Louisina Wallingford
F, b. 25 February 1823, d. probably after 1891
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Birth* | Louisina Wallingford was born on 25 February 1823. (Date from gravestone.)1 |
Marriage* | She married Phineas Corson, son of Levi Corson and Sally Hodsdon, on 12 May 1850 in Lebanon, York County, MaineG. They were both from Lebanon at the time they were married. Her name was spelled Louisana on her marriage record and Lousina on the marriage intention.2,3 |
Death* | Louisina died probably after 1891. She was buried in City Cemetery in Rochester, N.H.4 |
| Her name was spelled Louisina on her marriage intention and Lucania on her gravestone, and may likely have also been Lucinda. There is some confusion about her identity, as there is a 'sister' Lucinda born around the same time and on later census records Louisina is referred to as Lucinda. But there is a death record for her 'sister' Lucinda in 1852 so are they two people or one with some errors in records? Her gravestone record, as Lucania Corson, wife of Phineas, appears in the published Lebanon vital records as being among those removed to the City Cemetery in Rochester, N.H. On it is given her birth date of 25 February 1823, yet these published records offer no death date, which would suggest that her death occurred after the cut-off date for the book of 1891. The sister Lucinda Wallingford died on 3 or 4 May 1852. This Lucinda is aged 29y, 2m, suggesting a birth date in the month before 4 March 1823, which is very close to the date on Louisiana's gravestone. Her grave is in a small private lot on the Parsonage land in West Lebanon Village.5 So we have two separate gravestones for Lucinda Wallingford/Lucania Corson for individuals born at about the same time. Are they the same person? Perhaps twin sisters?
We know that Louisina (Wallingford) Corson was daughter of Daniel and Lydia because in the 1908 obituary of her brother Charles W. Wallingford it stated that his only living relative was a nephew Elmer E. Corson, who is the son of Phineas and Louisina. |
Citations
- George Walter Chamberlain, Vital Records of Lebanon, Maine to the year 1892 (Boston : Wright & Potter Printing Company for the Maine Historical Society, 1922-1923), 1:39.
- John Eldridge Frost and Joseph Crook Anderson II, Marriage Returns of York County, Maine prior to 1892 (Camden, ME: Picton Press, 1993), p.180.
- Lebanon, Maine, Town Records, 4:254.
- George Walter Chamberlain, Vital Records of Lebanon, Maine to the year 1892 (Boston : Wright & Potter Printing Company for the Maine Historical Society, 1922-1923), 1:39 (only her birth date is mentioned in this source, but it does tell the name of the cemetery record from which it comes, so the assumption is that the death took place after the 1891 cut-off date for the book).
- George Walter Chamberlain, Vital Records of Lebanon, Maine to the year 1892 (Boston : Wright & Potter Printing Company for the Maine Historical Society, 1922-1923), 3:137.
Osgood Wallingford
M, b. circa 1833
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Birth* | Osgood Wallingford was born circa 1833 in MaineG. (Based on the 1850 census of Lebanon, Maine and the 1860 census of Somersworth, N.H.) |
Marriage* | He married Lizzy R. (?) say 1851. |
Marriage* | He married second Eliza (?) by 1875. |
| In 1850 16-year old Osgood Wallingford, born in Maine, was living in the household of Charles and Elizabeth Shapleigh in the area of Lebanon, Maine known as "Wallingford City" due to its heavy concentration of Wallingford families. There was an Alonzo Knox, aged 13, also living there, but no one who could be a 20-year old Lizzy that appears with him in the next census.1
He is found in the 1860 census of Somersworth, a 27-year old baker born in Maine, living with a Lizzy R. Wallingford, age 30, born N.H., who is probably a wife but could be a sister or other relation. Also with them is an Amanda [M.?] Neal, age 11, born N.H.2
In the 1870 census he is living in Dover, N.H. with his 18-year old daughter Cora B. and another probable daughter, 8-year-old Lucy R. He was employed in a shoe factory at the time. Lizzy is no longer living with him so may have been dead by this time.3
The 1880 census finds them still in Dover. This time Osgood is a 50-year-old laborer living with his wife Eliza, daughter Corah, and a five-year-old daughter Mary.4 This wife Eliza is treated here as a second wife, although she may be the first wife "Lizzy" who may have been absent from the 1870 census for some reason other than her death.
