BIRDS-EYE VIEWS Of East Douglas and Douglas Centre. HISTORY OF THE TOWN OF DOUGLAS, (MASSACHUSETTS,) From the Earliest Period to the Close of 1878. BY WM. A. EMERSON. If- BOSTON : Published by Frank W. Bird, OLD BOOK SHOP, .37 CoRNHiLL, 32 Brattle Street, and Cornhill Steps, 1879. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1870, by "Wm. a. Emerson, In the Clerk's oflSce, District of Massachusetts. J. A. & R. A. Reid, Printers, Providence, R. I. TO THE MEMORY OF (pig (mot^tx, MARIA W. EMERSON, WITHOUT WHOSE LOVING ENCOURAGEMENT THIS WORK WOULD NOT HAVE BEEN UNDERTAKEN. INTRODUCTION N a certain sense it may be said that all men are his- torians, and great lovers of history too ; and that a talent for this is a sort of inherent element in man's intellectual constitution. Is not the brain of every individual crowded quite full with the his- toric incidents, great and small, which go to make up the vast aggregate of human experiences ? Our very speech, too, is curiously historical. How many there are who only speak to narrate, which is only to historize ? As men are always fond of telling what they have done, or seen, or heard, curiosity is so natural that all such historians are sure to be listened to. Thomas Carlyle tersely puts it in this way : " AV^e do little but to enact historj-, and we say little but to recite it ; and so historj^ is but the essence of innumerable biographies." Those who have never written or assisted in writing a histor- ical work of any kind, even of a less miscellaneous character than a town history necessarily is, are not aware of the extent and va- riety of the labor requisite in its preparation. In collecting the material which has been wrought into the present volume the pub- lic libraries of Boston, Worcester, and Providence have been placed under contribution for all they contained that could throw Z HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. light upon the early histoiy of the town ; the records of Douglas, Sherborn, and other places, man}' of these being diflicult to col- late, have been examined ; ancient manuscripts, deeds, private writings, yellow and worn with age, and other authentic docu- ments have been sought for in all directions ; histories of other towns have been consulted, dr^^ family genealogies compared, the recollections of the aged snatched from forgetfulness, and the whole mass compared, rearranged, and verified, that the work might be as correct as care and industrj' could make it. The publisher desires to express his thanks to all those who have contributed to lighten his labors in the compilation of the work, and begs leave to refer in a special manner to Rev. E. A. Maknikg, whose experience as a writer made him an invaluable assistant in the work of reducing the material from a crude state to its present attractive form and arrangement. Also to William H. Briggs, Esq., George W. Spencer, Edwin Moore, Aaron M. Hill, Rev. William T. Briggs, Rev. W. W. Dow, Ira Wallis, Jus- tin B. Whipple, A. F. Brown, Esq., and Joseph Hunt, who have in various ways rendered him most valuable service. For many of the historical facts obtained he feels under great obligation to the American Antiquarian Society of Worcester, to whose extensive repository of buried learning he has had constant access, through the kindness of the Librarian, S. F. Haven, Esq., as well as to the courteous Assistant Librarian, Mr. Edmund Bar- ton, without whose valuable aid the historical worth of the work would have been much diminished. For statistics relating to the war of the rebellion he has relied chiefly upon the reports of Adjutant-General Schouler, and the statements of soldiers who participated in the struggle. He is also indebted to Samuel Elias Staples, Esq., President of the AVorcester Society of Antiquity, and to Professor Homer B. Sprague of Boston, for the interest they have shown and for infor- mation furnished. INTRODUCTION. 6 In conclusion, he desires to express his gratification at the sat- isfactory manner in which the typographical and mechanical part of the work has been executed by Messrs. J. A. & R. A, Reid, of Providence, R. I., and also to express his appreciation of the in- terest they have shown in making this volume in every possible way satisfactory. With this brief apology for our work, we commend it to all those who can appreciate the past in the corporate career of our town, as having a just and honored claim upon at least the re- spectful regards of the present ; and to all as a most impressive illustration in detail of the capabilities of our common but bur- dened humanity, under the wholesome inspiration of free institu- tions based upon religion and learning, without which they gravi- tate inevitabl}' to unthrift and barbarism. CONTENTS CHAPTER I. First Occupation of the Town. —When the Town Was First Named — The First White Settlers Chiefly from Sherborn — Prior Abuse of the Territory by Otlier Towns — Historic As- sociations of the Name — Reason for Its Adoption — Original Boundaries of tlie Douglas Donation — Dr. Jennison's Desire to Change the Name — Present Area and Bounds— Geological and General Formation — Reference to Purgatory — Lakes and Ponds — Connection with Indian History — Their Kindly Rela- tions to the Whites — John Eliot and the Praying Indians — Population by Decades Since 1790, and Desirableness of Douglas as a Summer Resort — Union Evangelical Camp Ground Pages 17-24 CHAPTER II. Feosi 1746 TO Allotment of Sheijborn New Grant. — Scarcity of Early Records — Sherborn Records Show Douglas Colonized by Inhabitants of that Town — Territory Originally Granted in Consideration of Eand and Families Set Off from Sherborn to Framingham — Action of Sherborn Town-meeting Thereon Names of Committee to Apportion the Territory — Their Re- ward for Services — Territory of the Draper and Murdish Fam- ilies set off to Uxbridge — Purchase of Dr. William Douglas — Titles Fixed by Lot — Number of Original Proprietors —The Morse Family — New Grant of 3,000 Acres to Twenty Proprie- tors — Ministerial Grant — Grant of the Boston Men's Farm, or Wallum Pond — Grant and Gratuity to Governor Bradstreet's Son — Names of Early Settlers — Gratuity to Ephraim Hill, as First Settler — Town Action on Report of Committee on Lay- ing Out the Land " . . Pages 25-30 CHAPTER III. Allotment of Otiieb Grants. — Names of Original Proprietors, and Numbers of their Allotment — Diagram of the Plan of b HISTORY OP DOUGLAS, Allotment of the Slierboni New Gi-ant — Eeport of Commit- tee on Surveying — Generosity of one Proprietor — Special Grant to First Settler — Xew Grant of 4,000 Acres from the State, and How Disposed of by Order of Town-meeting — In- habitants of Towns of Holliston Included in the Grant — Lists of Proprietors and Numbers of New Allotments . Pages 32-39 CHAPTER IV. From 1735-1754. — Town-meeting in Holliston — An Agent Ap- pointed to Protect Holliston Proprietors' Rights — Trespassers to Be Looked After — Arrangements to Settle with Trespassers, and for Establishing Regular Preaching — Land Appropriation for a School and School-house — Committee to Adjust Bounda- ries with Other Towns and Proprietors — Agents to Prosecute Trespassers on Cedar Swamp Lands — Provision for Transcribing ; the Proprietors' Records — Earliest Records Extant of Douglas Town-meeting — A Sutton Farm Annexed to Douglas — Meas- ures Adopted for Laying Out Roads, and Appropriations There- for — List of Legal Voters in 1748 — How the Elective Fran- chise Was Then Regarded and Guarded — School Provisions — Verbatim Cojiy of Town Vote — First Meeting-house — Town- meeting Warrants Jealously Criticised — Dispute Thereon Be- tween the Town and Captain Hill Settled by General Court — School for Six jVlonths — Deficiency in Rev. Mr. Phipp's Salary — Width of Highways — Refusal to Raise Minister's Salary — Sexton's Pay — Price of Indian Corn — Demand on Dr. Doug- las for His Prom'ised Donation — Rank and Duties of Tithing-men Pages 41-53 CHAPTER V. From 1754-1791. — Pleasanter Aspect of Negotiations with Rev. Mr. Phipps on the Salary Question — Queer Settlement Between Him and the Town Treasurer — Grant for Schools — Tax on Distilled Spirits, and the Comparatively Small Amount Con- sumed in Town — Five Schools Ordered to be Established — Pe- tition for a Lottery to Repair the Road — Burying Ground Fenced — Plow Counterfeit Money Used to be Disposed Of — How the "Bulls" and "Bears" Were Viewed in 1780 — Main Street When it Had a ToH gate — Transportation Business in 1812. and How the Teamsters' Army Managed — Paul Dudley's Tavern at Nightfall — The Old Brick Tavern on the Caleb Hill Place Described, with Fac Simile of the Old Sign — Rendezvous of Voters, and the Sympathizers with the Shays Rebellion — The Old Providence and Douglas Turnpike in 1808 — The Old Coffee-house — Names of the Families Living on the Turnpike in 1814 — Site of the Old Distillery — State and Town Officers Obliged to Abjure the King and Queen of England — Bridge over CONTENTS. 7 Mumford River — Voted Not to Permit Inoculation to Prevent Sniall-pox Spreading — Terrible Ravages of this Disease — Voted to " Color " the Meeting-house — Map of Town Ordered — First Representative in Congress from Douglas — Letter from Him to tlie Town — Accoimt of Town Treasurer in 1791 . Pagus 54-6& CHAPTER VI. I Wau of the Revolution. — Greatness of the Struggle Necessi- tated by the Revolutionary War — Grandeur of tlie Result — Fatality Attending all Prior Efforts for Governmental Organiza- tion in America by Spain, Portugal, the Cabots, V^errazzano, Fer- dinand de Soto, etc., etc. — Patriotic Stand of Douglas During the Struggle, Both in Militar^and Civil Relations — Committee of Conference with Other Towns — Sam' 1 Jenni.son's Valuable Services — How the Judges Capitulated — Clerk of Court Sum- * moned Before Convention at Worcester — Removal of the Of- fice of the Mdssachuftetts Siyy from Boston to Worcester — Douglas Represented in the Provincial Congress at Salem in 1774 — Peremptory Message to the British Governor Gage — Salem's Most Efficient Action in Capturing British Vessels — Endorse- ment of Mr. Jennison by the Town .... Pagks 66-72 CHAPTER VII. Revolutionauy Wah — Continued. — Culmination of Excitement Against the King in Boston — Douglas People Eager for the Fight — Town Affairs Put on a War Footing — Minute-men Ap- pointed and Invited to Accei^t Pay — Ammunition and Arms Freely Contributed — Sharing the Pecuniary Burdens of the Oppressed Patriots in Boston — Twenty-two of the Refugees Received in Douglas — Prisoners Guarded by the Douglas Vet- eran, Captain Hill — After the Battle of Lexington tlie Soldiers' Families Supported by the Town — Vigilance Committee to At- tend to Suspicious Persons — Contributions by the Town for the Sappers and Miners in the Army — More than £70,000, Ex- clusive of Bounties and Indirect Expenses, Contributed by the Town — Its Quota Filled Every Time . . . Pages 73-77 CHAPTER VIII. Revolutionary Wak — Continued. — Prominence of Douglas in Formation of State Government — Copy of Dr. Jennison's Draft of Call for State Convention — Troubles Arising from the De- pressed Condition of the Finances — How the Town Proposed a Remedy — Formal Petition to the Legislature — Causes of the General Dissatisfaction Set Forth — The Famous "Shays Rebel- lion," and What Connection the Town Had With it — Vote of the Town in the Succeeding Gubernatorial Election — Vote of the Town on Accepting the State Constitution, and Some Amendments Proposed