of both sexes, though I am inclined to think more so among women than men. In every grocery store there always stood on the counter two jars of snuff, and this fact alone shows its extensive use. I cannot recall more than thirty persons who were in the habit of carrying snuff boxes, and these did not belong to any special class or occupation. I remember that during the sessions of the Supreme and Common Pleas Courts an open box of snuff always lay on the clerk’s desk, and was frequently visited by the members of the bar, as well as by the judges on the bench.

It is said that of all the tobacco habits that of snuff taking is the most difficult to abandon. The story is told of Charles Lamb and Thomas Hone, both inveterate snuffers, walking one day on Hamstead Heath, and coming to the resolution to give up the habit, threw their snuff boxes away. The next morning Lamb visited the Heath to recover his box, and there encountered Hone hunting in the shrubbery for his.

The practice of smoking is ancient. While the use of cigars in England and the United States cannot be traced to a period earlier than 1700, pipes were used by the aborigines, and have been found in the ancient mounds of the West. Whether tobacco was smoked before the days of the Pilgrims, so far as New England was concerned, is doubtful, while at an earlier period the natives of the South and West undoubtedly both used and cultivated it. It is certain that as late as King Phillip’s War in 1676, the New England Indian, while smoking tobacco when he could get it, used various substitutes. On this point we have the testimony of Mrs. Rowlandson, the wife of the minister of Lancaster, Mass., who was captured by the Indians and confined in the Camp of King Phillip. When a messenger was sent to King Phillip to negotiate for her release, she sent back word asking her husband to send her some tobacco for Phillip. She stated in a later narrative that when she saw Phillip, “he bade me come in and sit down, and asked me whether I would smoke it, but this no way suited me. For though I had formerly used tobacco, yet I had left it ever since I was first taken. It seems to be a bait the devil lays to make men loose their precious time. I remember with shame how formerly when I had taken two or three pipes I was presently ready for another, such a bewitching ‘thing’ it is, but I thank God he has now given me power over it; surely there are many who may be better employed than to lie sucking a stinking ‘tobacco pipe.’” She further said that the Indians for want of tobacco smoked hemlock and ground ivy. From the above statement it will be seen that smoking was common to both sexes. The laws, however, from a very early period, were rigid in their provisions against smoking in public places. In 1638 the General Court ordered “that no man shall take any tobacco within twenty poles of any house, or so near as may endanger the same.” One of the latest statutes on the subject was passed in 1798, which “forbade carrying fire through the streets, except in a covered vessel, as well as smoking or having in one’s possession any lighted pipe or cigar in the streets or on the wharves.” This law remained in force many years. In 1835 a by-law was adopted by the town of Plymouth, which I believe has never been repealed, forbidding smoking in any street, lane, public square or wharf within the town. I do not remember to have seen in all my boyhood any person smoking about the streets, or at his work. No ship carpenter in his yard, no rigger on the mast, no blacksmith at the forge, no digger in the garden or street, ever held a pipe in his mouth, wasting the time of his employer, in cutting tobacco, and filling his pipe. It was not because the practice was an expensive one, but because the fashion of the day was opposed to it. The mechanic and the farmer smoked in a leisure hour, or after his meal, but no woman was seen at home or in the field, or anywhere else smoking at all. Doctors and lawyers smoked occasionally in their offices, business men rarely behind their counters, while a minister who used tobacco in any form was unknown. In later years, however, smoking has become a frequent practice among the clergy, but so far as my observation has gone, chiefly among those of the Episcopalian and Unitarian denominations. I once detected in the cheek of an eminent divine a suspicious swelling, and when I spoke of it, he said that it was his invariable habit to preach with a cud of tobacco in his mouth. Since the early days of which I speak, pipe smoking has largely taken the place of cigar smoking, and the use of both cigars and pipes has found its way into times and places where forty years ago it would not have been tolerated. Several causes have contributed to this change. In the first place cigars were much cheaper in 1840 and 1850, and their higher cost has led to the more economical use of the pipe. When I began to smoke in 1838, Havana cigars sold at retail at five dollars a quarter box of two hundred and fifty. The same cigars today would cost twenty dollars. In the second place the coming in of foreigners largely increased the use of the pipe, and lastly the Civil War taught the use of the pipe to soldiers in the camp, who under normal conditions would not have taken it up. Now we are seeing, to say nothing of smelling, either the cigar or the pipe everywhere, in the street, in the office, in court houses, in the state house, between the lips of the mechanic at his work, the provision dealer on his cart, and indeed almost in every place except the pulpit and school, from which it is a matter of congratulation that they are yet excluded. Being a smoker myself, I cannot be charged with prejudice when I express the opinion that this excessive and ill-timed use of tobacco not only violates rules of good taste and propriety, but is well nigh a nuisance.

The habit of using tooth picks is of recent origin. In Boston on any day between twelve and two o’clock, nearly every third woman met in the vicinity of Winter and West streets, has a tooth pick between her lips. This practice is made more vulgar when at table the hand is held over the mouth, for thus its vulgarity is acknowledged by those who persist in it.

The changing fashions in dress have been so constant that it is futile to attempt to trace them. The greatest change in the United States occurred at the close of the revolution, when what was called republican simplicity took the place of the dress which characterized the first three-quarters of the 18th century of which such fine illustrations may be found in the works of Smybert, Blackburn and Copley. There is something absurd about this so-called republican simplicity, which compels a representative of our government to appear at foreign courts in the garb of an American citizen, while he has his residence in one of the most lordly houses in London, and makes it the vogue for a bridegroom to appear at his wedding with nothing but the color of his skin to distinguish him from the colored waiter, while he sets up a livery and hunts through Herald’s college for a coat of arms to have painted on the door of his carriage. I am inclined to think that a false pride in the supposed possession of aristocratic blood has more to do with the formation of so-called patriotic societies than a true patriotic spirit.

In speaking of dress let me begin with the young. In my school days I wore a blue jacket with brass buttons and a stiff linen collar buttoned to it on the inside, and turned over the collar of the jacket. I never wore an overcoat, or even owned one, and when I entered college, the first thing I did was to go to John Earle, the tailor, and get measured for a long tail broadcloth coat, and buy a camlet cloak. The frock coat was unknown, and the cloak was indispensable in attending prayers when hastily jumping out of bed I hurried to chapel often with nothing under it but a night gown and trousers and boots. During the summer months many boys went barefooted, not on account of poverty, but simply for economy. A writer in the _Old Colony Memorial_ in 1837 misrepresented this custom in the statement that “old men had a great coat and a pair of boots, the boots generally lasting for life. Shoes and stockings were not worn by the young men, and by but few men in farming business, and young women in their ordinary work did not wear stockings and shoes.” I suppose that during the school season there are fewer barefooted boys then formerly, but at other times I do not think that there has been any change as to footwear. As to overcoats I have known many persons who went without them from preference in the coldest weather. Nathaniel Ingersoll Bowditch of Boston never wore one, and my old schoolmate, George Sampson, the late proprietor of the Boston directory, never did. I met the latter one afternoon in Boston when the thermometer was about zero, and I said, “George, I suspect that on such a day as this you wear a thicker undershirt?” To my surprise he said that he had never worn an undershirt in his life. I propose in speaking of dress to confine myself to those articles worn at various times which would strike the present generation as strange. About the year 1840, gentlemen’s boots were two inches longer than the foot, and turned up like the dasher of a sleigh. At about the same time, or a little earlier, trousers skin tight, put on necessarily with the boots already in them, were worn, and then immediately after loose trousers with plaits. For many years after the revolution, and continuing into my own days, the woolen cloths, of which dresses were made, were often spun and woven at home. During the 18th century in the small towns and country districts, nearly every family made a coarse cloth called lindsy-woolsy, with the warp of linen and the woof of wool. It is a mistake to suppose that in the earliest colonial times spinning wheels were much used until fulling mills were built in the last half of the 17th century, and it is not probable that Priscilla Alden ever used one until she was forty years of age. The small wheels known as flax wheels were first brought to Boston by the Scotch Irish in the first quarter of the 18th century. Of all articles of dress there is none in my opinion which so unerringly stamps the lady as a neat, tidy footgear. I say it with fear and trembling, but here goes, there must also be a white stocking. The contour of the foot is destroyed by a shoe, especially one without a heel, and the outlines of the ankle and limb are lost on any other color than white. The hat comes next, not set on the head like a liberty cap on a pole, but one whether large or small, as much belonging to the figure as the lily to its stem. Then comes the glove, never white in the street, a well fitting dress, not necessarily of expensive material, and withall as few ornaments as possible, and you have so far as flesh and blood are concerned, a faultless woman. A eulogist of the late Susan B. Anthony, herself a noble woman, said that she never was afraid to see her friend mount a table or platform to speak, because she knew that her boots and stockings were immaculate.