Osgood is as yet unplaced in this genealogy but most probably belongs to one of the Wallingford families of Lebanon, Maine that are a big tangled mess. |
Citations
- 1850 U.S. Federal census, Maine, York Co., Lebanon, p.34.
- 1860 U.S. Federal census, N.H., Strafford Co., Somersworth, p.307.
- 1880 U.S. Federal census, N.H., Strafford Co., Dover, Ward 2, p.42, original record viewed on ancestry.com on 11 Nov 2003.
- 1880 U.S. Federal census, N.H., Strafford Co., Dover, E.D. 247, p.41, original record viewed on ancestry.com on 11 Nov 2003.
Lizzy R. (?)
F, b. circa 1830
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Robert M. Wallingford
M, b. circa 1951, d. 17 November 2015
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Birth* | Robert M. Wallingford was born circa 1951 in Brewerton, Onondaga County, New YorkG.1 |
Death* | He died on 17 November 2015 at University Hospital in Syracuse, Onondaga County, New YorkG.2 |
| His obituary appeared in the 18 November 2015 Syracuse Post Standard and read as follows:
Robert M. Wallingford November 17, 2015 Robert M. Wallingford, 64 of Brewerton, passed away Tuesday, at University Hospital in Syracuse. He was born in Brewerton and remained as a life resident. He was a graduate of Central Square High School and the Chicago Art Institute. He was a 40-year member of the International Association of Heat and Frost Insulators and Asbestos Workers, Local #30, Syracuse, NY. He was an avid skier and was a member of the Ski Patrol at Labrador Mountain. He was an avid golfer and outdoors man. Robert loved to play his guitar. He loved Oneida Lake and had a passion for traveling and camping. His most precious treasure was his grandchildren. He was predeceased by his mother, Dolores Lenhart. Robert is survived by his wife, the former Kathleen Jones; his two daughters, Kristin Wallingford of Raleigh, NC and Tamara Spath of Brewerton; his son, Timothy Cullings of Charlotte, NC; his special eight grandchildren, Hannah, Justin, Maggie, Gavin, James, Clark, Kennedy and Campbell; his father, Robert and Norma Wallingford of Brewerton; his sister, Jill Wallingford-Jeffries of Williamstown and his two brothers, Patrick Wallingford of Amboy and Michael Wallingford of Syracuse. Funeral services will be held at 7 p.m. Sunday, at the Harter Funeral Home, 9525 S. Main St. (Rt. 11, Brewerton Rd.) Brewerton, NY.2 |
Charles W. Wallingford
M, b. 11 November 1827, d. 11 July 1908
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Birth* | Charles W. Wallingford was born on 11 November 1827 in West Lebanon, York County, MaineG.1 |
Marriage* | He married Caroline Morrill, daughter of Samuel Morrill and Mercy Wiggins, on 9 April 1850 in Somersworth, Strafford County, New HampshireG.2 |
Death* | Charles died on 11 July 1908 at his home at the corner of Green and Pleasant Streets in Somersworth, Strafford County, New HampshireG.3 |
Burial* | He was buried in Forest Glade Cemetery in Somersworth, Strafford County, New HampshireG.4 |
| Https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/LDX5-M6P. |
| Charles W. Wallingford appears in the 1850 through 1870 censuses of Somersworth, N.H. In 1850 he was a 23-year old laborer born in Maine, living with a Caroline L. Wallingford, 22, born Maine, who is apparently his wife as she appears with him in the next two censuses also. Also with them are Mary F. Keay, 24, Martha Keay, 18, Lydia [H.?] Brackett, 18, and Peace B. Morrill, 16 (female), all born in Maine.5
In 1860 Charles is a 30 (hard to read, might not be a zero on the end of the number) and a day laborer and Caroline A. (different middle initial than in 1850) is 30. With them this time is another Morrill -- Julia [O.?] Morrill, 14, born in Maine6.
In 1870 Charles, age 42 and a railroad worker, and Caroline, age 40 and a dressmaker, are living with a Hattie F. Wallingford, age four, likely their daughter.