Pages 78-86 8 HISTORY OP DOUGLAS. CHAPTER IX. Towx Action on Education. — Earliest Records on Educational Plans — Pioneer Scliool-liouse — Difficulties Connected with At- tending First School — Paucity of Instruction Then — Commend- able Progress in Provisions for Schooling the Children — Singular Species of Vendue — Investment of School Fund — Reading-schools Established in Various Parts of the Town — Appropriation for Support of Schools in five Sections of the Town, Divided into " Squadrons" —List of Six of These Squad- rons in the Succeeding Year — Cost of New School-house in the Center — Cost of Schooling Between 1747 and 1770— Multipli- cation of School-houses — Ten Districts in Existence as Early as 1760 — [For other Educational Doings see Chapter XXI.] Pages 87-91 CHAPTER X. Church Organizations. — Installation of First Minister — Mem- bership Composed of Some Residents from Sutton — Length of Time in Building First Meeting-house — Frame Buildings Iftire Things in Those Days — Prominence of Religious Matters in Town Meetings — Uncertain Character of Ministers' Salaries — Value of a Bushel of Corn — AVindowless and Floorless Churches — First Plastering of the Church — Meeting-house Funds Taken for School Purposes — Opposition to the Church — Vote to Raise Minister's Salary, and Subsequently Rescinded — Pastor Stone in 1789 Asks a Dismission — Compromise Effected — Renewal of His Request for Dismission in 1805 — Baptists in 1770 Relieved of Assessment for Minister — Quakers Follow Suit, but Do Not Succeed so Well— History of the Church from Its Organization to 1879 — History of the Second Congregational Church in East Douglas, with List of the Original Members Brought Down to JS79 — History of the Reformed Methodist Church, South Doug- las- History of the Reformed Methodist Church in East Douglas — History of the Methodist Episcopal Church in East Douglas — History of the Quaker Church in South Douglas — History of the Catholic Church in East Douglas . . . Pages 92-112 CHAPTER XI. War of the Rebellion. —Douglas in the Rebellion — Number of Men Furnished— Honorable Record of the Town in Regard to This Struggle — Amount of Money Expended — List of Town Meetings to Act on Questions Relating to the War— Aid for Soldiers' Families — Conference with the Towns of Northbridgc and Uxbridge — Complete List of Douglas Soldiers by Regi- ments—Names of Douglas Soldiers Killed, Wounded and Miss- ino- Durin<^ the War —Decoration Day Observances Pages 113-121 CONTENTS. 9 CHAPTER XII. Newspapers and Othek Pubi.ications. — History of the Doug- las Herald — Its Originators Employes in the Webster Times Office — Consultation of Mr. Spencer with Leading Citizens of Douglas — Announcement of the Paper by Posters — Meagre Equipment of Office — Its Economical but Energetic Launch — Cost of Presses and Type, and How Liquidated — Location of First Headquarters — First Number, and the Impression Pro- duced — Increase of Patronage and Size of Paper — Eetirenient of Mr. Quimby — New Partner, and Enlargement in Size — Editor Made Postmaster — Local Matters Ventilated — Effect on Subscription List — Benefits of Illustrated Editions — Sub- scription List Doubled — Co-oiierative Plan Tried — Enlarge- ment of Its Sphere of Local Matter to Include Whitinsville — Proposal to Eemove to Blackstone — Finally Goes to Uxbridge — Appears as the Worcester South Compendium — Review of Its Course and History — Other Minor Publications — The Adver- tiser — Home Journal . . ... . Pages 122-130 CHAPTER XIII. Society Organizations. — First Douglas Band, with Names of Members — Second Douglas Band and Its Organization — Its Successor, and the Accident When Returning from Sutton — Its Resurrection to the Tune of Yankee Doodle by the Irrepres- sible Reynolds and Balcome — History of the Band of 1858-59 — The Gallant Enlistment of this Band When the Rebellion Oc- curred — Its Present Flourishing Condition — Douglas Literary Society — Douglas Social Library — Union Lodge, No. 88, I. O. of O. F. —Howard Lodge, No. 119, I. O. of O. F. — Mumford River Lodge A. F. & A. M. — The Social Union — The Douglas Lyceum — East Douglas District — Eas-t Douglas Musical Society — Douglas Library Association — Union Temperance Society and Reform Club Pages 131-141 CHAPTER XIV, Biographical and Genealogicai. Records. — Dr. Wm. Douglas — Col. Ezekiel Preston — The Hill Family — Hunt Family— Thayer Family — Wallis Family — Whipple Family — Stone Family Pages 142-207 CHAPTER XV. Biographical and Genealogical Records. — Rawson Family — Capt. Benjamin Wallis and Descendants — Dudley Family — Amos Gould —Amos Humes — Russel Titus — Dudley Balcome Ezra Jones — Dea. Warren Hunt— Dr. William Jennison — Jonathan Sprague — Homer B. Sprague — James E. Simmons 10 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. — Feuner Batchellev — Col. Horace Emerson — Luther Stone — Dr. Ezekiel Wood — Cliarles Hutchins — Gardner Chase — Dr. John Taylor — Samuel Lovett — Dr. D. P. White — Archelaus Stone — Milton D. Whipple — Cullen Whipple — Lyman Par- sons — S. W. Heath — Jeremiah B. Luther — Warren Humes — Eunice Balcome — Moses Knapp — Welcome Whipple, Esq. — Theodore Stone Pages 208-242 CHAPTER XVI. Manufactures. — Early Development of Manufacturing Enter- prise in the Town — Shingles, Hoops and Barrel Staves First on the List — Saw and Grain Mill in Eastern Section of the Town — The Wallis Planing-mill — Samuel Legg's Fulling-mill — Cragin's Satinet-mill — Cragin & Co.'s Cotton and Woolen Factory — Adams & Co.'s Cassimere Factory, and Their Hard Fortune— Hazard's Satinet-mill — Ellis Burt's Plow Factory — Col. Preston's Cotton Factory — Sweatland & Angel's Machine Shop — Cragin & Co.'s Nail Factory — Adams & Co.'s Power Loom Manufactory — The Lovett ]\[ill — Southworth's Grist- mill — Carpenter's Tannery — Carpenter's Shoe Factory Pages 243-251 CHAPTER XVII. Manufactures — Continued. — First Axe Factory — Humble Ori- gin — Remarkable and Continuous Success of the Business — Second Establishinent for the Manufacture of Axes — Failure of the Hunt Bros. — Resumption of the Business by Oliver — Boston the Most Favorable Depot for Their Axes — Mr. Cragin Becomes Agent for Selling Them — First Employes at Axe-mak- ing — Cullen Whipple's Drilling Machine — Enlargement of the Shops — Captain Scudder's Partnership — Formation of "The Douglas Axe Manufacturing Co."— Names of Employes Prior to Incorporation — Warren Hunt's Lease of the Works, and His Handsome Profits — Description of the Company's Works at Gilboa — Ice Embargo, and How Broken Up — Old Fashioned Trip Hammers, or Jumpers — Rolls First Used — Spanish Ma- chels, Cane Knives, etc. — Purchase of the Lovett Mill — Thayer's Grist and Saw-mill — Logee's Carriage Manufactory — Wellman's Grist-mill — Lee and Murdock's Shoddy-mill — Gleason's Wheelwi-ight's Shop — Joseph Bowen's Undertaker and Cabinet Repair Shop — L. S. Keith's Carriage and Paint Shop — Willard Whipple's Harness Shop — S. Rivers' Horse Shoeing "and Blacksmith's Shop — Eagle Grist-mill Pages 252-267 CHAPTER XVII L Douglas Axe Manufacturing Co. — Wonderful Growth of Axe Manufacturing — Ex-Premier Gladstone's Admiration of the CONTENTS. 11 American Axe — Capital Kequisite for the Business — Its Prin- cipal Departments — Motive Power Employed — Aggregate of Iron, Coal, Grindstones, etc.. Annually Iveqnired — Detail of the Forging Department — Peculiar Method of Incorporating the Steel with the Iron — Symmetry and Scientific Form of the Douglas Brand of Axes — Kigid System of Inspection Employed — Bunglers Not at a Premium Among the Workmen, and Why Not — Process of Grinding, and Its Perils — Tempering Syste- matized for Practical Resvilts in Axe Production — The Aes- thetics in Axe-making, and Where It Comes In . Pages 268-274 CHAPTER XIX. Incidents and Accidents. — Robbery of the Axe Company's Safe — A Ponderous Job, but Noiseless in Execution — Evident- ly Done by Veterans in Burglary — Removal of the Safe Entire- ly Across One Room and Partly Across Another — Front and Top of Safe Pried Apart — Contents Fished Out — Fortunate Absence of Funds for Pay-day — Explanation of their Opera- tions Being Unheard — Amount of Property Stolen — Suspect- ed Persons Found Innocent — Adventure of the " Douglas Fleet ' ' in Boston — Captain Balcome's Facetious Commandery of the Military — Wonderful Muscularity — Yanquishment of a Pugi- list at Sight — How Tramps Used to be Managed — How a Man Was Cured of the Watch Fever — The Frightened Quaker — La- Fayette and the Horses He Borrowed in Douglas — Dueling Party Visits Douglas — Lovell Pulsipher's Ingenious Plan for Abate- ment of the Town Tax Pages 275-289 CHAPTER XX. Centennial, Fourth of July in East Douglas. — Widespread Observance of Human Birthdays — Increasing Intelligence Se- cures General Recognition — National Birthdays Proportionately Important — One Hundredth Anniversary Deserved Especial Observance — What it Celebrated — Double Victory over Eng- land, and Subjugation of the Rebellion — Promptitude in Car- rying out Centennial Fourth — Doings Preliminary — Illumina- tion and Torchlight Procession — Trades' Display, etc. — Civic Procession and Public Addresses — Dinner and Exercises at Table — Union Prayer-meeting — Afternoon and Evening Amusements — Remarkable Good Order During the Jubilee Pages 290-296 CHAPTER XXI. Educational Addenda. — Educational Efforts in 1797 — Walluni Pond Hill District Organized — Reorganization of Districts — School Money Divided pro rata — Rebuilding of the Burnt 12 HISTORY OP DOUGLAS. South School-house — Committee to Define Limits of the Dis- tricts — Abolition of District System by the State — Town Action Restoring the System of Districts — Special Provision by the Town for East Douglas — Repairs in Nos. 9 and 10 Dis- tricts — Report of Town Committee for 1878 — High School Established — Subscribers' Names — Building Committee — How Maintained — Dr. Wood's Donation — Litigation over this Fund — Revising Standard of Admission to High School — Three Years' Course Adopted for Graduation , Pages 297-30T CHAPTER XXII. The Moses Wallis Devise — Singular Character of the Docu- ment — Obligations of the Town in Accepting the Trust — Pres- ent Status of the Devise After Thirty-seven Years' Investment — A Correct Copy of the Original Will . . Pages 308-31& APPENDIX. Supplementaiy Rebellion War Record — Response of Massachu- setts to tlie President's Call for Three Months' Men — Prompt Rally of the Troops in Boston — First Companies to Reach Boston — Call from Washington for More Soldiers — Departure of First Troops from Boston for Washington — MemoraL'.e Passage Through Baltimore — Governor Andrews' Call for Three Years' Men — Plan of Organizing and Numbering the Regiments — First Three Regiments Organized — Eleventh Regiment, and Lieutenant-Colonel Tripp's Narrative of Its Services and Casualties — Fifteenth Regiment at Ball's Bluff and Gettysburg — Bi-igadier-General Gibbons' Complimentary Order — Eighteenth, Twenty-second, Twenty-fourth, Twenty- fifth, Twenty-seventli, Twenty-eighth, Thirtieth, Thirty-third, and Thirty-sixth Regiments, with Lists of Douglas Soldiers and Casualties — Fifty-first Regiment — Its Gallant Volunteer- ing After Expiration of Enlistment, and Colonel A, B. R. Sprague's Official Reports — Fifty-seventh and Fifty-eighth Regiments — First, Third, and Fourth Massachusetts Cavalry, and Bravery of Colonel Frank Washburn — First, Second, and Sixteenth Massacliusetts Heavy Artillery — First, Second, Fourtli, and Seventh Rhode Island Volunteers — First, Second, and Third Rhode Island Cavalry — Third Rhode Island Heavy Artillery — Thirteenth, Eighteenth, and Twenty-sixth Con- necticut Volunteers — Engineer, Signal, and Veteran Reserve Corps — United States Navy, etc Pages 317-35^ List of Illustrations. ^( NO. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. > 6. ~1. 8. - 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. SUB.1ECT. PAGK. Bird's-eye Vieav of East Douglas, Bird's-eye View of Douglas Center, Piece of Petrified Wood, ... . . . Arrowheads and Other Indian Kelics, Indian Camping Ground, ...... Eesidence of a. J. Thayer, East Dougi-as, First Cong. Church, Erected 1748 at Douglas Center. Diagram of the Several Land Grants, Residence of Chas. A. Caouette, East Douglas, Residence of Dea. Albert Butler, East Douglas, . Residence of A. F. Jones, East Douglas, . Residence of Mrs. Adaline Starrett, East Douglas, Residence of Rev. W. W. Dow, Douglas Center, Thayer's Block, East Douglas, .... Moses Hill TaveKn Sign, Frontispiece. Frontispiece. 21 22 22 28 31 if 36 40 40 47 47 56 69 14 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. NO. SUBJECT. 16. Eesidence of Dr. A. E. Kemp, 17. Kesidence of Rev. Wm. T. Briggs, 18. Autographs of Thirty-one Prominent Douglas Men, 19. Portrait of Rev. David Holman, .... 2 0. First Congregational, Church, Douglas Center 21. Second Congregational Church, East Douglas, 22. Interior of Old Reformed Methodist Church, 2.3. Reformed Methodist Church, East Douglas, 24. Methodist Episcopal Church, East Douglas, 25. Catholic Church, East Douglas, . 26. Office of Douglas Herald (Knapp Building), 27. Office of Douglas Herald (Arcade), . 28. Douglas Band, 29. Residence of Moses H. Balcome, 30. Residence of D. M. Lee, 31. Portrait of Dea. Warren Hunt, 32. Autograph of Jonathan Sprague, 33. Autograph of Fenner Batcheller, 34. Autograph of Gardner Chase, 35. Autograph of Lyman Parsons, . 36. Autograph of S. W. Heath, 37. Bird's-eye View of Whitin Reservoir, . 38. Bass Fishing at Wallum Pond, 39. Camping Out at Wallum Pond, . 40. The Moses Knapp Place, East Douglas, 41. Modern axe, ... 42. Old Axe, Made in 1825, 43. Upper Works of Douglas Axe Mf'g. Co., 44. Howe Factory op Douglas Axe Mf'g. Co, 45. GiLBOA, Douglas Axe Mf'g. Co., . 46. Head and Bit Forging Shops and Lovett Works^ 47. Medals Awarded to the Douglas Axe Mf'g. Co. by the Massachusetts Charitable Association, Unit- ed States Centennial Commission, and French Medal, 48. Medal Awarded to the Douglas Axe Mf'g, Co, at the World's Fair, London, 1862, 49. Medal Awarded to Douglas Axe Mf'g. Co. at the Vienna Exposition, 1863, PAGE. 60 69 93 - . 98 ^ 100 103 106 107 109/ 111/ 123 123 131 217 217 220 222 225 230 ^35 ^ 236 238 238 238 249 253 253 255 255 255 257 • 259 260 261 LIST OF ENGRAVINGS. 15 NO. 50. 51. 52. .5.3. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. .59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. SUB.IECT. Old Red Shop and Farm Buildings of the Douglas Axe Mf'g. Co., Patterns of Axes Made by the Douglas Axe Mf' Overcoat Steel and the Douglas Axe Bit, Patterns of Hatchets Made by the Douglas Mf'g. Co., Claav Hatchet, ...... Burglars' Tools Used in the Safe Robbery, Residence of A. F. Brown, Esq., . . Residence of Charles Hutchins, . Residence of Jesse B. Sherman, . Residence of L. S. Whipple, Residence of Edwin Moore, Residence of John M. Rawson, Residence of A. M. Hill, .... Residence of Ira Wallis, . . . . Plan of Ball's Bluff Battlefield, G. Co Axe PAGE. 263 269 271 273 - 274 275 277 281 283 293 293 ' 299 299 305 v^ 325 ^J,i //' M AP THE TOWN OF DOUGUS, SHOWING THE SEVEm scB m uraicTS, 1B78. CHAPTER I. FIRST OCCUPATION OP THE TOWN. riP^ name of Douglas was iirst given to the territory of the town in the jear 1746. '' New Sherburu," or '' New Sherburn Grant," had previously to this date been its designa- tion since its first occupancy by the whites, which was as early as 1715, if not considera- bly earlier. The original settlers came ahnost entirely from the town of Sherburn, though some, and probably a small portion of them, hailed from Natick, and in all their transactions as a bod}^ they appear to have invaria- bly acknowledged their allegiance to the town of Sherburn. The year in which the present name was given is clearly that of 174(5, since in 1745 a new road was laid out, and the records show that it was done by the authorities of New Sherburn, but in all subse- quent transactions b}' these officers the}- are recorded under the auspices of Douglas. At the time when these pioneer settlers began the occupation of the town large tracts of land within its present limits had for some years been annually burned over in the spring by the people residing in the adjoining towns of Oxford and Mendon, in order that the lands thus devastated might better answer the purpose of grazing their cattle. The excellent quahties of the temtory of Douglas for pasturing had at this early date become well known to the farmers in these towns, and doubtless the same fact was well understood by the Sherburn people in the other direction, and was probably one of the strong inducements governing them in their courageous venture to plant themselves here. This annual destruc- tion of unmense quantities of tunber, merely for the purpose of 2 18 HISTORY OF EAST DOUGLAS. eurichiug thus summarily their borrowed pasturage ground, was not strange on the part of these neighbors, even though it was done, in process of time, at the expense as well as to the no small annoy- ance of the more legitimate occupants of the land. In due time it came to an end, however, though not without calling out proba- bly some vigorous protests from those whose rights were thus encroached upon. Carrying us back, as the name instinctively does, to the chival- rous days of Scottish history, when the proverb was in vogue, " No man may touch a Douglas, nor a Douglas's man, for if he do he is sure to come by the waur (worse)," the question, ''What 'sin a name?" is one not entirely unrenunierative to the curiosity' of a genuine son of the old town of Douglas. In view of the fact that the old-world contest by the real lords of the soil against the Stu- arts and their allies was really revived in our Revolutionar}' strug- gle, we think it will not be diflicult to see that at no time in the })ast were the Douglases more uncompromising in their resistance to the haughty and baseless demands of royalty, or less entitled to the honor of having inherited the republicanism as well as tlie fear- less and independent spirit of John Knox and his followers. And lest this should be deemed to be only the ebullition of a merely senseless ol)stinacy tomouarchial authority, uncalled for in reason, we are able to cite one of the noblest instances of lo^'alty to the king in the annals of any country, in the case of the beautiful and heroic C!atharine Douglas, maid of honor to Queen .Joanna, who threw herself in front of the assassins who were savagely thundering at the door of the ro_val apartments, and, substituting her own arm for the bolts that had been treacherously drawn, she held the door therewith until cut down at her post by the swords of the conspir- ators. But it is time for us to trace the origin of the name borne bj' our town. Dr. William Douglas, an eminent j)hysician of Boston, a Scotchmaii ])y l)irth, author of several historical and medical works, being withal a somewhat extensive land proi)rietor in various parts of the State, in consideration of the privilege of naming the township, offered the inhabitants the sum of $')00 (old tenor), as a fund for the establishment and maintenance of free schools, togethei- with a tract of thirty acres of land, with a dwelling-house and barn standing thereon. It was stipulated in this offer that this land was FIRST OCCUPATION OF THE TOWN. 19 not to be sold by tlie town, but it was sold, nevertheless, in the course of a few years afterwards, though the wise and kind inten- tions of the donor were doubtless fully met by the inhabitants in ordering the proceeds to be carefully invested for the benefit of the school fund. vSomething more than $900 of the money thus real- ized still remain in the keeping of the town, the balance having been invested in nonproductive securities. It is said also that a bell was promised to the Center School by Doctor Douglas, besides £50 a year for seven years for the support of the ministry, though quite a portion of these pledges was ncA'er received b}' the town. The location of the thirty-acre farm is supposed to have been in or near what is now known as the Douglas "Woods, through which the New York and New England Hailroad is located. For the gratification of the curiosity of those Avho have the leisure to look up the boundaries as they stood when the donation was made, we insert the following extract from the original deed, which bears the date of May 8, 1750 : '' Northerly on the Kange line parting the second and third Ranges of lots ; easterly with the laud of Dr. Wm. Douglas ; southwardly with the Range line ])arting the third and fourth Ranges of lots ; westwardly with the land of Jonathan Fairbanks bv metes and bounds — being 215 rods in length and twenty -four rods in Avidtli, with a dwelling-house on said land." Dr. Samuel Jennison, a man Avhose subsequent prominence in the history of the town, as well as in national matters, would certainly seem to have secured for him the highest regard of his fellow-townsmen, appears at a later date to have become anxious that the toAvu should bear his name, in consideration of certain favors which he was ready to grant. For some reason his propo- sition was not favorably received, since on the 11th of February, 1771, the voters were assembled to see if they would petition the General Court to have the name altered, but the proposal was rejected, and with so much unanimity that it was never again alluded to. Notwithstanding the failure of Doctor Douglas to make good all of his promises to the town, tl>e inhabitants chose still to honor him, or else were content not to experiment further in subsitlized cognomens, and hence we do not to-day live in Jen- nison. The area of the town now comprises about thirty-three square 20 HISTOEY OF EAbT DOUGLAS. miles, or about 21,000 ac-res. It is bounded on the nortli by Oxford, Sutton and Uxbridge, on the east by Sutton andUxbridge, on tlie south b^' Burrillville {11. I.), and on the west by Thompson (Conn.) and Webster. Its distance from Boston is forty-five miles, with which it has a direct connection over the New York and New England Railroad. The geological formation consists of quartz, feldspar and mica. Bowlders are plentifully scattered over the surface in nearly every section of the town, and gold and silver ores are said to be found in some localities, though not in sufficient quantities to pay for working. Large quantities of building and ornamental stone are quarried from the granite ledges found in the centre of the town, which are shipped to almost every section of New England. The face of the country is beautifull}' diversified with hills and valleys, and it is rendered more beautiful in many sections b}' the cultivation of shade and ornamental trees by the roadside. The numerous lakes and ponds within the limits of the town add greatly to the beauty of the scenery, and the waters flowing from them, mingling with the rivers and streamlets, are made tributary to the wealth and prosperity of the inhabitants, as the chapters^ under the head