Ear-rings, concerning which I find many interesting items in the work of Alice Morse Earle on costumes, have come down to us from a period as early as the 16th century. They were, however, in their early days, worn by men more than by women, and in many cases only in one ear. Charles the First, on going to execution, wore a pearl pear shaped ear-ring, about five-eighths of an inch long, which is now owned by the Duke of Portland; and Shakespeare and Sir Walter Raleigh wore them. In my youth their use among women was almost universal, and I can recall many men who wore plain gold rings, and every young lady on leaving school had her ears bored as a matter of course.

Among the bonnets at various times in fashion I shall refer alone to the poke bonnet because its etymology is a little confused. This bonnet had plaits around its crown and sides. One of the many definitions of the word poke given in the Century dictionary, which no library is complete without, is, “to poke plaits in a ruff,” and I have no doubt that “poke bonnet” meant merely a bonnet with plaits poked in the ruff. I must omit the scarlet cloak with its black silk quilted hood, worn by elderly women in my youth, the busks worn in the corsets, made of whalebone, steel or wood, the bustles below the waist behind, the quilted mandarins for cold weather, the India shawls now packed away in cedar closets awaiting their return in the revolving wheel of fashion, turbans, lace caps, night caps, hoops and other female paraphernalia, forming a sea without a shore, and speak lastly of pattens, which in my early boyhood were giving place to the overshoe and rubbers.

I remember a pair of pattens in an old closet where they had been consigned to an undeserved exile after many centuries of faithful service. The patten consisted of a wooden stock like the stock of a skate, with an oval iron ring attached to its under side, and with toe and heel pieces fastened by straps to the foot and ankle, its purpose being to protect the foot from mud and slush. It can be traced back to the 14th century, when it was called the galoe-shoe or galoshe. After its introduction into France, where it was called patin, the English galoshe became patten, but as if to revenge itself against the usurper, it has had a resurrection, and now lives in its legitimate successor, the galoshe of the present day.

I shall devote a portion of this chapter to a mention of those words and phrases which have made their appearance at various times, and have become incorporated for a longer or shorter time in the language of our people. Only a few of these are peculiar to Plymouth. Some have come down to us from our English ancestors, some owe their origin to the different languages of continental Europe, some are slang, which have found their way through unknown channels into the speech of men, and a few through ignorance of orthography have found a place in colloquial use. My reference to these must be restricted by necessarily limited space.

Some of my readers may be surprised at the number of words and names which have come to us from foreign tongues, and have made themselves as much at home as if they were to the manor born. We have the word wharf from the Swedish hworf, and the word dock from the Gothic dok, lane from the Dutch laan, alley from the French allee, derived from the verb aller, to go. The verb tedder meaning to ted or spread hay was introduced by the Irish when they began to work on our farms. Fishermen in Gloucester, Provincetown and Plymouth and other places, after drying codfish on flakes, yaffle them up and carry them into the fish house. The word yaffle is old English, and means an armful and the word stadle is the Scotch stathel, and means the stakes driven into a salt meadow, on which salt hay is to be piled. Scuttle comes from the French escoutelle, and the word kench, which means the bin in which salt codfish are piled, is old English. The word kid not only stands for an animal, but is also the name of the square bin on the deck of a fishing vessel by the side of each fisherman, in which he throws his fish. Sailors got into the way of calling any box without a cover a kid. I remember a story told by my mother when I was a boy of her going to church and finding a strange man in her pew, who jumped over the rail into the next pew, saying, I beg your pardon, Madam, I got into the wrong kid. The word coverlid, often called coverlet, is French derived from the French word couvrelit, cover bed. The word sass applied to vegetables, and also meaning impudence, is not as many suppose, a Yankee slang word, but has an English origin, and is still used in the county of Essex, in England. The word cabbage, as applied to the vegetable, came from Holland, and was introduced into England by Sir Anthony Ashley. He was accused of securing much loot, while holding a command in Spain, and he was so closely associated with the vegetable in the public mind, that on his monument at Wimbourne the head of a cabbage was sculptured, and in consequence of his looting the word became applied to looting in general, and finally to the odds and ends saved by tailors in their trade. The word arter, for after, came down to us from England, and if I remember right, was used by Governor Bradford in his history. The word fetch is an old Saxon word, used by Bacon, Shakespeare and many other old writers, and is worthy of respect, and continued use, though at present excluded from elegant speech. The word fetching expressing attractiveness in beauty or dress is a comparatively recent half slang innovation. The origin of the word contraptions, meaning new notions, I do not know, but I have heard it many times in my day. Arey or airey came from England, where it was sometimes called arrow or narrow. Hearth in two syllables, with emphasis on the e is a word I have never heard out of Plymouth. As long as I can remember it has been used by the deer hunters in Plymouth woods. Once Branch Pierce, the famous hunter, put Daniel Webster on a stand, and later in the day called out to him that the dogs had been out of hearth an hour, and that the hunt was up. The word dike as applied to a sloping grassy bank or terrace, is universal in Plymouth, and as far as I know, never used in that sense anywhere except in Plymouth, and its vicinity. Crojeck or crotchet, is a common corruption of cross jack in Plymouth and elsewhere as applied to the lower yard on the mizzen mast of a ship. Chimley for chimney, has been common in Scotland, and may be found in Scott’s Rob Roy. In the United States it is usually spelled chimbley, but it is rarely heard in Plymouth.

James Russell Lowell has these lines:

“Ag’in the chimbley crooknecks hung, An’ in amongs ’em, rusted, The ole queen’s arm that granther Young Fetched back from Concord, busted.”

Sun-up for sunrise, I do not remember to have heard in Plymouth more than once, but I have heard it often in other Plymouth county towns. As the opposite of sun-down, which is English, it seems as correct as sunset or sunrise, and may be properly used. Bile is often used for boil, and has been thought by some of the best writers to be more correct. It is, however, going out of use. Brewis is an English word meaning bread covered with broth, but when introduced into New England, it was applied to rye and Indian crusts boiled with milk and butter.

The word sleigh comes from the Dutch sluy; squash came down from the aborigines, by whom it was called estata, or vine apple; carrots came from Holland, and some growing wild bore a flower which the English called Queen Anne’s lace. The cochroach was the Dutch kackenlack; potatoes, which have been said to have been introduced by the Irish, were raised by the Dutch in New York as early as 1654, and were called pataddes. It is not unlikely that as they were called Irish potatoes, the slang word paddies applied to the Irish, came from pataddes.

The word “certain” a few years ago came into use in answer to certain questions as for instance—are you going to Boston tomorrow? “Certain;” but it seems to have given place to the word “sure.” For a time, “you bet,” was used in the same way, as for instance to the statement, “that was a good dinner,” the answer was, “you bet.” Chores probably comes from the old English “char,” as does also the word “charwomen.” The word cow pronounced kyou, has been said to be peculiar to New England country towns, but there can be no greater mistake, for I have heard it so pronounced by natives of South Carolina, and it is so pronounced today in the shires of Essex and Sussex, in England. Fornent or fornenst was originally a Scotch word meaning opposite to, as for instance his house was fornent the church. It was carried to Ireland, and by the Irish introduced here. I heard it for the first time about 1854. “Gab,” now common, was used by Chaucer as we use it. The English laugh at the word “guess,” and call it a vulgar Americanism, but it was used by Locke, Milton and Chaucer.

“Her yellow hair was braided in a tress, Behind her back a yard long I guess.”