A few months before his death this was published in the Springvale (Maine) Advocate on 13 Mar 1908, p.2: Lebanon. Charles W. Wallingford, who on Saturday gave up his position as agent of the Boston & Maine Railroad at the South end station in Somersworth, N. H., after 62 years’ service was a native of this town. It may be doubted if today there is a man employed on that railroad who was working for it when Mr. Wallingford entered into its employment. He is now in his eighty-first year, being born at West Lebanon, Me., in November, 1827. He is the last one of a family of eleven children. His sister, aged 85, was buried last November, on his birthday. Mr. Wallingford went to Somersworth when he was about 18 years of age and worked for a time in a card room for the Great Falls Manufacturing Co. In March or April, 1847, he went to work for the Boston & Maine as a spare hand. Previous to that he did some work in spiking the rails for the Conway road toward Rochester. His work for the Boston & Maine was to do whatever was wanted of him on the train or elsewhere. He helped at times in sawing wood for the engines, for that was the fuel used in those days. Three men were employed regularly at this task, with a spare hand called in quite often. |
| His obituary appeared in the 13 July 1908 Foster's Daily Democrat and read as follows:
Death of Charles W. Wallingford Saturday. Somersworth, July 13. By the death of Charles W. Wallingford, which occurred at his home at the corner of Green and Pleasant streets at 1 o’clock Saturday afternoon, Somersworth loses one of its best citizens. For 62 years Mr. Wallingford was employed in the service of the Boston and Maine railroad and at the time of the completion of his service on the first of March of this year, he was undoubtedly the road’s oldest employee and few of those who began service as early as he did are living today. Mr. Wallingford’s story is one of utmost fidelity, attention to duty, and loyalty to the system to which he gave his life work. He was born at West Lebanon, Me., November 11, 1827, being the son of Daniel and Lydia Wallingford, and the last of their eleven children, his sole surviving sister having been buried on his last birthday. After receiving an education in the schools of his native place, Mr. Wallingford came to Somersworth when he was about 18 years old. He was thus at the time of his death one of the oldest citizens here. For a time he worked in a card room of the Great Falls Manufacturing company, and in March or April, 1847, began his long service for the Boston and Maine railroad. Even that was not his first work as a railroad hand, for he had previously done some work at spiking rails on the old Conway road between this place and Rochester. His first work was that of a spare hand. At times he helped in the freight office or at the baggage room, and at times sawed on the wood for the locomotives, all engines at that time using wood for fuel. In 1848 Mr. Wallingford was given a regular job as fireman on a locomotive, the service then being of the hardest sort, as the feeding of fuel into the huge fireboxes had to be almost continuous. He fired on a number of the old-time machines, and after five years was promoted to baggagemaster here. Besides the duties of baggagemaster of today in the handling of baggage, his work consisted in switching and also shifting all the freight cars in the yard, including those for the Great Falls Manufacturing company. His hours of duty were early and late. He was the first at the station and the last to leave at night, and if the train from any cause was late, he had to await its arrival. For a quarter of a century he performed this arduous work faithfully, until on December 6, 1882, he suffered the accident which changed his whole life. While shifting cars at night opposite the old roundhouse, whose site was just inside the present Market street billboard, he slipped on a pile of ashes, fell forward under the engine, which he was trying to board, and the wheels passed over his right leg. For a year and a half he was unable to do work, but such was his loyalty to the road and trust in its promises that he refused to bring suit, although repeatedly urged to do so by many friends saying that he wished to live without quarrel with any man, however just might be his case against him. The road officials, on their part, promised that he should never lack employment throughout his life as he then had an artificial limb and was able to resume work. Accordingly, when the old station at Salmon Falls was divided and one-half placed at Rollinsford and the other in Somersworth at the point where the