of " Manufactures" will abundantly show. The principal elevations are Bald Hill, 711 feet in height; Wallum Pond Hill, 778 feet ; and Mount Daniel, 735 feet. The largest of the numerous ponds are Wallum Pond, in the south- west part, covering about 150 acres within the territory of Doug- las ; Badluck Pond, in the western part of the town, covering about 110 acres; Reservoir Pond, also in the western limits, covering about 400 acres ; and Manchaug Pond, located in the northern border, covering in Douglas ninety-three acres. Besides these, Bating Pond is found in the southern part of the town, and Cham- berlin Pond in the west, each covering a small extent of terri- tory. The soil is varied. In the central and eastern sections man}- of the farms are susceptible of easy cultivation, and reward the labors of those who till them with remunerative crops, but in the western section there is an unbroken tract, of nearl}' 6,000 acres in area, extending nearly tlie entire length of the town from north to south, and comprising nearly one-third of the whole of its territory, its surface rocky and uneven, and covered with a varied growth of FIRST OCCUPATION OF THE TOWN. 21 wood and timber, but with scarcely a single inhabitant. Just across the boundary line which separates this portion of the town from Sutton is located a natural curiosity, well known as " Purgatory," — a weird and rugged spot, in which some terrible convulsion of nature has at a former jxn-iod rent asunder the solid rocky formation of which the entire region is chiefly composed, leaving a cliasm of some fifty feet in width, its perfectly vertical walls nearly seventy feet in •depth in some places, into which the superincumbent trees and rocks have been tumbled in wildest confusion. At the bottom of PIECE OF PETRIFIED WOOD FOUND OX LAND OF SIMON RAWSON. some portions of this fnghtful gorge may sometimes be found beds of ice far into the summer months, and visitors who are at the trouble to clamber through the rugged detile find the air strangely alternating from hot to cold. Such fantastic names as "Pulpit Rock," and "The Devil's Corn-crib," have been bestowed on some of the singular forms assumed by the fallen rocks. From a ver}' early period, probably reaching bej'ond the year 1635, bands of Indians, principally of the Nipmuck tribe, largely monopolized the beautiful region of country comprised within the southern limits of Worcester county, the Blackstone river being then called Nipmuck river. The numerous relics of Indian war- fare as well as of dail}' life, which have been exhumed from time to time by the plow and spade within the area of Douglas, show ARROWHEADS AND OTHER INDIAN RELICS FOUND WITHIN THE I.IMITS OF DOUGLAS, CHIEFLY ON THE SIMON RAWSON PLACE. FIRST OCCUPATION OF THE TOWN. 23 conclusive!}- that this was one of the favorite haunts of the red man. It is well known that the Indians almost invariably select for their burial grounds the most picturesque localities, and here they must have congregated quite numerousl}', pursuing their rude arts of husbandry and predatory life combined. In 1074 Major (lOokin, with that distinguished apostle to the Indians, John Eliot, made a tour through the Nipmuck country, visiting especially among the "■ praying Indians," who are said to liave mniil)ered at this time as many as one thousand, from which it is safe to conclude that the Indian population in this region must have been unusually large as early as this. No records exist showing the time when the Nipmucks constituted an independent tribe. They seem to have been for many years held in more or less subjection to the neighboring sachems. Until the fatal war of 1675 these sons of the forest lived on the most pacific terms Aviththe white settlers, proving highly serviceable to them in many ways. That ferocity so generally predominating in savage life seems never to have shown itself among them, such was the simpUcity of the Nipmuck character. Up to this time no pur- chases of lands were allowed to be made from the Indians without the oversight of a judicious committee of the General Court, so that no injustice or wrong seems to have occurred on either side, each seeming to realize their mutual needs and obligations. That they were constantly interchanging ofHces of kindness and neigh- borly assistance, the following touching incident strikingly exem- phfies : At one time, not long after the arrival of the Puritans, it became known to these Indians that their new neighbors were greatly in want of bread, and one of these miscalled '•'■ savages" is said to have carried them a bag of corn, believed to have contained as much at least as a bushel and a half, the entire distance from the southwest part of Worcester county to Boston. It is doul^tful if the records of civilized life will present man}- such instances of persevering goodness under similar disal)ilities. The census of Douglas for the several decades since the year 1790 shows a constant gain in population, though moderate in the rate of increase. Its elevation above the Blackstone valley on the east, and the valley of the (iuinebaug on the west, secures to its residents a most salul^rious and in\-igorating atmosphere, and those in quest of permanent residences are beginning to realize the ad- 24 HISTORY OF EAST DOUGLAS. vantages afforded to such within its limits, as the rapid gain since 1850 will show in the appended table : 1790 1800 1810 1820 1830 1840 1850 1860 1875 1,070 1,083 1,142 1,375 1,742 1,017 1,878 2,442 2,202 Within the last few years a camp ground lias been established near the Center, where union religious services of the evangelical order are regularly held each 3'ear, usually closing with a mass temperance meeting, conducted on the plan of the gospel workers in this cause. This camp-meeting enterprise was started through the earnest efforts of Mr. George M. Morse, of Putnam, Conn., a leading manufacturer of that town, and possessed of considerable wealth, whicli he endeavors seemingly to employ as far as possible in the promotion of religious and benevolent efforts. Large num- bers of people from the different towns in this part of Massa- chusetts, as well as from the closely adjoining States of Connecticut and Rhode Island, attend this annual gathering, many of them during the ten or twelve dajs of its continuance, but the attendance is mostly b}^ those who can leave their homes in the morning and return at night. I'he order prevailing at these meetings is almost invarial)ly uuexceptioiuTble. CHAPTER II. ALLOTMENT OF SHERBORN NEW GRANT. /E have been unable, after careful inquiry, to ob- tain an}- reliable local facts of an early date con- cerning the settlement of the town, so sparsely made and so slightly appreciated in their real importance and desirableness were the records of those eventful times. Doubtless very many incidents of a most interesting and even thrill- ing character transpired in connection with the venturesomeness of those who braved peril and hardship to secure for themselves and families a home by pushing out into the unoc- cupied regions of the country. The perusal of these incarnations of heroic endurance would prove invaluable tousof to-da3-inmany respects. Napoleon is reported to have said that the history of an army could not be written till that of its several regiments had been recorded ; and neither can a nation's history, nor even that of a State, be fairly and impartially constructed till that of its towns and hamlets is collated. In the absence of these important data, however, the history of its connection with the town of Sherborn (the present legal orthog- rai)hy of *■' Sherbnrn " since the action of the Legislature on the subject in 1852) will furnish us much valuable material. This old town was incorporated in 1G74, but when Framingham was erected into a township, in 1700, the General Court set otf from Sherborn seA'enteen families, with their estates, to be included in the new town. This proved so unsatisfactory to the inhabitants of Sherborn that they appealed to the General Court for redress, and urged their complaint so vigorousl}' that it resulted in securing to 26 HISTORY OF EAST DOUGLAS. them two \:iluable land grants. From the Sherborn Town Rec- ords the following items are appended, as giving, perhaps, the onl}' legitimate history of those days : 3Iareh 7, 1708. — •' At a town meeting, legally warned, etc., it was then manifest to ye towu what had l)een etfeeted with ye Hon. General Court by our Representative, Sam'l Bnllard, concerning ye scA'enteen families on ye north part of ye town, with ye accept- ance and concurrence of ye Court herewith, and was consented to by a general vote, in consequence of ye loss of seventeen families which were incorporated witli ye town of Framingham. Ye Gen- eral Court granted 4,(X)(J acres of land, lying westerly of ye town- ship of Mendon, as an equivalent." These lands were called Sher- born New Grant, and the grant was confirmed in 1710. "At a meeting of ye inhabitants of Sherborn, June 1 7th, 1 71.'k to state a rule whereby ye 4,000 acres of land, late granted and con- firmed to ye toAvn liy ye General Court, in lieu of ye seventeen families set oflJ'to Framingham, may be orderly and regularly di- vided, to and among ye same free h(jlders and inhal)itants, it was '' Voted, That ye invoice and pcjUs and ratable estates taken in August, 1714, shall be ye rule whereby j-e 4,000 acres of land shall be appropriated aniong ye i)resent inhabitants of said town of Sher- born, being freeholders, and such other inhabitants that have lived upon hire in ye town for some time passed. "Ye first committee chosen to h)ok where ye town may be ac- commodated with ye 4,000 acres of country land was, Dea. Leland, Joseph Sheffit'ld, and Benj. Whitney. Ye first committee chosen U> divide yo land according to ye rule adopted 1\y ye town was, En- sign Sam'l Bullard, AVm. Rider, Jr., and Joseph Death; and ye- town voted them 400 acres of land for their services. This com- mittee subsequently dechned to serve, and Dea. Benoni Larned, Eleazer Hollirook, John Death, Joseph Ware, and Thomas Jones were chosen a committee, and ye tow^n voted that they should not receive but 3 shillings per day for their serAices." It was also voted ' ' that ye committee shall begin at ye northeast corner of ye said grant, and work from thence westwardly through ye same in ye first range of lots ; then turning and running eastward in their work through ye second range of lots ; then working westward again for ye third range of lots ; and lastly, to work eastward for ye fourth range of lots — ye lots to be 200 rods in length northerly ALLOTMENT OF SHERBORN NEW GRANT. 