“Poke” in one of its many meanings is a pocket or bag, as in the words, to buy a pig in a poke, that is without seeing it. “Streak it,” to run fast, was heard by me for the first time when hunting in the Plymouth woods. Branch Pierce, the hunter, after placing his party on their stands would take his son Tom and take short cuts through the woods to head off the deer. When a good chance occurred the old man could be heard calling out, Streak it, Tommy. There was another Thomas Pierce living in the neighborhood, so in order to distinguish them one was called Squire Tom, and the other Streak it Tommy. I have never heard the word “seen” in the sense of saw in Plymouth, but I have heard it frequently in Boston among Englishmen and immigrants from the Dominion. Muckrakes is a word recently rescued from oblivion, but with a wrong understanding of its meaning. According to Professor DeVere, now or late Professor of modern languages in the University of Virginia, and author of “Studies in English” muckrakes are those who rake for the purpose of finding something valuable and worthy of preservation. Rag pickers are in one sense muckrakes. There are two offensive words which have recently found a lodgement in our vocabulary, chiefly, however, among inexperienced writers. One of these words, “one,” taken out of its legitimate meaning, seems to be due either to a lack of taste or to a mistaken notion that it is elegant. The following sentence explains what I mean. “When one writes a letter one must be careful how one expresses oneself, lest one finds that one makes a mistake in using too many ones.” The other is the word “gotten,” which to me always suggests a writer who fancies himself an accurate scholar, and would call aisle of a church “oil,” and one of its pillars, a “pillow.” There are two other words not offensive, but objectionable, which I find constantly in new novels, “peering,” for looking, and “perturbed” for disturbed, or agitated, or “annoyed.” As for instance “in peering out of the window I was perturbed by an unusual sight.”

The use of exaggerations and superlatives is every day becoming more common. Newspaper reporters and associated press men are responsible for many of these. With them it never rains, but it pours, every snow spit is a blizzard, every fresh breeze a gale, every gale a hurricane, every wave is mountain high, every collision is a crash, and every crowd a surging mob. New newspaper words are constantly creeping into our vocabulary. Among the most recent are “defi” for “defiance,” and “confer” for “conference.” There is another class of words and phrases having their origin in athletics and games of various kinds, which are constantly found in the newspapers, and even in congressional and other speeches. “Stand pat,” “win out,” “flush,” and “full deck” are some of those which are unworthy of the press or the speech of a legislator. There is still another class quite frequently used which are really nothing but veiled oaths with the spirit if not the letter of profanity behind them. Among them are by-jingo, land-sakes, by-George, by-gum, by-thunder, good-gracious, dern it, thunder and Mars, heavens and earth, all fired for hell fired, gol darn it, darnation, Lord-a-mussy, mercy sakes alive, great Scott, by the eternal, and lastly, tarnation, as in the lines of John Noakes and May Styles:

“Poor honest John ’tis plain he knows But little of life’s range. Or he’d a know’d gals oft at fust Have ways tarnation strange.”

In the above selections of words and phrases I have of course omitted a large number, the origin and etomology of which it would be interesting to trace. I must, however, in order to finish my memories in this chapter, proceed to the record of streets laid out since 1825, as proposed in the beginning of the chapter.

LeBaron alley, leading from Leyden street to Middle street, was laid out as a townway Sept. 7 and 10, 1832.

The way around Cole’s Hill from Leyden street was laid out Nov. 27, 1827, and May 14, 1829.

Pleasant street was laid out and altered at various times, June 5, 1820, May 12, 1825, Nov. 5, 1845, March 25, 1867, and January 4, 1887.

Russell street was laid out April 20, 1833.

Union street was laid out August 4, 1841, and Nov. 5, 1865.

Samoset street was laid out from Court street to the South Meadow Road, Dec. 8, 1854.

Cedarville Road was laid out Nov. 15, 1855.

The Manomet House Road was laid out September 23, 1851.

The way from Harvey Bartlett’s to the Pine Hills was laid out July 13, 1848.

Warren Avenue was laid out Nov. 5, 1849, and August, 1850.

Robinson street was laid out April 6, 1859 and September 10, 1859.

Road from Chiltonville to the Manomet Road was laid out July 9, 1851, and April 9, 1866.

Cushman street was laid out Oct. 4, 1856.

Allerton street in part was laid out Oct. 4, 1856.

Allerton street in part was laid out March 26, 1877.

Chilton street was laid out April 3, 1882.

Cedar Village Road was laid out January 4, 1876.

Bradford street was laid out Sept. 10, 1859.

Cliff street was laid out March 20, 1876.

Oak street was laid out March 9, 1874, and March 1, 1875.

Davis street was laid out January 3, 1882.

Federal Road was laid out January 5, 1869.

Franklin street was laid out April 6, 1857, and July 6, 1865.

Fremont street was laid out Sept. 10, 1859.

Fremont street was extended June 22, 1895.

North Green street was laid out Oct. 4, 1856.

High street was widened June 24, 1870.

Corner of Court and North streets was laid out in 1892.

Main street was widened Aug. 3, 1886.

Jefferson street was laid out June 25, 1870.

Lothrop Place, laid out September 10, 1859, and Oct. 14, 1872.

Rocky Hill Road was laid out January 6, 1874.

Court Square, south side, laid out April 6, 1857.

South Russell street was laid out January 7, 1868.

Sagamore street was laid out June 25, 1870.

Street from Court street at Seaside to the railroad, was laid out January 6, 1874.

Sandy Gutter street laid out Oct. 21, 1871.

Stafford street laid out June 17, 1882.

Road from Manomet to Sandwich, January 2, 1872.

Road from Manomet to Fresh Pond, January 6, 1874.

Manomet Road, south of the bridge, February 7, 1857.

Manomet Road at the dam, January 1, 1884.

Market street, widened from the bake house, south, December 31, 1873.

Market street, widened at the corner of Leyden street, November 5, 1883.

Market street, widened at Spring Hill, January 1, 1890.

Massasoit street, laid out June 25, 1870.

Mayflower street, laid out April 6, 1857, and Sept. 10, 1859.

Mt. Pleasant street, laid out April 6, 1857.

Water street, extended April 4, 1881, Dec. 9, 1893, and June 22, 1895.

Thomas alley, discontinued March 28, 1885.

Waverly street, laid out October 4, 1856.

White Horse Road, laid out March 5, 1883.

Whiting street, laid out March 28, 1885.

Willard Place, laid out March 2, 1863.

Winslow street (Ocean Place), laid out April 3, 1882.

Spooner street at Seaside, laid out March 6, 1893.

Standish Avenue, laid out April 14, 1896, and March 6, 1899.

Vallerville road, laid out January 3, 1893, and March 19, 1901.

Washington street, laid out July 6, 1865.

Forest avenue, laid out February 20, 1904.

Billington street, laid out August 12, 1902.

Pump station Road, laid out August 12, 1902.

Road from Russell Mills to Long Pond Road, was laid out March 14, 1898.

Sever street was laid out January 26, 1901.

South Park Avenue, laid out January 26, 1901.

Clyfton street was laid out September 27, 1890.

Carver street was laid out March 28, 1854, February 12, 1884, and February 10, 1885.

Centre Hill Pond road was laid out August 6, 1895.

Cherry street was laid out March 6, 1899.

Alden street was laid out March 9, 1891, and April 6, 1891.

Atlantic street was laid out April 6, 1891.

Bartlett street was laid out March 13, 1886.

Brewster street was laid out December 1, 1884.

N. Wood & Co. Factory road at Chiltonville was laid out April 9, 1866.

Darby station entrance was laid out March 6, 1893.

Hall town road was laid out December 9, 1893.

Hamilton street was laid out June 5, 1897.

Highland Place was laid out April 2, 1888.

Howes Lane was laid out March 9, 1891, and March 7, 1892.

Leyden and Water street corner was widened March 9, 1891.

Lincoln street was laid out March 9, 1891.

Murray street was laid out March 5, 1883, and March 3, 1902.

Bay View avenue was laid out March 3, 1902.

Road from Manomet to Vallerville was laid out March 19, 1901.

Nelson street was laid out January 6, 1896.

Newfields street was laid out July 1, 1890, February 23, 1901.

Middle street was widened March 6, 1899.

Towns street was laid out February 10, 1906.

Main street was widened at the corner of Town Square, March 12, 1906.