tracks cross the Indigo Hill road, he was made ticket agent of the little station known as “Somersworth,” in distinction from the main station of “Great Falls.” On January 1, 1892, James T. Furber, who had Mr. Wallingford’s interests at heart, died, and soon afterwards the “Somersworth” ticket station was discontinued and Wallingford was made a flagman at the crossing. After the “Foundry” station was burned, September 10, 1900, the ticket office was removed to the “Somersworth” station, which was remodeled and located at the “Foundry.” Mr. Wallingford was then placed as flagman at the Depot street crossing. He had trusted the word of the officials that he should not lack work, but had nothing to that effect. All who had befriended him were dead, and Mr. Wallingford was retired last March on a small pension. He survived this disappointment only five months and died of the infirmities of old age, which aggravated the symptoms of a long-standing disease. He was in bed six weeks. Except during his last illness and during the suffering caused by his accident, he has enjoyed remarkably good health, attributing much of his bodily vigor to his temperate habits. Mr. Wallingford was married in April, 1850, to Miss Caroline Morrill, daughter of Samuel and Mary Morrill of China, Me. She died at Somersworth in December, 1898. One daughter, Harriet Frances, who has faithfully cared for her father in his declining years, survives him; and he also leaves one nephew, Elmer E. Corson of Rochester. The funeral will be held at his home tomorrow at 2 p.m., and will be private. The Rev. Albert E. Monger of the High Street Methodist church will conduct the services, the Orpheus male quartette will sing, and it is hoped that four of the men oldest in the service of the railroad and who have known him for many years will be present to act as bearers. The interment will be in the family lot in Forest Glade cemetery. From 1:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. the house will be thrown open, and all the friends of Mr. Wallingford are invited to view his remains at that time.7 |
Citations
- Death record for date and place of birth and name of father. Obituary for date and place of birth and names of both parents.
- Samuel B. Shackford, Wallingford Family Records (Typescript at New England Historic Genealogical Society in Boston, 1928), p.248.
- FamilySearch, http://www.familysearch.org, (New Hampshire Death Certificates, <https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-6GBS-JFS>, scan of original state record).
- Find A Grave, http://www.findagrave.com/, (Charles W. Wallingford, <https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/116398008/charles_w_wallingford>, includes photo of gravestone with years of birth and death).
- 1850 U.S. Federal census, N.H., Strafford Co., Somersworth, p.156.
- 1860 U.S. Federal census, N.H., Strafford Co., Somersworth, p.322.
- Foster's Daily Democrat (newspaper), (Dover, N.H.), Obituary of Charles W. Wallingford, Monday, 13 Jul 1908, p.7,. <https://dover.advantage-preservation.com/viewer/?k=wallingford&i=f&d=01011828-12312024&m=between&ord=k1&fn=fosters_daily_democrat_usa_new_hampshire_dover_19080713_english_7&df=1&dt=10
Caroline Morrill
F, b. circa 1830, d. 23 October 1893
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Birth* | Caroline Morrill was born circa 1830 in Winslow, Kennebec County, MaineG. (Date based on the 1850 through 1870 censuses. Calculating from her age at death would give us 8 June 1828.)1 |
Marriage* | She married Charles W. Wallingford, son of Daniel Wallingford and Lydia Wallingford, on 9 April 1850 in Somersworth, Strafford County, New HampshireG.2 |
Death* | Caroline died of heart disease, on 23 October 1893, in Somersworth, Strafford County, New HampshireG.3 |
| Https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/LDX5-M6P. |
| Her middle initial is uncertain. It was a.w. on her birth record, L. in the 1850 census, A. in the 1860 census, not given in 1870, and W. on her death record. |
Citations
- Somersworth Town Report. (Somersworth, N.H.), Deaths, 1893 (for place).
- Samuel B. Shackford, Wallingford Family Records (Typescript at New England Historic Genealogical Society in Boston, 1928), p.248.
- Somersworth Town Report. (Somersworth, N.H.), Deaths, 1893.
Harriet F. Wallingford
F, b. about 1865/66
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Citations
- She was age 4 in the 1870 census, and age 49, born in Somersworth on her second marriage record in 1915.
- Massachusetts Vital Records, Marriages, 1915, v.1, 394, no.2551.
- Somersworth Town Report. (Somersworth, N.H.), Births & Deaths, 1888.