27 a,u(l southerl}', and ye breadth of 'em to extend easterly and west- erly, according to their bigness." It was also voted "■ that ye proprietors draw lots for dividing the land," and Dea. Ilopestill Leland was chosen to draw for those of the proprietors that were not present. This 4,000-aere grant was divided among one hnndred and five persons, seventeen of whom bore the name of Morse. In 1715 another grant of 3,000 acres was obtained b}- the town of Sherborn ; and subsequently by purchase still another grant of 3,700 acres, all of which was di- vided according to the rule adopted by the town. There were granted '■ to twenty proprietors, of a place called New Sherburn, afterwards Douglas," at some time prior to 1730, an area of 4,524 acres of land at the extreme Avest and southwest part of the town, within which grant Avere " 400 acres granted to ye ministers, and IGO acres to Simon Chamberlin." About this time there were set otf to several men in Boston a large tract of land, on what is now known as Walhim Pond Hill, then known as the Boston Men's Farm, There were also granted to a son of Gov. Bradstreet, for some meritorious service, 500 acres of land in what is now the northeast corner of Douglas. The com- mittee sent out t(j locate this land for Iiim, in their report, recom- mended that they " throw in GO acres, because 3'e land was of such poor (luality." There were also granted to David Draper GOO acres of land in the northeast corner of New Sherborn, and to Na- thaniel Brewer (called afterwards the Brewer Farm) HOO acres south of the Draper and Bradstreet grant. Brewer subsequently sold 500 acres of his grant to Benjamin Murdish. David Draper and Benjamin Murdish soon after this petitioned the General Court to be set to the town of Uxbridge, and they, with their es- tates, the eastern line of which was near the school-house on Wil- liams Hill, were set to the town of Uxbridge, and have ever since belonged there. The remainder of the Brewer farm is now divided into the farms owned by Willard Whipple, Mrs. Charles Thayer, Mary Prentice, and James and Chester Williams, the farm known as the Knapp Farm (now owned by Wm. A. Perr^'), and the lower village, owned by the Axe Company." A part of the remainder of the village of East Douglas, and a strip of land nearly one mile wide, and extending to the Uxbridge line south of the residence of Joseph Hall, was sold by order of ALLOTMENT OP SHERBORN NEW GRANT. 29' the General Court, April 1, 1723, '' in ye first year of je reign of our Sovereign Lord, King George ye Second, to Dr. Wm. Douglas, Habijah Savage, John Binning, Wm. Tyler and Andrew Tyler." This land was subsequently divided between these parties, and the Tylers settled upon their shares. On the eastern part thereof,, immediately south of this Tyler and Douglas grant, was the first 3,000-acre grant, the north line of which must have been not far from the Martin Four Corners. This tract was two and a half miles long from north to south, and two miles wide from east to west. The 4:,0()0-acre grant was west of the Bradstreet grant. The Brewer Farm and the Taylor and Douglas grants, the east line of which was the east line of the farm ftirmerly owned by INIicah Hill, extended two and a half miles from north to south, and twa and a half miles from east to west, the west line being near the east edge of Douglas Woods. The last grant to Sherborn, of 3,700 acres, was west of the 4,000-acre grant, and extended as far south as the present residence of Mr. Joseph Morse, and included within its limits Badluck Cedar Swamp. Besides these there were various other small tracts of land granted to individuals, together with sec- tions of land contiguous to these respective tracts, which were desig- nated as " unknown land," " individual land," and "overplus land." The most of these have fallen into the hands of adjacent land- holders. Among the first settlers of the town we find the well known names of Morse, Hill, Brown, Balcome, Wallis, Jones, AVhiting, Dudley, Whitue}', Fairbanks, Jepherson, Reed, Gould, Thaver, Aldrich, Humes, and many others. Mr. Ephraim Hill was the first white man that settled in Douglas, and in 1721 the town of Sherborn granted him twenty acres of the 4,000-acre grant, in consideration of this fact, to be divided to him with his other land. The Sherborn Records give the following additional information on this primary division of the territory of the town : " At a meeting of freeholders and other inhabitants of ye town of Sherborn, regularly assembled by legal warning, Oct. ye 10th, 1715, to receive information from ye Committee chosen to lay out Sherborn New Grant, &c., as may then be otfered, and to give to ye said Committee full and plenary orders and directions how to proceed in la3ing out ye 4,000 acres of land late granted and con- firmed b}^ ye General Court to ye town of Sherborn, as an equiva- 30 HISTORY OF EAST DOUGLAS. lent for sevonteen fumilies, &c., called Sherborn New Grant, as aforesaid , A^oted, Tliat ye said committee, viz., Deacon Benoni Learned, Eleazar Ilolbrook. John Death, Joseph Ware, and Thomas Jones, shall boi'-in at ye northeast corner of ye said tract of land, and to work from there to ye westward, through ye same in ye same range of lotts ; then turning eastward in their work, through ye land again for ye second range of lots ; then working westward for ye third range ; and lastly, to work eastward for ye fourth range of lots, ye Lotts to he 200 rods in length, northerly and southerly-, and ve hreadth of them to be easterly and westerly according to their bigness ; and ye said committee to lay out ye whole of ye said tract of land, one with another, good and bad, as near as they can according to equity, to ye proprietors as ye town have voted and agreed upon ; and also to ye Committee that looked up and implatted ye said tract of land, as ye town have agreed with them. Provided also, that allowance shall be made for convenient wave in ye laying out of ye said Lots. Voted in ye affirmative. Also voted for ye said proprietors to proceed to draw lots for dividing ye land ; and Dea. Hopestill Lealand was chosen to draw lots for those of ye said proprietors that were .absent. Voted in ye affirmative by ye pro- ])rietors, ye 10th day of October, 1715. Attest, J(JSKPH MOUSE, Moderator:' "Also, there was chosen Isaac Coolidge, to serve as one of ye .said Committee in ye room of Joseph A\'are, his desire being to be dismissed by reason of ye stress of his business. Voted in ye affirmative. Attest, JOSEPH MORSE, Moderator." FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH, ERECTED IN 1718 AT DOUGLAS CENTER. CHAPTER III ALLOTMENT OF OTHER GRANTS. ELOW we give the minutes on the Records of the town of Sherborn touching the orig- inal allotment of the territory included in the New Grant, of which the diagram fol- lowing is a fjic simile, as well as of the additional grants. That portion which is shaded includes the 4,000-acre grant, and the balance the subsequent grants : LOTTS DRAWN BY YE PROPRIETORS OF SHERBORN NEW GRANT, OCT. YE 10th, 1715 : NAMK OF PROPRIETOR, Jun Noah Morse, Eleazar Fairbanks, Juu'r, William Sheffield, Jonathan Whitney, John Hill, Sen'r, John Holbrook, AVilliam Barron, Benjamin Bullard, ]Jenjamin Twitcliell, John Morse, Ensign John Death, Joseph Cozzens, Samuel Perry, . James Lealand, Nathaniel Morse, Robert Daniel, Capt. Samuel Bullard, Eleazar Hill, Jun'r, Plain Aaron Morse, Lieut. Jonathan Morse, r, NO. OF LOT. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 NAME OF NO. PROPRIETOR. 3F LOT. Ebenezer Hill, Jun'r, 21 Moses Adams, Jun'r, 22 Ebenezer Lealand, Sen'r, 23 John Goulding, 24 Edmund Gookin, 25 Richard Sanger, 26 George Fairbanks, . 27 Thomas Holbrook, . 28 Nathan Morse, 29 John Twitchell, 30 Eleazar Rider, 31 Moses Adams, Sen'r, 32 Benjamin Twitchell, Sen'r, 33 Timothy Lealand, . 34 Joshua Underwood, 35 Jacob Cozzens, . 36 Wilham Wait, . 37 Ebenezer Hill, Sen'r, 38 Ebenezer Lealand, Jun'r, . 39 Isaac Bullard, . . 40 ALLOTMENT OF OTHER GRANTS. 33 NAME OF PROPRIETOR. NO. OF LOT. John Brick, .... 41 John Lealand, . . . .42 Hopestill Lealand, Jr., . . 43 Widow Mary West, ... 44 The Joseijh Johnson, . . 45 Eleazer Hill, Sen'r, ... 46 John Hill, Jun'r, ... 47 Nathaniel Sheffield, ... 48 Jonathan Morse, Jun'r, . . 49 Benoni Adams, ... 50 Daniel Eider, .... 51 Solomon Hill, .... 52 James Morse, . . . .53 Thomas Jones, . . .54 Joseph Whitney, ... 55 Joshua Kebbe, ... 5(5 Samuel Morse, ... 57 Joseph Ware, .... 58 William Rider, Sen'r, . . 59 The Widow Bethia Perry, . 60 Joseph Perry, .... 61 Joseph Morse, Jun'r, . . 62 Isaac Cozzens, .... 63 Farm of Aaron Morse, , . 64 Dea. Hopestill Lealand, . . 65 The AVidow Leah Goddard, . 66 Isaac Learned, ... 67 Joseph Sheffield, ... 68 Abraham Cozzens, Jun'r, . 69 The Widow Deborah Morse, . 70 Isaac Coolidge, ... 71 Capt. Joseph Morse, . . 72 The Widow Lydia Twitchell, 73 N.4ME OF NO. PROPRIETOR. OF LOT. Henry Lealand, 74 Daniel Sheffield, 75 AVilliam Lealand, 76 William Bull, .... 77 John Sawin, .... 78 Nathaniel Perry, 79 Jonathan Fairbanks, Jun'r, 80 Dea'n Benoni Learned, . 81 Doct'r Jonathan Fairbanks, 82 Ebenezer Pratt, 83 Abraham Cozzens, Sen'r, 84 The Widow Mary Coolidge, . 85 William Rider, Jun'r, 86 Benjamin Whitney Wholder, 87 Ebenezer Badkick, , 88 Nathaniel Hill, 89 James Adams, 90 Eleazar Fairbanks, Sen'r, 91 Lieut. Thomas Sawin, 92 The Widow Sheffield Estate, 93 Ephraim Bullin, 94 Benjamin Whitney, Sen'r, . 95 Daniel Morse, . . 96 John BuUen, 97 Joseph Twitchell, . 98 Eleazer Holbrook, . 99 John Fisk, 100 Moses Morse, 101 Nathaniel Holbrook, A. William Johnson, B. Mary Morse C. Israel Morse, D. Ephraim Hill, .... * In the 3'ear 1715 the committee, viz., Deacon Benoni Learned, Eleazar Holbrook, John Death, Thomas Jones, and Isaac Cool- idge, having so far "completed their work in ye proportioning and laying out ye 4,000 acres of land lying westward of Mendon, late granted by ye Gen" Court to ye towii of Sherborn, with ye assistance of Mr. Thomas White, their surveyor," made their "re- turn of ye ser^-ice they had done " by a plan of it, drawn by Mr. White, to ye Town for acceptance, as also their demands for their service, and to pay Mr. White for his in ye aforesaid business ; 3 lifiliIMp DIAGRAM OF THE SEVERAL LAND GRANTS. ALLOTMENT OF OTHER GRANTS. 35 and 3-6 town voted an acceptance of ^-e sd committee's work, and the cost, amonnting to ye snm of abont ten pounds, one way or another. Old Mr. Ebenezer Hill appeared (his Lott falling well), and freeh' undertook to pay off and satisfy ye committee and sur- vej'or for their serA-ice, as above said, which was accepted by ye town." " At a meeting of ye inhabitants of Sherborn, Dec. 29, 1721, ye town granted to Ephraim Hill, and his heirs forever, 20 acres of laud within ye common and undivided laud in ye said 4,000 acres, in 3'e 4th range, next to ye last lott there granted, to be laid out in a regular form, in consideration of his being the first settled inhabitant there." The Sherborn Records contain the following additional minutes of the action of the town in the year 1725 concerning the several land grants : " At a meeting of 3'e Proprietors of 3-e undivided laud in three several grants of laud made b3^ 3'e Great and General Court of His Majest3', Province of ye Massachusetts Ba3', of late, to ye town of Sherborn, Mug westward of and parth' adjoining to ye Township of Mendou, in ye count3- of Suffolk, commonly called New Sher- born, viz. : First, a grant of 4,000 acres ; secondl3^ a grant of 3,000 acres; and thirdly, a grant of 3, 700 —being regularly assembled and convened upon 3'e 27th day of December, 1725, b3' legal warning, and from thence held by several continuations to ye sec- ond Monda3' in November next following, and then met Monda3^, November ye 14th, 1726." "Upon a motion made to 3'e said proprietors, being assembled at time and place as aforesaid, whether it would not be for 3^6 best to make but one lotment and division in 3'e 3,000 acres and ye 3,700 acres Grants made by ye General Court to ye Town of Sherborn, situate and 13'ing westward of Mendon, saving what 3"e Town has disposed of to pay for 3'e Purchase Grant and Badluck Cedar Swamp, to and among 3'e proprietors, both in Sherborn and Hollis- ton, and any others that rights are belonging unto them therein, according