Russell street was widened from Court street to the Registry, December 1, 1905.

Town Square was widened at corner of Main street, November 1, 1905.

Here, my readers, these memories must close. Any pleasure which you may have received in reading them has been more than equalled by my own in writing them. They present a meagre record of the memories of a long life whose beginning and end are mysteries.

Helpless I lay upon the shore Of a world unknown to me; How, I wonder, came I o’er The dark mysterious sea.

Tell me, oh tell me, whence I came; Is there another shore? This sun, these skies, are they the same That I have seen before?

Now, life’s journey nearly o’er, The land beyond the sea, As when I lay upon the shore, Is still unknown to me.

Another shore before me lies, Bounding another sea; May I there find the sun and skies Before unknown to me.

Errata and Addenda

On page 26, 3rd line, “Contry” should be “country.”

On page 28, 7th line, celebration of 1794 was private.

On page 41, “Hollinguer” should be “Hottinger.”

On page 109, 11th line, “to” should be “so.”

On page 233, 17th line, “Davee” should be “Davie.”

On page 238, 17th line, “Longwood” should be “La Grange.”

On page 319, 17th line, “Wooster” should be “Worcester.”

On page 330, 25th line, “Nathan” should be “Nathaniel.”

On page 399, 10th line from bottom, “Tuesday” should be “Monday.”

* * * * *

To the blacksmiths on page 52, are to be added Nathan Delano and Moses Nichols. Mr. Delano lived on Middle street, and had his shop in the brick basement of the house, which once stood on Cole’s Hill, with its rear on the way leading from Middle street to Water street.

Mr. Nichols came to Plymouth from Freetown, and building a shop in Chiltonville on the southwest corner of the Russell Mills road, worked on a vessel building on Eel River, a little below the Hayden factory. He later built a shop where the George Fuller shop now stands, and lived in the house in Wellingsley, lately occupied by John Bartlett. Still later he built a shop in what is now called Dublin, and built and occupied the house on the upper corner of Summer and Edes streets, where he died about 1809. After his death, his son Otis Nichols, born in the Bartlett house, occupied the Summer street house until he moved to Manomet, and established the farm now owned and occupied by his son Otis.

Among the whaling vessels mentioned on page 64, was the schooner Mercury. She sailed Nov. 12, 1842, and on the 2d of May, 1843, capsized in a gale, and Wm. H. Godfrey, Henry Missard, George L. Jones, Wm. Pierce and Wm. Hatch were lost. The remainder of the crew, consisting of John Winslow of Provincetown, Thomas D. Barnes, Lemuel Hall, Wm. H. Carver, Richard Pierce and Isaac Cole of Plymouth, and Robert Gardner and George Williams were taken off. When the vessel capsized Richard Pierce was in the cabin, and was taken out with a broken leg through a hole cut in the deck. I remember him well a cripple through life.