Julia [O.?] Morrill
F, b. circa 1846
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Birth* | Julia [O.?] Morrill was born circa 1846 in MaineG. (Based on the 1850 census of Somersworth, where she appears in the family of Charles W. and Caroline Wallingford.) |
Peace B. Morrill
F, b. circa 1834
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Birth* | Peace B. Morrill was born circa 1834 in MaineG. (Based on the 1860 census of Somersworth, where she appears in the family of Charles W. and Caroline Wallingford.) |
Lydia [H.?] Brackett
F, b. circa 1832
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Birth* | Lydia [H.?] Brackett was born circa 1832 in MaineG. (Based on the 1850 census of Somersworth, where she appears in the family of Charles W. and Caroline Wallingford.) |
Mary F. Keay
F, b. circa 1826
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Birth* | Mary F. Keay was born circa 1826 in MaineG. (Based on the 1850 census of Somersworth, where she appears in the family of Charles W. and Caroline Wallingford.) |
Martha Keay
F, b. circa 1832
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Birth* | Martha Keay was born circa 1832 in MaineG. (Based on the 1850 census of Somersworth, where she appears in the family of Charles W. and Caroline Wallingford.) |
Samuel Hooper
M, b. circa 1827
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Birth* | Samuel Hooper was born circa 1827 in MaineG. (Based on the 1850, 1860 and 1870 censuses, although 1860 says he was born in N.H.) |
Marriage* | He married Frances Wallingford, daughter of Samuel Wallingford and Fanny Tibbetts, on 28 November 1850 in Somersworth, Strafford County, New HampshireG. Frances was "of Somersworth".1 |
| In the 1850 census of Somersworth, N.H. Samuel Hooper, age 23, a carpenter born in Maine, was living with Bradstreet D. Hill, another carpenter, Mary H. Hill and two other carpenters.2 |
Citations
- Samuel B. Shackford, Wallingford Family Records (Typescript at New England Historic Genealogical Society in Boston, 1928), p.273 (from NHVR).
- 1850 U.S. Federal census, NH, Strafford Co., Somersworth, p.131.
Fanny Robinson
F, b. circa 1816
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Birth* | Fanny Robinson was born circa 1816 in MaineG. (Based on the 1870 census.) |
Frank [C.?] Robinson
M, b. circa 1859
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Birth* | Frank [C.?] Robinson was born circa 1859 in New HampshireG. (Based on the 1870 census.) |
Garland Wallingford
M, b. circa 1840
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Birth* | Garland Wallingford was born circa 1840 in New HampshireG. (Based on the 1870 census.) |
Marriage* | He married Susan (?). (Based on the 1870 census.) |
| Garland's parentage is unknown. Given the presence of his unusual first name in the Lebanon branch of the family, it can be presumed that he springs from there. He appears in the 1870 census of Somersworth, N.H., aged 30, born N.H., as someone who "works in a wool shop". With him are Susan, 28, and Mary, 4, both born in N.H., who we will presume to be his wife and child. |
Susan (?)
F, b. circa 1842
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Mary Wallingford
F, b. circa 1866
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Birth* | Mary Wallingford was born circa 1866 in New HampshireG. (Based on the 1870 census.) |
Nellie A. Gott or Tucker
F, b. 1872
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Birth* | Nellie A. Gott or Tucker was born in 1872. Her name and birth year appear on a gravestone in Pine Hill Cemetery in Dover along with her husband William G. Wallingford, but there is no death date so she may be buried elsewhere, or else the transcript from which the record is taken was made before she died.1 |
Marriage* | She married William G. Wallingford, son of John O. Wallingford and Nellie P. Cook, on 5 December 1923 in MaineG. They were both living in Wayne, Maine when they got married.2 |
| The Maine marriages index lists her under both Gott and Tucker, meaning she was married at least once before, but which is her maiden name and which is the name of her first husband, is presently unknown. |
Citations
- John Eldridge Frost, Pine Hill Cemetery Dover, New Hampshire (Undated typescript at Dover, NH Public Lib., in 2 vols.), 1:216.
- Maine State Archives, 1892-1966, 1976-1996 Indexes of Maine Marriages, http://thor.dafs.state.me.us/pls/archives/, (Date viewed: 19 Feb 2000).