to such rules as 3'e said proprietors have agreed upon and stated, which motion, being tried by a vote, it unanimously passed in 3'e affirmative." ' ' At 3'e said meeting it was proposed to 3'e said proprietors to lay out ye said grants to and among them, excepting what is be- < 1-5 O t3 O o H D IJEFOKMED METHODIST CHURCH —r SOUTH DOUGLAS. withdrew from the Methodist Episcopal Church, and effected a new organization, under the name of Reformed Methodists. Twenty- five members of his Church united with him in the formation of the new organization, of which Mrs. Nancj' Yates, wife of Elder Yates, is the last surviving member. Others shortly followed Mr. Brett, who continued but a short time in the pastorate after the formation of the new Church. Having placed himself at the head of the new movement^ he Avent about preaching and forming new societies. He was quite successful in securing followers. Several local preachers and others united with him in the formation of liEFORMED METHODIST CHURCH, E\ST DOUGI.AS. 108 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. Churches under the new name, until on Cape Cod and througli the JState of Vermont the membership reached about 2,000. Ehler Yates was his successor, and continued for many years its- devoted pastor, imtil unable to continue his labors longer on ac- count of the infirmities of age. Since that tim2 there has been no settled minister. Elder Pierce suppUed for a few years. Since about the year 18.j0 the meetings have l)een conducted by Elder Harvey Wakefield, Elder Parley Brown, and others. The meet- ing-house becoming old and unfit for use, meetings were held in the hall at the Wm. Jetferson house, so-called. These were kept up for five years, and were discontinued in 1870. During this time Elder Wakefield officiated. It was afterwards considered as. a kind of out-station to the Church at Douglas Center. REFORMED METHODIST CHURCH IN EAST DOUfiLAS. This Church was organized about the year 1844, with a small membership, and a house of worship was built in 1845, on land donated bj' Nahum Legg. Solomon P. Snow was in that 3'ear ordained as the first pastor. He w^as succeeded by Rev. Wm. C. Clark, and in turn was followed by Rev. Mr. Gireeley, who sup- plied the pulpit for several months. W. D. Jones then became the pastor, and was followed by David Mason, S. E. Pike, Geo. G. Perkins, and S. Leader. During Mr. L.'s ministry the parson- age was built. S. E. Pike and Deacon White then supplied the pulpit for several months, until R. S. Cobb came. Rev. W. Wil- kie was their last minister. Prior to the formation of this Church quite a number of persons in Douglas belonged to the Reformed JNIethodist Church in Mill- ville, forming what was termed a "class." Meetings were held by them at the school-house in District No. 3, Parley Brown, Amos Yates, Harvey AVakefield, William Stone and otheri's conducting the services. On the 10th of March, 1 86 G, it was voted to change the name of the Church to that of Wesleyan MetJiodist, by the Discipline of which Church the members were governed (as we believe the}' had been) until they were merged in the Methodist Episcopal Church. Rev. Mr. AVilkie, alluded to above, had been the regularly ap- l)ointed Wesleyan i)astor in East Douglas since April 2, 1804. Though the Church at this time was nominally of the Reformed Methodist denomination, it had been virtuall}^ a Wesleyan bod}' METHODIST CHURCH, EAST DOUGLAS. 110 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. for some time. Having been organized under Ihe general stat- utes, however, the legal distinction between the Church and so- ciety had been kept up. In the year 186G, under Mr. Wilkie's labors, quite an extensive revival of religion occurred, resulting in the conversion of more than sixty persons, over thirty of whom united with the Church. Mr. Wilkie had formerly been identified with the Methodist Episcopal Church, having left that body in 1843, on account of its connection with slavery. But, now that sla\'ery was no longer in the Church or nation, he felt that he ought to return to his old home, the Church of his earl}' choice. This he finally determined to do, and most of the members of his Church in East Douglas followed him. They met with some opposition from a few of the old members, who went so far as to close the door of the meeting-house against him. They opened it by force, however, and occupied it on the Sabbath, and then in due form appealed to the courts for protection ; and at the ensuing session of the Supreme Judicial Court an injunction was obtained for a few daj's, until the merits of the case could be reached, when the injunction was made perpetual. The case is fully detailed in the Massachusetts Reports, vol. 95, p. 349. On the 5th of November, 18GG, Rev. D. Dorchester, Presiding Elder of the Worcester District of the New England Annual Con- ference of the Metliodist Episcopal Church, ])y request, came to East Douglas and organized the members of the Wesleyan Church into a Methodist Episcopal Church, which constituted at this time a membership of eighty-four persons, seventy-seven of them being from the Wesleyan Church, thus after the lapse of sixty-three years reviving the Church which Elder Brett carried into the Reformed Methodist ranks. Since April, 18G7, the Church has been regu- larly supplied with ministers from the New England Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Rev. Mr. Wilkie was followed by Revs. WilUam P. Blackmer, Wilham Silverthorn and Daniel P. Atkins, and under the admin- istration of the latter a new and commodious Church edifice was erected in the center of the village. This was accomplished in 1872, and the work it involved was done under Mr. Atkins' per- sonal supervision, and mainly through his active laboi's. He was succeeded by Rev. William M. Hubbard, who was followed by Rev. William D. Bridge, Rev. J. J. Woodbury, the present pastor,, following him. CATHOLIC CHURCH, EAST DOUGLAS. 112 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. QUAKER CHURCH, SOUTH DOUGLAS. No records of the formation of the old Quaker Church society of Douglas can be found. Either its members did not care to have their doings inspected by succeeding generations, or the minutes of them have been lost. The meeting-house was long ago removed from its original site, near the Quaker burying-ground, aiid used for other purposes. It occasioned the dwellers around about some uneasiness for a considerable while before it was re- moved. At various times it was reported, by persons who ha])- pened to pass the building under the influence of spirits within, that the old church was haunted b}' s[)irits from without - — occu- pants of the adjoining grave-j'ard. Believers in ghosts came from all parts of the country for twent}' miles around, and — found it even so. Sometimes a hundred half-frightened people would congregate there to watch the dim forms flitting by the windows, and to listen to the sepulchral conversation. It turned out, however, that during a certain part of the day the light, falling upon the imperfect window-panes, was the author of the mystic forms, and that human imaginations originated the ghostly talk. Thus was one more good story spoiled, but not before a nation of fools had been born in a day. CATHOLIC CHURCH, EAST DOUGLAS. In the spring of 18G5 the Catholic residents of Douglas and Manchaug purchased the neat and commodious building on Manchaug street, which the}' now occupy as a place of worship. For more than twenty j^ears previous to that time their meet- ings were held in the Whitin Tavern Hall, and were presided over by Father Sheridan, whose field of labor also included Uxbridge, Blackstone and Rockdale. His successor, Eev. Dennis A. O'Keefe (since, deceased), was active in securing the present place of wor- ship, and remained some time after its dedication. At first the meetings were held but once in three months, afterwards once a month, and still later once a week or oftener. Eev. Dennis C. Moran was the next priest, and was followed by Father Gagnier, who purchased the Emory Thaj-er place, opposite the Church, and fitted it up as a parsonage. His successor. Rev. J. B. Coullard, also took an interest in improvements about the place. During the summer and fall of 1878, Rev. A. Delphos, acted as assistant, Mr. Coullard being in failing health. CHAPTER XI. WAR OF THE RERKLLION. ^N tlirec of the preceding chapters, heginning with the sixth, we have entleavored, in the spirit of a scru- pulous adherence to the truthful but houora])le facts in the case, to set forth how thoroughh- loyal and val- uable were the efforts of the fathers of our town in the achievement of the country's independence of Brit- ish domination. Mewing this as a stupendous experiment of popular government by and for the people, in contrast with the haughty claims of hereditary- power. l)acked by the wealthy orders of nobility, against which it had to contend, the unparalleled success attending their efforts through almost a hundred years of testing would seem to augur the success of the descendants of these fathers in suppressing any remaining relics of those days of baronial arrogance. It cannot be disguised that, from the beginning of our national history, the elements of a most intolerant aristocracy have found constant nutriment in the system of slavery, which, permitted to exist in our midst merely by sufferance at the outset, continually grew hj what it fed upon, until it ripened into an open menace of our very existence as a government. And it is much to the credit of the sons of these brave men, who met with such signal success on the untried field of a separate national existence, amid difficul- 114 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. ties and obstacles unprecedented in the formidableness of their arra}^, that they proved themselves their worth}'^ successors when re- bellion sounded the call to arms again. As then, so now, Douglas was among the foremost in ralhdng for the defense of the country. As the most reliable criteria on this point, we append the action of the town in reference to all the important questions demanding" attention at the breaking out of this fratricidal war, b}' which it will be seen that the town furnished about two hundred and flfty men during the continuance of the war, and at its close was found to have sent to the scene of conflict quite a surplus. Five of its quota were enrolled among the commissioned officers of the army. In proportion to tlie number of its inhabitants, the town was represented b}' more men than any other town in Worcester count}', and also contributed the most money, on the basis of its valuation, for the same purpose. It was simply a rei)etition of the old spirit of '76. The whole amount of money appropriated and expended l)y the town on the Avar account, exclusive of State aid, was $;')0,7o4.3(>. The amount paid by the town for State aid and to soldiers' families during the war, and repaid b^' the Commonwealth, was as follows: In 1861, $661.70; in 1862. $3,472.47 ; in 1863, $4,222.80 ; in 1864, $2,600 : in I860, $1,100. Total amount, $12,056.97. The first legal town meeting to act on questions relating to the war was held May 7, 1861, at which the town voted to raise by taxation $4,000 for the enlistment and equipment of a company of volunteers, and to provide for the families of those who enlist. On the 11th of September of the same year, at another legal meeting of the citizens. $2,000 were api)ropriated for the aid of soldiers' famihes, thus assuring the husl)ands and fathers at the front that their wives and little ones should be cared for. In the month of July of the following year the town voted unanimously to pay a bounty of $100 to each volunteer who shall enlist for three years' military serAdce, and who should be mustered in to the credit of the town, in addition to the bounty ottered by the government. And on the 21st of August following in town- meeting $50 were added to the bounty " of each of the last eleven volunteers." The bounty to A'olunteers for nine months' service was fixed at $100, which was on September 4th raised to $150. December 11, 1863, Parley Gould and Charles W. Moore were WAR OF THE REBELLION. 