INDEX

Adams, George, 148

Adams, George, family, 149

Adams, Thomas, 148

Adams, John Quincy, 294

Adams and Liberty, 475

Adulterations, 487

Alderman and Gooding, 152

Alexander, Wm. B., 408

Allen & S. D. Ballard, 195

Alleys, 441

Allyne, Joseph, 113

Allyne house, 112

Anasthesia, 274

Ancient legend, 270

Ancient papers, 262

Andrew, John A., 389

Annapolis, 393

Antietam, 410

Anti-masons, 263

Anti-slavery, 241

Anti-slavery rooms, 180

Anti-slavery Society, 332

Apples, 486, 493

Appointments to office, 407

Aqueduct, 182

Aqueduct water, 114

Arctic (steamship), 285

Armories, 453

Articles of food, 485

Artillery Company, 453

Ashore on Hog Island, 398

Atwood, Anthony, 32

Atwood, Wm., 54

Author’s house, 281

Author’s trip to Washington, 398

Avery, Joseph, 181

Bachelder, John, 312

Back bay land, 444

Baked beans, 19

Balm of Gilead, 511

Bananas, 509

Bancroft, Elizabeth, 133

Bank robbery, 232

Banks, 404

Baptist Church, 124, 127

Barbers, 515

Barbers’ pole, 516

Barbers’ shops, 149

Bark Charles Bartlett, 96

Bark Espindola, 41

Bark Fortune, 61

Bark Griffin, 40

Bark Truman, 40

Bark Iconium, 42

Bark Mary and Martha, 63

Bark Triton, 63

Barks in Plymouth, 44

Barnes, John C., 57

Barnes, Levi, 34

Barnes, Southworth, 18, 179

Barnes’ wharf, 34

Baron of beef, 364

Barrett, John, 62

Barrett, Wm., 62

Barron, James, 405

Bartlett, Andrew, 296

Bartlett, Elkanah, 33

Bartlett, Isaac, 140

Bartlett, James, 22, 32, 65, 116, 121

Bartlett, James, Jr., 60, 64

Bartlett, John, 155, 199, 200

Bartlett, Joseph, 199

Bartlett, Robert, 140, 342

Bartlett, Truman family, 295

Bartlett, Wm., 101, 197, 199

Bartlett, Wm. S., 148

Bartlett, Zacheus family, 181

Bates, Clement, 143, 260

Bates, John Blaney, 16

Bates, Ozen, 62

Baths, 487

Battle of Fredericksburg, 416

Baxter, Geo. L., 344

Beards, 515

Bedsteads, 514

Beech tree, 512

Bees of various kinds, 489

Bell ringing, 448

Bells, 339

Bennett, John C., 312

Big Bethel, 401

Billings, Hammatt, 27

Binding twine, 240

Birch, 513

Birth place of author, 16, 281

Bishop Cheverus, 433

Bishop, Wm., 178

Bishop, Eastburn, 451

Blacksmiths, 52

Black walnut, 471

Black and White Club, 187

Blagden, George W., 361

Blair, Frank P., Jr., 375

Bliss, Alexander, 134

Bliss, Leonard, 341

Blockmakers, 52

Boat harbor, 110

Bonnets, 522

Bootblacks, 449

Boots, 144, 521

Boston, 440, 454

Boston bridges, 443

Boston common, 510

Boston harbor, 463

Boston marine, 462

Boston Neck, 443

Boston shipping, 464

Boston ships, 462

Boston streets, 442

Boston theatres, 455

Boston wharves, 462

Bouncing betts, 282

Boutelle, Ann, 172

Bowling, 206

Boys’ dress, 520

Boys’ Military Company, 152

Bradford, George P., 147

Bradford, John H., 124

Bradford, Lemuel, 234

Bradford’s tavern, 124

Bramhall, Charles, 35

Bramhall, Wm., 35

Breckinridge, W. C. P., 383

Brewer, Francis B., 311

Brewster, Elder, 325

Brewster, Isaac, 32

Brewster, Wm. W., 65

Brig Emerald, 297

Brig George Little, 224

Brig Hannah, 140

Brig Hope, 82

Brig James Monroe, 64

Brig John R. Rhodes, 222

Brig Regulator, 220

Brig Sally Ann, 219

Brig Yeoman, 63

Brigs in Plymouth, 44

Briggs, George W., 318

Brigham, Antipas, 139

Brigham, Peter B., 457

Brighton, Artillery, 460

Brook farm, 307

Brown, Joseph P., 299

Brown, Lemuel, 299

Brown, Wm., 145

Bryant, Danville, 13, 158

Bryant’s tavern, 13

Buckingham, Jos. T., 465

Buckingham, Wm. A., 374

Buggies, 206, 437

Bunch of Grapes, 181

Burglar alarms, 231

Burgoyne, General, 122

Burial Hill, 324

Burlingame, Anson, 374

Burton, Charles, 344

Busks, 160

Butler, B. F., 399

Button pears, 186

Buttonwood, 511

Cabbage, 524

Cabs, 437

California emigration, 102

Call to arms, 390

Calls for men, 417

Cambria ashore, 463

Camp Hospitals, 412

Canal trip, 467

Candles, 481

Canopy, 27

Capen, Robert, 310

Captains, 50

Carlyle, Thomas, 135

Carriage fares, 440

Carriages, 436

Carriole, 437

Carver’s wharf, 33

Casco yacht, 108

Catholic church, 433

Celebration, 1820, 357, 359

Celebration of 1824, 360

Celebration, July 4, 1825, 385

Celebration, July 4, 1826, 385

Celebration, July 4, 1828, 385

Celebration of 1829, 361

Celebration of 1835, 362

Celebration of 1841, 363

Celebration of 1845, 364

Celebration of 1853, 365

Celebration, 1855, 370

Celebration, 1859, 372

Celebration, July 9, 1865, 385, 386

Celebration, 1870, 375

Celebration of 1880, 380

Celebration of 1885, 380

Celebration, 1889, 380

Celebration, 1895, 384

Celebrations, 356

Central House, 195

Centre of population, 234

Chaise, 206, 437

Chaise house, 206

Chandler, Joseph R., 363

Change of Shire, 308

Channel, 77

Charles River, 444

Chase, Salmon P., 374

Chess player, 457

Chewing, 517

Choate, Rufus, 441

Choir of church, 118

Chowder, 18

Christmas, 491

Churchill, Charles O., 284

Churchill, George, 144

Churchill, John, 27, 185

Churchill, John D., 33

Churchill, Lemuel B., 34

Churchill, Otis, 32

Churchill, Solomon, 151

Churchill, Wm., 31

Church street, 66

Cigars, 519

Circus, 157

Civil War, 389

Clark, Joseph S., 315

Cloak, 520

Coach, 438

Coal barges, 463

Cobb, Howell, 396

Cobb, Isaac Eames, 298

Codfish, 18, 486

Cod fishery, 86

Coffee, 486

Cold Spring, 12

Cole, James, 121

Cole’s Hill, 16, 31, 112, 320

College education, 345

College professors, 345

College punishments, 347

Collier, Ezra, 148

Collingwood family, 22

Collingwood, Joseph W., 407, 415

Collingwood, George, 62

Collins, James, 38

Columbia steamer, 22

Common house, 322

Concert Hall, 457

Condition of Gov. Finances, 396

Conflagration of Moscow, 457

Confederate plan, 397

Constables, 7, 447

Contribution of Plymouth Bank, 391

Cooking, 485

Coopers, 57

Cooper’s Alley, 65

Cooper, James, 65

Cornerstone of canopy, 372

Cornerstone of Monument, 372

Cotton, Charles, 30, 258

Cotton house, 258

Cotton, John, 117

Cotton, Rossiter, 258

Cotton, Rowland Edwin, 259

Countings out, 207

Country teams, 458

Country trade, 458

Court Square, 199

Court street, 10

Covington, Jacob, 14, 62

Covington, Jacob family, 264

Cows, 55

Cox, James, 303

Cox, Wm. R., 303

Cranberry, 509

Crocker and Warren, 171

Cults, 492

Cunard line, 462

Curfew, 448

Currency, 189

Currier, John, Jr., 48

Cushing, Joshua, 216

Cushing school, 133

Cushman, Charlotte, 197

Cushman, Joseph, 151

Cushman, Susan, 198

Custom House, 136

Customs, 447

Daisies, 472

Damsons, 510

Dancing schools, 160

Danforth, Allen, 167, 168

Davie, Ezra J., 233

Davie, Johnson, 233

Davis Building, 188

Davis, John, 28

Davis, John R., 193

Davis house, 131, 136

Davis, Nathaniel M., 136

Davis wharf, 33, 52

Davis, Wm., 33, 313, 314

Davis, Wm. family, 131

Davis & Russell, 153

Dawes, James H., 219

Debating Societies, 331

Decatur, Stephen, 405

Dermer, Thomas, 6

Dewey, Laura, 53

Diaz, Abigail, 307

Dipping, 517

Division of the town, 308

Doten, Charles C., 408

Doten, Samuel, 80, 222, 224, 227

Doten, Samuel H., 395

Double trucks, 465

Draft, 416

Dress coat, 520

Dress of a lady, 521

Drew, Atwood L., 34

Drew, Benjamin, 230, 291

Drew, Charles H., 408, 410

Drew, David, 57, 59

Drew, Deborah, 21

Drew, Ebenezer, 21

Drew, Edward Bangs, 293

Drew, George, 137, 230

Drew, Malachi, 21

Drew, Thomas, 230, 343

Drew, Wm. R., 146

Drury Lane theatre, 134

Duel, 405

Duke of Cambridge, 135

Duke of Wellington, 135

Dunfish, 10

Dunham, Robert, 17, 120

Duxbury ship building, 47

Dyer, Gustavus G., 257

Ear rings, 522

Earthquake, 11