Clifton O. Lomison
M, b. 26 November 1894, d. 4 December 1984
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Marriage* | He married Mary Austin Cartland, daughter of Charles Sumner Cartland and Julia Hilliard Wallingford. (Gravestone.) |
Birth* | Clifton O. Lomison was born on 26 November 1894. His birth date appears on a tombstone in Pine Hill Cemetery in Dover, N.H., but no date of death is included so he evidently is buried elsewhere or the transcript of the inscriptions was done before he died.1 |
Death* | Clifton died on 4 December 1984. His last residence was in Virginia according to the Social Security Death Index. It also said that he was a long-time or retired railroad worker. |
Citations
- John Eldridge Frost, Pine Hill Cemetery Dover, New Hampshire (Undated typescript at Dover, NH Public Lib., in 2 vols.), 1:230.
Woodbury Hough
M, b. 10 November 1891, d. 15 January 1940
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Citations
- John Eldridge Frost, Pine Hill Cemetery Dover, New Hampshire (Undated typescript at Dover, NH Public Lib., in 2 vols.), 1:230.
Luther M. Caverly
M, b. 1839, d. 1909
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Citations
- William Henry Gove, The Gove Book: History and Genealogy of the American Family of Gove and Notes of European Goves (Salem, MA: Sidney Perley, 1922), p.312.
- John Eldridge Frost, Pine Hill Cemetery Dover, New Hampshire (Undated typescript at Dover, NH Public Lib., in 2 vols.), 2:372.
Anna P. Berry
F, b. 1847, d. 1878
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Birth* | Anna P. Berry was born in 1847. (Gravestone.) |
Marriage* | She married first Luther M. Caverly. (Gravestone.) |
Death* | Anna died in 1878. She is buried in the Pine Hill Cemetery in Dover, N.H.1 |
Citations
- John Eldridge Frost, Pine Hill Cemetery Dover, New Hampshire (Undated typescript at Dover, NH Public Lib., in 2 vols.), 2:372.
Daniel Pease
M, b. 1806, d. 1888
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Marriage* | He married Jerusha (?). |
Birth* | Daniel Pease was born in 1806. (Gravestone.) |
Death* | Daniel died in 1888. (Gravestone.) |
Jerusha (?)
F, b. 1809, d. 1877
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Marriage* | She married Daniel Pease. |
Birth* | Jerusha (?) was born in 1809. (Gravestone.) |
Death* | Jerusha died in 1877. (Gravestone.) |
Roscoe W. Pease
M, b. 15 December 1884, d. 21 January 1887
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Citations
- Pease Family Bible, Pease Family Bible, in possession of Isabelle Roberts of Rochester, NH prior to her death in 1977, viewed and notes taken by Prudence Pease Meader of Sun City, AZ, emailed from Pruemeader@aol.com, 10 Dec 2000,.
- Rochester Town Report. (Rochester, N.H.), 1887.
- Five Medium-sized Community Cemeteries in Rochester, New Hampshire. (Manuscript at Rochester Public Library, multiple dates between 1983 and 1989), p.48.
Fred P. Abbott
M, b. 29 December 1877, d. 12 February 1887
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Citations
- Birthplace, parentage and date (calculated from age at death of 9-1-14) from death record.
- Richard P. Roberts, Rochester New Hampshire Death Records 1887-1951 (Westminster, MD: Heritage Books, 2006), p.5. Hereinafter cited as Rochester NH Death Records 1887-1951. [Compiled from the Rochester Town Reports]
Harry Melvin Jacobs
M, b. 4 June 1888, d. 8 August 1888
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Citations
- Place and parentage from death. Date calculated from age at death of 0-2-4).
- Rochester Town Report. (Rochester, N.H.), 1888.
Warren J. Babbidge
M, b. circa 1867
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Mary E. (?)
F, b. 1858, d. 1937
This research is a work in progress, taken from sources of varying reliability. The information should be verified before being relied upon.
Birth* | Mary E. (?) was born in 1858. (Gravestone.) |
Marriage* | She married second Thomas Sawyer Pease, son of Daniel Pease and Jerusha (?), after 1892. (Gravestones.) |
Death* | Mary died in 1937. She was buried in the Kimball Cemetery in Rochester, N.H.1 |
Citations
- Five Medium-sized Community Cemeteries in Rochester, New Hampshire. (Manuscript at Rochester Public Library, multiple dates between 1983 and 1989), p.48.