115 chosen to confer Avith committees of Northbridge and Uxbridge in relation to filling the quota of the town. July 7,1864, the Selectmen were authorized to pa}- a bountj- of $125 to each volunteer who shall enlist for three 3-ears' service, and be credited to the town, '^ under any call of the President l)e- fore the 1st of March. 18G5 ; and any unappropriated money used to reimburse individuals Avho had contributed of tlieir private means to pay bounties may l)e used for this purpose." August 20, 18(14 . it was voted that the bounties offered by the town should all be paid in gold. And in 1865. after the conflict had been ended, in the spirit of honor and consistency with all its previous action, the town voted to raise $6,500 to reimburse citizens who had voluntarily contributed of their private means to pay bounties and encourage re-enlisting. It is, however, a fact worthy of record that some who had l)een active in securing en- hstments and making hberal contributions for that purpose, refused to accept their share of the money thus voted b}" the town, choos- ing rather to have it remain as it was intended, a free contribution. Among this number we find the names of Dea. Albert Butler, who, under the call of 1861 offered to pay two dollars and fifty cents to every soldier enlisting for three years' service on the quota of Douglas. Also Mr. Daniel Phillipps, who, in 1868 made an offer of two dollars to every soldier enlisting for nine months. These promises were fulfilled to the letter and the money tendered each soldier personally while they were in camp at Worcester. These acts fully justify all that we have claimed on the score of the patri- otism of the citizens. The taking of such a firm and uncompromising stand at the outset, and maintaining it so cordially from time to time, and with such increasing evidence of the sincerity with which the citizens of all classes were striving to sustain the men they had called into the service of the country, could have no other effect than that shown hy the records cited at the commencement of these extracts. COMPLETE LIST OF SOLDIEES, WITH THE REGIMENTS TO WHICH THEY WERE ATTACHED. The following is believed to be as full and accurate a statement of the names of all the soldiers from Douglas engaged in the war of the Rebelhon, with their rank and the army division in which 116 HISTOKY OF DOUGLAS. they were enrolled, as can he obtained after tlie most diligent search and inqnir^' : Second Mass. Vols. Lebright Brown, John B. Johnson, John Kichards, Thomas Take, Thomas AVolf. Fourth Mass. Vols. John Shriver. Eleventh Mass. Vols. Horace Beldmg, Lorin R. Chase, Philip Gannon, J. Francis W. Thompson. Fifteenth Mass. Vols. Edwin F. Andrews, Rufus Belden, Corp., Kennedy Bi'onock, Franklin Bullard, Corp., Benjamin R. Elliott, Harlan Fairbanks. Corp., Sylvester Oakes, Nathaniel Putnam, Adoniram J. Rawson, Samuel Sibley, Harvey Sibley, Thomas Snow, Jr., Thomas A. South wick, Hiram Ward. Eighteenth Mass. Vols. Alexander Thompson. Twenty-Second Mass. Vols. Alfred H. Marsh. Twenty-Fourth Mass. Vols. John Blake. Twenty-Fifth Mass. Vols. Joseph Albee, Orrin J. Aldricli, John Allen, William De Forest Balcome, Musician, Benjamin Bartlett, James O. Bartlett, Nathan S. Bartlett, Elbridge Buxton, Glory Busch, Orlando Carpenter, Samuel A. Cragin, Joshua Dubuque. Cornelius Emmons, Band, George A. Gleason. Stephen Hall, George Hall, Samuel Hall, John Hall, Renssalaer G. Hamilton, Benajah Hodge, Allen R. Hough, Henry C. Lampson, George Leach, Joseph Lemay, Jeremiah E. Luther, Corp., Thomas Magee, Timothy Megary, Aaron Metcalf , Marshall Pnrinton, Nathaniel Putnam, Lambert B. Simmons, Hiram Staples, Amos Steere, Band, Francis A. Stockwell, Joseph Teabaidt, Charles C. Wall, William Wood. Twenty-Seventh Mass. Vols. Dr. Franklin Hunt, Assistant Surgeon, William Mayer, Lewis Satro. Twenty-Eighth Mass. Vols. Thomas J. Calden, Band, Enoch Converse, Band, Noah H. Jones, Band, Edward L. Thayer, Band, Bennett W. Thomas, Band. WAR OP THE REBELLION. 117 Thirtieth Mass. Vols. John Perry. Thirty-Third Mass. Vols. James Ward. Thirty-Sixth Mass. Vols. Daniel A. Burton, ttergt., Patrick Callahan, Leonard A. Chapman, Elias H. Freeman, Matthew Hudson, William Mowry. Fifty-First Mass. Vols. Leander Andrews, Nelson Angell, Joseph T. Arnold, Charles T. Balcome, Elmer H. Balcome, Wellington Balcome, Solomon V. E. Barnes, Lemuel C. Belding, John Bird, Philetus Butt'um. Loami B. Carr, John Collar, John Donaldson, George E. Dunn, John X. Gaskell, Gilbert Gillson, Leonard G. Higgins, Corp., Moses W. Hollis. Joseph Hough, Josiah Hough, Jr., Loren M. Howell, AVilliam Hunt, Capt., George F. Hutchins, Band, William N. Jones, Oscar Keith, Benjamin Knapp, Corp., Alphonso Luther, Sergt., Francis A. Maynard, Corp., Charles W. Moore, 2d Lieut., Francis L. Moore, Lewis T. Moore, Sergt., Naham Morse. Ezekiel Packard, 1st Lieut., Peter Roberts, Charles F. Russell. Jeremiah F. Russell, Alfred Snow, Ira Southwick, Willis W. Sherman, Simeon H. Staples, Lucius M. Thayer, Capt., Elijah Thompson, David L. Thomas, Chandler Titus, Hiram Ward, Charles Whitney, Lvicius S. Whipple. Charles A. Whipple, Wilbour A. Wilcox, William H. Wilcox, James Woodard, Dorris B. Young. Fifty-Sevp:nth Mass. Voi^s. David B. Curtis, John N. Gaskell, Henry Glover, Abner A. Lealand, Lewis Mountain. Fifty^-Eighth Mass. Vols. George A. Stone. First Mass. Cavalry. John D. Darling, Noah M. Knight, William N. Sprague, Charles C. Walls, John Kelly. Third Mass. Cavalry. Herbert R. Bragg. Fourth Mass. Cavalry. William Brown. James Clark, John McGrath, Noah M. Knight.* ♦Transferred from First Mass. Cavalry. 118 HISTORY OP DOUGLAS. First Mass. Heavv Artilleby. Stephen Martyr, Alexander Miken, Andrew Peter. Second Mass. Heavv Artillery. Joseph Bygoine, Chai-les Boner, Thomas Fitzgerald, William L. Church, John Hartwell, Miletus Luther, James Clarke, Corp., John Manning, Alfred Snow, Joseph Quinn. Sixteenth (Unattached) Heavy Artillery. Thomas W. Nelson, Byron Richardson, Osborn Richardson. First R. I. Vols. George R. Buftum. Second R. I. Vols. Leonard C. Belding, Charles W. Stearns. Fourth R. I. Vols. Sabine Angell, Windsor Ballon, William W. Caswell, Simeon Smith. Seventh R. I. Vols. Elisha E. Thompson, Corp. First R. I. Cavalry. George Aldrich. Simeon A. Brown, Sylvester Chase, H. C. Fitts, Capt., Chas. E. Gould, Albert A. Greene, Munroe W. Ide, . M. Leach, James Lee, Co. Charles H. Legg, M. M. Luther, William Lyon, Alfred P. Palmer, Geoi'ge Snow, Leander Thompson, Albert J. Watkins. Ira. Wakefield, Thomas J. Wood. Third R. I. Cavalry. Chas. A. Andrews,Quar. Sergt., Edwin F.Andrews, Com. Sergt., W. D. Balcome, Samuel Cragin, Henry C. Fitts, Capt., Daniel E. Gould, Eugene H. Gould. Joseph Hough, Nelson Jepherson, Farrier, Thomas Magee, Corp., Myron Simpson, Bennett W. Thomas, Wm. H. Wilcox. Seventh R. I. Cavalry. W. De Forest Balcome, Henry C. Fitts, Musician, Hezekiah Knight. Third R. I. Heavy Artillery.. Peter Balcome, Cyrus Jepherson, George Jepherson, James Jepherson. Thirteenth Conn. Vols. Newell J. Lee, Sergt. Eighteenth Conn. Vols. Walter Ward. Twenty-Sixth Conn. Vols. Myron Starrett. Engineer Corps U. S. Army. Francis S. Phillips, Napoleon Ritchie. WAR OF THE REBELLION. 110 FouBTH Vermont Vols. George II. Amidon. Capt. Signal Corps U. S. Army. Thomas L. Bovey, George Ballou, Addison Hawkey. Henry E. Hawkey, Charles S. Hohnes, Michael Martin. .John T. Shaw. Horace L. Tilton, Elliot Travis. U. S. Navv. Edtiar P. Barton. John Norton. James Wilson. Veteran Reserve Corps. Charles H. Beers, Oscar L. Brown, August Chrome, Edmund Coggshall, John Goodnow, Dennis M. Hennesey, Munro W. Ide, William F. Krantz, Nathaniel Palmer, James Tubbs, David H. Selgham, Thomas Stratton, Madison Sanborn, Martin H. Schollay. CASUALTIES. Capt. Gp^o. H. Amidon, wounded in the thigh in the battle of the Wilderness May .5, 1864; partly recovered, and returned to the army, and wounded again (in the thigh) at Cedar Creek Oct. 17, 1804. Since died, and was buried in Oxford. Joseph Albkk, died and was buried at Newbern, N. C, in the spring of 1868. Capt. Simeon Brown, wounded June 18. 186;J. Died at East Doug- las. Nathan Baetlett, killed at Cold Harbor, June 3. 1S()4. Daniel A. Burton, wounded by a shell before Petersburg Oct. 2, 1804. Died Oct. 19, 18(54; buried at South Sutton Cemetery. C)rlando Carpenter, wounded in the arm and leg at Cold Harbor June .3, 1864, and died in the hospital at Washington June 16, 1864. Leonard A. Chapman, killed before Petersburg July 9, 1864. LoRiN P. Chase, died May 0, 1864; buried in the Douglas Cemetery. David B. Curtis, killed at Petersburg, Va., June, 1864. Ben.jamin p. Ei,liott, killed at Antietam, September, 186l', and was bui-ied there. Harlan P'airbanks, severely wounded in the leg and foot at the battle of Fair Oaks or Seven Pines, near Richmond, Va., June 30, 1862. Capt. Henry C. Fitts, died of small-pox at Donaldsonville, La.. Dec. 19, 1864, and was bviried tliere. John N. Gaskell, killed near Spottsylvania court-house May 31, 1864. Pebley U. Germe, missing. 120 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. Gkokoe a. Gleason, severely wounded in the leg at Cold Harbor June 3, 1864, and discharged Oct. 20, 1864. Henry Gi,ovek, killed at Gold Harbor June 3, 1864, and buried there. Daniel E. Gould, taken prisoner — feet badly frozen. Suffered in rebel prison, but was exchanged, and died May 2.5, at Jefferson Barracks, Mo., of typhoid fever, brought on by exposure. EuGEXE E. Gould, discharged Nov. 16, 1864. Lost on steamer North America, off Cape Hatteras, Dec. 22, 1864. Charles E. Gould, taken prisoner June 18, 1863. Exchanged, and again taken prisoner Oct. 12, 1863. Exchanged, and taken prisoner for the third time March 31, 1864; was afterwards exchanged, and transfen'ed to Troop D, 1st R. I. Cavalry, Dec. 21, 1864. Albert A. Greene, taken prisoner June 18, 1863. Exchanged, and re-enlisted. Allen R. Hough, died of typhoid fever at Hampton hospital Aug. 10, 1864. Joseph Hough, taken prisoner while bearing dispatches, near New Orleans. Matthew Hudson, lost in battle. Dr. Franklin Hunt, killed by guerrillas at Little Washington, N.C. George Jepherson, died in hospital at New York Oct. 28, 1863, and was buried there. Newell J. Lee M. Leach, missing in action Oct. 12, 1863. Supposed to have been caijtured. Jerrie E. Luther, died at Newbern, N. C, Oct. 14, 1863, of conges- tion of the brain; buried in Evergreen Cemetery. Abner a. Leland, killed before Petersburg June 23, 1864, and was buried there. William Lyon, not accounted for. Timothy Magary, killed before Petersburg May 11, 1864, and was buried there. Thomas M. Magee, wounded in side by grape shot at battle of Roan- oke Island. Lost on steamer North America off Cape Hatteras Dec. 22, 1864. Mark Mitchell, died at Newbern, N. C. Daniel Mix, wounded in the arm at Cold Harbor June 2, 1864, and discharged from service Jan. 16, 186.5. Francis L. Moore, died in hospital at Newbern, N. C, April 26, 1863. Buried in E. Douglas Evergreen Cemetery. Sylvester Oakes, killed at Fredericksburg Dec. 13, 1862. William Oakes, wounded in the leg at Antietam Sept. 15, 1862. Nathaniel C. Putnam, died at Fairfax, Va., Oct. 10, 1862, of con- sumption. Jose;ph Quin.x, wounded in leg and foot in skirmish near Newbern, N. C, in 1864. Samuel Sibley, wounded severely in the leg at Ball's Bluff Oct. 21, 1861, and died at Poolesville, Md., Nov. 6, 1861, and was buried there. WAR OF THE REBELLION. 