East Boston, 446

East Boston ship building, 48

Edes, Oliver, 174, 282

Education, 307

Eighteenth Regiment, 407, 422

Eldridge, John, 41

Election Day, 33

Ellis, Bartlett, 156, 185

Ellis, Nathaniel, 352

Elm trees, 512

Embargo, 49, 79

Embargo, avoidance of, 81

Emergency fund, 391

Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 25

Engine House, 162

English trees, 512

Enlistment, 406

Entertainments, 330

Episcopacy, 491

Escape from quarantine, 260

Europa steamer, 96

Evarts, Wm. M., 313, 374

Everett, Edward, 360, 364

Express, 68

Expresses, 155

Family names, 302

Family traits, 57

Farms, 436

Farris, Jeremiah, 174

Fashions in dress, 519

Faunce, Daniel W., 319

Faunce, John, 402

Faunce, Wm., 318

Fernside, 14

Fifth Massachusetts, 403

Finney, Ezra, 295

Finney, Ezra family, 295

Fire Department, 477, 478

Fire Department Celebration, 384

Fire Engines, 474, 476

Fire engine steam, 478

Fire pans, 483

Fire place, 484

Fire in School Street, 138

Fire Insurance, 475

Fires, 473, 492

Fires in Plymouth, 475

First coal grate, 282

First Meeting House, 322

Fish, 514

Fish duties, 88

Fishing, 436

Fishing bounty, 87

Fishing ledges, 18

Fishing vessels, 88, 95

Fishing vessels lost, 91

Flagg stones, 441

Flowers, 508

Floyd, John B., 396

Football, 205

Foot stoves, 483

Foreign trade, 49

Forests, 471

Fornenst, 525

Fortress Monroe, 396, 398, 399

Fort Andrew, 414, 417

Fort Hill, 442

Fort McHenry, 404

Fort Standish, 417

Forts in Plymouth harbor, 414

Forster, Wm. E., 236

Fox, Gustavus V., 406

Fragment Society, 334

Francis, Ebenezer, 163

Franklin street, 441

Frederick, 411

Freeman, Frederick, 14, 265

Freeman, Frederick family, 266

Frigate Constitution, 393

Frost, Daniel, 36

Fruits, 508

Fuel, 482

Fuller, Hiram, 146, 369

Fuller house, 116

Fuller, Josiah C., 408

Funeral customs, 479

Funerals, 479

Gab, 525

Gages, 510

Galoshe, 522

Gaiters, 161

Gale, Daniel, 150, 180

Gale’s cabbage, 180

Games, 204

Gaylord, John Flavel, 312

Germans, 435

Gilbert, Gustavus, 164

Gingko tree, 442

Girard college, 55

Girard, Stephen, 55

Glass, Mr., 14

Gleason, James G., 157

Gloves of ministers, 118

Goddard, Daniel, 27, 54

Goddard, Daniel F., 319

Goddard, Grace H., 166

Goddard, John, 166

Gold discovery, 102

Gooding family, 183

Gooding, John, 183

Gooding, John, family, 183

Goodwin, Ezra S., 317

Goodwin, Hersey B., 317

Goodwin, Isaac, 315

Goodwin, Nathaniel, 121, 122, 257

Goodwin, Nathaniel, family, 257

Goodwin, Timothy, 188

Goodwin, Wm., 256

Gordon, Solomon J., 269

Gordon, Timothy, 269

Gorges, 7

Government treasury, 396

Grand Banks, 95

Gravestones, 324

Grave yards, 320

Great western steamship, 465

Greenwood, Wm. Pitt, 182

Grog time, 448

Guests, 1820, 358

Gurnard, 514

Guzzle, 74

Habits and Customs, 433

Hacks, 437

Hale, John P., 369

Hall, John, 18

Hall, Robert B., 246, 363

Hall, Samuel, 216

Hannah, vessel, 81

Hanover street, 12

Harlow, Bradford, 302

Harlow, David, family, 404

Harlow, Ephraim, family, 303

Harlow family, 302

Harlow, George, family, 404

Harlow, Jesse, 404

Harlow, Nathaniel E., 33

Harper’s Ferry, 413

Harriet Lane, 402

Harrison, Peter, 203

Hart, Jason, 154, 239

Hathaway, B. A., 15

Hathaway, Benj., 17, 174, 176

Hayward, Beza, 115

Hayward House, 162, 164

Hayward, Jedediah K., 315

Hayward, John S., 154

Hayward, Nathan, 162

Hearses, 480

Heating, 483

Hedge, Barnabas, 119

Hedge House, 119

Hedge, Isaac L., 113

Hedge, I. L. & T., 32, 60

Hedge, Nathaniel L., 62

Hedge’s wharf, 31, 74

Herring story, 300

Hibernia steamer, 22

Hicks, Robert, 113

High duties, 30

High School, 338, 340

High street, 145

Highways, 10

Hillard, George S., 379

Hobart, John Sloss, 193

Hobart, Noah, 192

Hodge, James Thacher, family, 280, 281

Hodgkins, Jos. W., 154

Hogreeves, 187

Hogs, 187

Hollis, Abigail, 125

Holmes, Amasa, 459

Holmes, Charles T., 145

Holmes, Doctor, 26

Holmes, Edward, 219

Holmes, John Calderwood, 144

Holmes, Joseph, 40, 216, 218

Holmes, Lewis, 318

Holmes, Peter, 235

Holmes, Richard, 27, 32

Holmes, Richard W., 32

Holmes, Sylvester, 318

Holmes, Wm., family, 114

Holmes and Scudder, 27

Holmes and Brewster, 27

Home, 482

Home customs, 481

Home Guard, 395

Hornbeam, 511

Horse hire, 206

Horse races, 347

Horse thieves, 332

Hospitals, 413

Hotels, 458

Hotel prices, 460

Howard, Oliver O., 378

Howland, Henry, 14

Howland street, 12

Hubbard, Benjamin, 153, 312

Hubbard, Levi, 180

Hunt, James L., 311

Hunt, Thomas Sterry, 378

Husking, 489

Hymns, 499

Immigrants, 434

Irish, 433

Irish famine, 134

India rubber shoes, 156

Indian burial ground, 321

Indian games, 207

Inscriptions, 325

Inspection, 450

Iron and coal duties, 299

Jackson, Abraham, 343

Jackson, Alexander, 187

Jackson, Alexander, family, 267

Jackson, Andrew, 294

Jackson apples, 186

Jackson brothers, 36

Jackson, Charles, 25

Jackson, Charles, family, 273

Jackson, Daniel, 36, 267

Jackson, Daniel L., 41

Jackson, D. and A., 37

Jackson, Henry, 52

Jackson, Henry F., 52

Jackson, Isaac C., 36

Jackson, Isaac M., 15

Jackson, Louisa S., 54

Jackson, Mercy B., 310

Jackson, Salisbury, 120, 173

Jackson, Thomas, 185

Jackson vessels, 38

Jackson, Wm., 185

Jackson, Wm., family, 186

Jenkins, Osmore, 144

Jews rafts, 48

Jones, Joseph D., 141

Judson, Abigail B., 305

Judson, Adoniram, family, 305

June eatings, 186

Kendall, James, 117

Kendall, James A., 317

Kent, Edward, 374

King street, 13

Kingston captains, 219

Kissing bridge, 11

Kitchen, 484

Know Nothings, 54

Kossuth celebration, 386

Lafayette steamboat, 75

LaGrange, 276

Lamps, 482

Lap tea, 330

Lawrence, Abbott, 23

LeBaron’s alley, 65, 112, 116

LeBaron, Francis, 124

LeBaron, Isaac, 172, 311

LeBaron, Lazarus, 116, 124

Lectures, 331

Legal votes, 355

Leo, privateer, 224

Leonard, James E., 137

Letters, 190

Letter writing, 190

Letters of marque, 223

Leyden Hall, 151

Leyden street, 110

Light Guard of New York, 119

Lightning struck, 55

Linden tree, 15, 513

Lindsy-woolsy, 521

Livery, 437

Lobsters, 75

Locomotives, 464

Long, John D., 380, 382

Long, Thomas, 17

Long wharf, 73, 77

Lord, Arthur, 384

Lord Surrey, 126

Lord, Wm. H., 230, 259, 342

Lothrop estate, 261

Lothrop, Isaac, 192

Lothrop, Nathaniel, 262, 310

Loud, Jacob H., 115

Lovell, Leander, 35

Loyalists, 9

Lucas, Joseph, 298

Mackie, Andrew, 311

Macomber, John, 140

Madan Society, 331

Main street, 12, 146

Mansion house, 157, 260

Marcy House, 115, 264

Market, 350

Market street, 137

Marine Insurance, 475

Marriage, 496

Marriage laws, 496

Marston, John, 401

Mason, Albert, 174

Mason, Jeremiah, 438

Masonic building, 161

Massachusetts Fire Society, 474

Massachusetts in the War, 389, 397

Massachusetts troops at front, 396

Masters of vessels, 30

Matches, 492

Mayflower Lodge, 54

Mayflower relics, 496

Maynard, Francis L., 176

Maynard, Mrs., school, 177

McKay, Donald, 48

McKay, Nathaniel White, 48

McKay’s ships, 447

McPherson, James B., 415

Medford ship building, 48

Meeting houses, 118, 322, 445

Merrimac ship building, 48

Merritt, Samuel, 106, 161, 185

Middle street, 13

Migration to Nova Scotia, 303

Militia, 450, 452

Militia law, 450

Milk carts, 55

Mill dam, 443

Milman, Henry H., 134

Moderator, 352

Modes of travel, 437

Monteth, 507

Morey, Wm., family, 144

Morse, Anthony, 156, 272

Morton, Ichabod, family, 307

Morton, James, 304

Morton, Nathaniel, 6

Moustaches, 516

Musters, 451

Mysterious stranger, 126

Nancy and Eliza, 139

Nantasket Steamboat Co., 78

Natural History Society, 187

Naverino bonnets, 120

Navy, 429

Navy enlistments, 418

Nelson, Wm., 297

Nelson, Wm., family, 298

Nelson, Wm. H., 301

New Guinea, 130

Newport News, 401

New streets, Boston, 444

Nicolson, Samuel, 58

Nicolson, Thomas, 82

Nine months’ men, 409

North River ship building, 47

North street, 14, 17, 26, 264

Notes for prayers, 479

Nye, Wm., 33

O’Connell, Daniel, 135

Odd Fellows’ building, 173

Odd Fellows’ Hall, 178

Oehme, F. G., 310

Officers and sailors, total, 418

Old Bank house, 257

Old Colony Bank, 168, 257

Old Colony Club, 264

Old Colony Democrat, 156

Old Colony Hall, 146

Old Colony Hotel, 199

Old Colony House, 234

Old Colony Insurance Co., 154, 168

Old Colony Memorial, 149, 179, 292

Old Colony National Bank, 187

Old Colony Railroad, 239, 468, 470

Old tenor, 349

Olney, Zaben, 137

Omnibus, 439, 440

Optimists, 289

Oranges, 108

Oregon steamer, 24

Orphicleide, 175

Osgood, Samuel, 369

Otis Place, 441

Ovens, 484

Overcoats, 521

Ox-eyed Juno, 290

Packets, 67, 70

Paine, John S., 53

Paine’s Hall, 53

Painters, 53

Pall bearers, 480

Palmer, Wm., 323

Parker, Dr., 311

Parker, Ebenezer G., 15

Paper, wood, 471

## Parties, 331

Passing bell, 480

Patchwork, 487

Patent windlass, 58

Pattens, 522

Payne, John Howard, 455

Peace, 333

Peace Society, 332

Peel, Sir Robert, 135

Pemberton Square, 442

Pens, 494

Perkins, John, 230, 231

Perry, N. M., 234

Pessimists, 289

Peterson, Reuben, 176

Pianos, 330

Pierce, Ebenezer W., 402

Pierce, Ignatius, 19

Pin in throat, 320

Pilgrim bones, 29

Pilgrim burials, 325

Pilgrim epidemic, 8

Pilgrim Hall, 17

Pilgrim House, 158, 161

Pilgrim name, 28

Pilgrim plates, etc., 153

Pilgrim Society, 16, 26, 27, 334, 357

Pilgrim wharf, 78

Pinkies in Plymouth, 45

Pipe smoking, 519

Plagiarisms, 504

Plague in Constantinople, 273

Plymouth Band, 175

Plymouth bounds, 7

Plymouth boys, 399

Plymouth Cordage Co., 239, 240, 241

Plymouth County loan, 163

Plymouth Hotel, 156

Plymouth incorporated, 7

Plymouth Rock, 27, 29

Plymouth Rock House, 15

Plymouth Rock Guards, 395

Plymouth Institution for Savings, 167, 263

Plymouth Savings Bank, 167, 168, 187

Plymouth Tavern, 188, 194

Plums, 510

Police, 447

Political parties, 293

Pompey, slave, 123

Pope, Richard, 67

Popular aid, 396

Porringers, 506

Porter, Eliphalet, 360

Portuguese, 435

Postage, 189

Post carriage, 439

Post office, 145, 188

Postmaster, 191

Post route, 188

Potomac River, 403

Potter, Richard, 457

Potter ventriloquist, 25

Powder house, 454

Practical jokes, 149

Preston, Amariah, 183, 184

Preston, Hervey, N. 176

Prince Albert, 135

Privateers, 58, 223

Professor Channing, 346

Professor Lovering, 347

Professor Pierce, 346

Provincetown, 435

Public schools, 345

Puddings, 484

Pudding before meat, 264, 497

Puget Sound ice, 108

Puget Sound piles, 108

Purchased recruits, 418, 426

Queen apples, 186

Queen Victoria, 135

Queen’s ware, 507

Quilting, 487

Quincy, Josiah, 347

Quota, 408

Railroad cars, 464

Railroad, Old Colony, 468

Railroads, 464, 466

Railroad ties, 470

Railroads in England, 467

Railroads in France, 467

Rainbow, schooner, 71

Raisings, 36, 489

Randall, Wm., 137

Rations, 399

Razors, 515

Rebel invasion, 231

Recruits, 416, 417

Reed, Nathan, 138

Relay House, 403

Reservoirs, 477

Rickard land, 112

Riggers, 57

Ripley, Wm. P., 17

Road at Eel River, 10

Roasting Jack, 506

Robbins, Chandler, 117

Robbins, Henry Howard, 175

Robbins, Josiah, 35, 265

Robbins, Leavitt Taylor, 244

Robbins lumber yard, 244

Robbins, Samuel, 145

Robbins, Thomas, 363

Roberts, Robert, 120

Robinson Iron Co., 263

Rodman, Wm. L., 409

Rogers, William, 15

Rope Walk lane, 136, 267

Rulings, 353

Russell, Bridgham, 143

Russell House, 199, 200, 203

Russell, John, family, 271

Russell, John, house, 270

Russell, John, J., 271

Russell, John J., family, 272

Russell, LeBaron, 342

Russell, Nathaniel, 201

Russell, Nathaniel, family, 202, 262

Russell, N. & Co., 263

Russell packet, 69

Russell, Thomas, 123, 287

Russell, Thomas, family, 123

Russell, Wm. G., 154, 287

Russell, Wm. S., 165

Sabbath, 488

Sail makers, 54

Sale of liquors, 307

Saltpetre, 171

Samoset House, 238, 469

Sampson, Schuyler, 294

Sampson, Simeon, 46

Sampson, Zabdiel, 293

Scallop, 28

Scarlet fever, 259

School bell, 339

School house, 338

School, school street, 230

Schools, 338

School teachers, 147, 243

Schooner Daniel Webster, 222

Schooner Exchange, 64

Schooner Maracaibo, 64

Schooner Mercury, 64

Schooners in Plymouth, 45

Schooner Welcome Return, 220

Schooner Vesper, 64

Scudder, Alonzo D., 32, 34

Second Brook, 11

Second Boston Church, 197

Sectarianism, 66

Selectmen, 352

Sever, Charles, 238

Sewage, 46

Sewall, Samuel, 6, 121

Seward, Wm. H., 370

Sexton, 260, 448

Seymour, Webster, 54

Sharpsburg, 413

Shaving, 515

Shaw’s Brook, 11

Shaw, Ichabod, 52

Shaw, Southworth, 52

Shelburne, Nova Scotia, 9

Sherley, James, 7

Sherman block, 179

Sherman, E. C., 173

Sherman, Edward L., 315

Sherman, Samuel, 143

Ship Arbella, 62

Ship builders, 446

Ship fever, 8

Ship heeling, 63

Ship Great Republic, 49

Ship Iconium, 42

Ship Levant, 63

Ship Massasoit, 46

Ship Mayflower, 61

Ship Ocean Monarch, 285

Ship Royal George, 63

Ships in Plymouth, 44

Ship yards, 46

Shipwrights, 57

Shoe business, 257, 258

Shooting Star schooner, 222

Shurtleff, Nathaniel B., 379

Shurtleff tavern, 139

Shurtleff, Wm., 137

Simeon, Sampson, 46

Simmons, Beulah, 55

Simmons, George, 56, 68

Simmons, Lemuel, 54, 235

Simmons, Wm. D., 33

Simmons, Wm. H., 53

Singing school, 54

Sirius steamship, 465

Skippers, 94

Slang phrases, 525

Slave return, 130

Slavery, 128

Slave story, 130

Slaves, 127

Slaves in Plymouth, 128, 129

Slave trade, 127, 359

Sleds, 206

Sliding, 205

Sloops in Plymouth, 45

Small clothes, 119

Smith, John, 6

Smoking, 517

Smoking laws, 518

Smoot, Wm. H., 156

Snake heads, 466

Snare drum, 176

Snuff, 517

Soil, 510

Soldiers, 427

Soldiers killed, 430

Soldiers total, 418

Soldiers wounded, 431

Sound of bells, 340

South Boston, 443

South Mountain, 410

Spear, Wm. F., 315

Spear, Wm. H., 315

Speedwell, steamer, 286

Spinning wheels, 521

Spooner, Allen Crocker, 284

Spooner, Bourne, 239

Spooner, James, 31

Spooner, James and Ephraim, 146

Spooner, Thomas, 242

Spooner, Wm., 33, 200

Sprague, Peleg, 362

Spring Hill, 143

Stables, 437

Stage drivers, 159

Stages, 76, 158, 438

Standish Guards, 143, 387, 390, 391, 407, 409, 418, 450

Standish, Joshua, 52

Stanton, E. M., 414

Star Spangled banner, 393

Steamboats, 72, 76, 498

Steamer Cambridge, 398

Steam navigation, 465

Steamer Savannah, 498

Steamer Vanderbilt, 401

Stephens, Lemuel, 55, 289

Stevenson, Robert Louis, 108

Stickney, J. Henry, 27

Stoddard, Isaac N., 259, 340

Stones, 510

Strap rails, 464, 466

Street lamps, 448

Streets, 454

Striped pig, 452

Strong, Benjamin O., 152

Sturtevant house, 267

Sturtevant, Wm., 267

Suffolk Bank system, 296

Sugar baker’s molasses, 172

Sullivan, Wm., 360

Summer street, Boston, 440

Sumner, Charles, 369

Sumner, George, 375

Sunday bell, 339

Sunflower, 508

Surplus revenue, 436

Talbot, Samuel, 144

Taylor Brothers, 17

Taylor, Edward, 16

Teachers’ marriages, 268

Telegraph, 274

Telegraph office, 185

Tellers, 354

Temperance Society, 36, 146

Thacher, James, 238, 276

Thacher, James, family, 279

Theatre alley, 441

Theft of peaches, 269

The old lilac tree, 282

Third Regiment, 395, 409, 419, 425

Thirty-eighth Regiment, 408, 424

Thirty-second Regiment, 408, 423

Thomas Gamaliel, 171

Thomas house, 13

Thomas, John, 32, 238

Thomas, Joshua, 194

Thomas, Joshua, family, 194

Thomas, Priscilla, 191

Thomas, Wm., 194

Thompson, Cephas G., 145

Thompson, Joseph P., 378

Thrasher, Joshua, 352

Tinder box, 493

Tinker’s Rock, 11

Three months men, 419

Thurber, James, 166

Thurber, James D., 425

Tobacco, 517

Tobey, Edward, S., 377

Toll bridges, 443

Tomato, 278, 508

Tomlinson, Russell, 318

Tontine block, 442

Toothpicks, 519

Torrey, Henry W., 288

Toucey, Isaac, 397

Town affairs, 351

Town bell, 448

Town house, 349, 350

Town meetings, 322, 349, 352, 417

Townsend, Samuel R., 340

Town Square trees, 513

Town trees, 513

Trees, 12, 508

Tremont theatre, 456

Tribble, Isaac, 53

Tribble, John, 53

Trombone, 176

Troops at Fortress Munroe, 400

Troops at Newport News, 401

Troops in Washington, 393, 394

Trousers, 521

Trousers, tight, 161

Trundle bed, 514

Tug boats, 463

Tulips, 508

Tureens, 506

Turner, David, 52, 166

Turner, E. S., 38

Turner, Madam Marie, 334

Turner, Misses, 54

Turner’s Hall, 53

Turnpikes, 439

Twenty-fourth, unattached, 427

Twenty-ninth Regiment, 420, 421

Twenty-third Regiment, 408, 422

Uncles, 235

Union building, 161

Universalist Society, 114

Upham, Charles W., 369

Varioloid, 260

Vaughn, Oliver C., 33

Vaults, 460

Velma Bark, 221

Ventilation, 461

Vessels of Edward Holmes, 219

Vessels of Ezra Weston & Sons, 214

Vessels of Joseph Holmes, 216

Voting restrictions, 356

Voyage in the Hibernia, 276

Waffles, 485

Wagons, 206, 437

Waite, Return, 116

Walker, John, 248

Walking-sides, 455

War appropriations, 395

War meeting, 392, 394

War of 1812, 223, 333

War preparation, 390

War ship Roanoke, 401

Warren, Charles H., 364

Warren, Henry, family, 169

Warren House, 169

Warren, Pelham W., 232

Warren, Winslow, 169

Washburn, John, 146

Washington, 392, 403, 413

Washington, celebration, 385

Washington street, 443

Washington treaty, 88

Watchmakers, 183, 184

Watchmen, 448

Water pipes, 233

Watering Place, 11

Water street, 26, 29, 30, 31, 52

Watson, Benjamin M., 291

Watson, Benjamin Marston, 196

Watson, Benjamin Marston, family, 196

Watson, Edward W., 235

Watson, Edward W., poem, 237

Watson, George, 15

Watson, Harriet L., 290

Watson, John, 191

Watson, Wm., 191

Watson, Winslow M., 290

Web fingers, 14

Webster celebration, 1849, 387

Webster, Daniel, 357

Webster, Ervin, 185, 310

Webster’s oration, 127

Wells, 114

Wells, Horace, 275

Wells, Phineas, 34, 35

Whale fishery associates, 60, 61

Wheeler, Charles S., 346

White Elizabeth C., 140

White, Gideon, 9

Whiting, Elisha, 33

Whiting, Wm., 147

Whitman, Wm. H., 314

Whitworth, Miles, 9

Whiskers, 515

Weston, Benjamin, 58

Weston, Coomer, family, 234

Weston, Ezra, 216

Weston, Ezra and Sons, 214

Weston, Lewis, 58

Weston, Patty, school, 9

Weston, Thomas, 317

Wilson, Henry, 379, 305

Wine, 66

Winslow, Edward, 7, 24

Winslow house, 25

Winslow, Joanna, 163

Winslow, Pelham, 163

Winslow street, 15, 273

Winter vegetables, 486

Winthrop Place, 441

Winthrop Place, Boston, 16

Winthrop, Robert C., 377

Winthrop, Theodore, 399

Whale fishery, 59

Wolff, Erick, 414, 425

Wood, Charles James, 312

Wood fuel, 470

Wood’s lane, 238

Wood, Nathaniel, 282

Word derivations, 523

Words and phrases, 523

Wrecks, 93, 219

Transcriber’s Notes

pg 23 Changed: to prevent excsses to: to prevent excesses

pg 26 Changed: he had been in the contry to: he had been in the country

pg 31 Changed: continued in active busines until 1873 to: continued in active business until 1873

pg 94 Changed: they battered down the hatches to: they battened down the hatches

pg 122 Changed: a bonnet made of paper resemblng to: a bonnet made of paper resembling

pg 125 Changed: no wordly influences could weaken to: no worldly influences could weaken

pg 127 Changed: that town was taken from Massachusets to: that town was taken from Massachusetts

pg 130 Changed: three yellaw marseilles waistcoats to: three yellow marseilles waistcoats

pg 138 Changed: brick one has already been discribed to: brick one has already been described

pg 144 Changed: by the Duke of Wellngton to: by the Duke of Wellington

pg 147 Changed: like the teachers who had preceeded him to: like the teachers who had preceded him

pg 148 Changed: Anthony Morse succeded Mr. Bartlett to: Anthony Morse succeeded Mr. Bartlett

pg 158 Changed: my first dancng school to: my first dancing school

pg 166 Changed: died at Gibralter to: died at Gibraltar

pg 187 Changed: house came into the posession to: house came into the possession

pg 206 Changed: With skating and its accompaniment hocky to: With skating and its accompaniment hockey

pg 234 Changed: a native of either Norfork to: a native of either Norfolk

pg 286 Changed: He succeded in reaching to: He succeeded in reaching

pg 286 Changed: crossing the English channel from Queenboro to: crossing the English channel from Queensboro

pg 289 Changed: was apointed collector to: was appointed collector

pg 295 Changed: Bartlett lived on the notherly to: Bartlett lived on the northerly

pg 307 Changed: vessels engaged in coatwise to: vessels engaged in coastwise

pg 309 Changed: A similiar petition was sent to: A similar petition was sent

pg 312 Changed: formerly professor of obsteric medicine to: formerly professor of obstetric medicine

pg 318 Changed: pastor of the Unversalist church to: pastor of the Universalist church

pg 319 Changed: pastor of the First Chuch to: pastor of the First Church

pg 321 Changed: the conclusion that this impresssion to: the conclusion that this impression

pg 334 Changed: imposed by bequests to the Soiety to: imposed by bequests to the Society

pg 339 Changed: be falling into disuetude. to: be falling into desuetude.

pg 372 Changed: various divisons had been forming to: various divisions had been forming

pg 389 Changed: first relief to our beleagued capital to: first relief to our beleaguered capital

pg 394 Changed: I had never so completed experienced to: I had never so completely experienced

pg 415 Changed: his thoughful face and thoroughly to: his thoughtful face and thoroughly

pg 415 Changed: When the Catpain came in to: When the Captain came in

pg 416 Changed: killed at the battle of Spottsylvania to: killed at the battle of Spotsylvania

pg 417 Changed: the men in the navy hertofore to: the men in the navy heretofore

pg 425 Changed: and to Carrolton, near New Orleans to: and to Carrollton, near New Orleans

pg 426 Changed: of Waterloo the people of Brussells to: of Waterloo the people of Brussels

pg 458 Changed: Teamers put up their teams to: Teamsters put up their teams

pg 460 Changed: retired a millionare. to: retired a millionaire.

pg 461 Changed: vicinity of sleping room windows to: vicinity of sleeping room windows

pg 463 Changed: changes it is thoughlessly said to: changes it is thoughtlessly said

pg 467 Changed: Edenboro, Perth, Dunkeld, the Trosacks to: Edinburgh, Perth, Dunkeld, the Trossachs

pg 472 Changed: as flexible as wood, as indistructible to: as flexible as wood, as indestructible

pg 480 Changed: which has been discribed as to: which has been described as

pg 485 Changed: waffles shows the intiquity to: waffles shows the antiquity

The table of contents was created by the transcriber.