121 George Sxow, Avounded March 17, 18(33. Re-enlisted. Myron Starrett, wounded above the hip at Port Hudson first day's battle, and died before morning. May 27, 1863. David L. Thomas, taken prisoner by scouts, near Bayou, La., Jan. 23, 1865. Elisha E. Thompson, wounded slightly Dec. 13, 1862, at battle of Fredericksburg. Leander Thompson, died of consumption Feb. 29, 1864, in Douglas. Luther White, taken prisoner at Staunton, Va., June 12, 1864. Died at Annapolis, Md., March 14, 186.5. Died of starvation. William H. Wilcox, discharged Nov. 16, 1864. Lost on steamer North America off Cape Hatteras Dec. 22, 1864. Decoration Day has been observed from year to year, in a qniet but appropriate manner. There has been no permanent soldiers' organization since the war, althongh in the spring of 1869 efforts were made to organize a Post of the Grand Army of the Republic. The requisite number of names were secured among the surviving soldiers and officers in this town, but no organization was effected. G. F. Hutchins organized an independent company of militia in June, 1870, and attempted to enlist them in the State service, and to procure uniforms and arms, but he failed to accomplish this object, and the company was afterwards disbanded. CHAPTER XII MCWSPAPERS AND OTHER PUBLICATIONS. OMEWIIERE near the latter part of 18fi7 two Journeymen printers, Gustavns B. (.^uiniby and George W. Spencer, then employed in the office of the Times at Webster, conceived the idea of stivrting in business together, and commenced looking around for a location. They corre- sponded with postmasters and others in ascer- taining whel-e a town could be found with suffi- cient population and ])ul)lic spirit to support a newspaper, but, while few towns were unwdlling to have a local organ, most of those not already supplied could otfer no substantial encourage- ment. Both of the would-be publishers were experienced in the mechanical work of a printing office, but neither of them had oc- cupied an editorial position, or were familiar with the details of the publishing Imsiness, which, perhaps, was one of the reasons wh^' more encouragement w^as not extended to them. Mr. Dresser, editor of the Times, learning the intentions of his employes, suggested that the neighboring town of Douglas would afford a good field for operation. Acting upon his suggestion, Mr. .Spencer visited this place in January, 1868, and consulted w'ith some of the leading citizens. First visiting the office of the Douglas Axe Manufacturing Company, and introducing himself to the agent, Mr. Edwin Moore, he ascertained that considerable job printing could be transferred from offices at Worcester to a home office, should one be established. Mr. Moore was quite enthusias- NEWSPAPERS AND OTHER PUBLICATIONS. 123 tic over the idea of having a local paper, with a job printing ofBce connected, and his kindness and courtesy strengthened the deter- mination of the projectors to make this the seat of their opera- tions. A handbill was issued, setting forth the ideas of Messrs. Quimby and Spencer, and calhng for subscriptions to the Douglas Herald, the first number of which it was intended to issue on the 1st of March. These were posted all over town, and subscription papers were left in charge of various persons for signatures. Tlie resources for establishing the printing business in Douglas were of the most meager description, as neither of the projectors (Knapp Building.) (Arcade.) OFFICES OF DOUGLAS HEKALl), EAST DOUGLAS. were in possession of any considerable amount of money or property ; l)ut they had an abundance of faith. JVIr. (Quimby was the owner of an old-fasliioued Ruggles job press, which would print a form only about five by eight inches, and he had laid by something like $200 for a rainy day. "Mr. Spencer succeeded in raising about an equal sum, and, being something of a mechanic, he went to work at l)uilding the necessary frames and stands needed for the office, so as to reduce the amount of capital re- quired to the lowest possible figure. All of this work was done at night, after the day's labor in the Times office. A wood-shed 124 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. adjoining his boarding-house was used for a carpenter's shop, with- out bench or floor, and with oul}' a hand-saw and hammer. The work was necessarily very rouglil}' done, but it answered the pur- pose. It Avas intended to secure at least five hundred subscribers before issuing the first number of the paper, but it was found impossible to get this number, and the figures were reduced, first to four hundred, and then again to three hundred. When the latter number was nearly reached, arrangements were made for procuring the press and type from the New England TA-pe Foundry of Messrs. Phelps & Dalton, in Boston. A hand-press, somewhat worn, but just overhauled and repaired, was selected, with four hundred pounds of long primer, two hundred pounds of breAaer, about twenty fonts of job type, and other necessary articles — the whole amounting to about Sy the citizens. The issues of both the Herald and Compendium appeared on the 11th of November, reduced to six columns on a page, and printed entirely at the home office, the ready-i)rinted outsides be- ing abandoned. Typographically and otherwise the paper never presented a more creditable appearance. March 9th, 1872, Mr. Charles A. W. Spencer, a brother of the editor, who had been for some time in his employ, was admitted to partnership, but the finu name remained unchanged under the style of G. W. Spencer &, Co. On the 25th of Januar}", 1873, the Douglas Herald and Whit- insville Compendhnn were merged into one sheet, called the Wor- NEWSPAPERS AND OTHER PUBLICATIONS. 129 cester ^HuutJi Compendium^ iiud was at tlie same time enlarged to seven columns on a page. The paper continued to exist as a Doug- las institution until the 4th of October, 1873, when it was removed to Uxbridge, against the wish of a large portion of the people of this ♦ town. The job office was separated from the paper, and left in charge of the junior member of the hnn, who also for a time acted as editor of a Douglas department. Within a few months of the removal the job office was sold to Mr. C. J. Batcheller, a former employe of the concei-n, who has since continued to act :is agent and correspondent of the Worcester South Comjiendhtm. Through the efforts put forth in this direction the paper has succeeded in retaining the larger part of its Douglas support, and is still con- sidered the local organ of the town and vicinity. I'roliablv no paper ever had a more enthusiastic set of sup- porters than the Herald while it remained here, notwithstanding its recognized faults and insufficiencies. The business men of the community were anxious to have an organ which might aid in correcting evils and promote the town's welfare. There is no doubt that the paper did n great deal in this direction, but it might have done much more if it had been backed by sufficient capital. It was an impecunious institution from the start, and never succeeded in surmounting the obstacle of debt, although its facilities were greatl}- improved hy additions of type and material from time to time. No injustice is done to its founder and pub- lisher in saying that a lack of financial management has been the one obstacle encountered. The tone of the paper was such as to meet the approval of the lastidious. It always sought to advance the interests of the town as a whole, without regard to the prejudices of the fcAv, and it advocated its pet ideas fearlessly and without favor. Its influence could never be bought, l)ut its cohnnns were always open to any respectful complainant, or to any one who had a subject of public interest to discuss. On the subject of schools the Herald always took a position m advance of the sentiment of the community, ridiculing the idea of putting the high school on Avheels, to be moved here and there at the beck of some agitator, and denouncing the action of the town in returning to the district system after its condonnation by the best intelligence of the State. In politics it was professedly " independent," which in the opinion of ,the editor did not den^- him the privilege of 130 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. writing and voting with the Repuhhcan party if he saw fit to do so. In times of heated political contests his views were sometimes fonnd to he objectionable to his Democratic readers, and in the Butler campaigns the hostility of the paper to the General as a gubernatorial candidate won the ill will of some Republicans. The Herald was started as a local paper, and its object, from first to last, was to present an epitome of local news, and to advocate beneficent measures of a local nature, making the dis- cussion of other matters of secondary importance. In this field it was a success, and claims onlj' the credit due it. Since the publication of the Herald was discontinued in East Douglas the following publications have been issued : In 1874 The Advertiser, a monthly sheet, by C. J. Batcheller. Our Home Journal, by W. D. Bridge & Co., in 1877. In October. 1877, the Engraver's Proof-Sheet, tin illustrated paper, by Wm. A. Emerson, now in its second year. In 1876 a volume entitled Practical Instructions in the ^irt of Wood, Engraving, by Wm. A. Emerson, a 16-mo., 52 pp., illustrated. All the above were printed at the office of C. J. Batcheller. CHAPTER XIII. douctLas hands, societjes, etc. ERY early in the history of Douglas it just- ly had the rep- utation of be- ing' a musical town, and at the old-fash- ioned musters would almost invariably l)e represented l)y a regu- larly organized band of music. The tirst association of this kind of Avhich we liave any account was composed of the members named below. It nourished for a number of years, and was in existence as early as l.SOO : Adolphus Taft. leader; Col. Ezekiel Preston, l)ass clarion ; .Stephen Southworth, Jesse Balcome, Micah Hill. Fuller JNIarsh, Dea. Isaac Gale, James Farwell. John Balcome. and Joseph Lee, clarionet ; Aaron Marsh, bassoon ; Ellis Balcome, bass drum. Wm. Hale, Sam'l Balcome, David Balcome. and Benaiah Morse were also members of this band, though we are not able to state the parts assumed by them. The second band of w^hich mention should be made was com- posed of very good players. The tirst seven in the subjcjined list being young players were called the '' Steer Band," and the last six the '' Ox Team ;" Dorris Taft, leader ; Homer Whipple, bugle ; Willard Taft and Edward Balcome, clarionet ; Jedediah Balcome, fife : Joseph Hunt, small drum : Austin Packard, bass drum ; Cullen Whipple, bugle ; Justin Whipple and Clark Balcome. clari- 132 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. ouet ; Luther Stone, life ; Sumner Balcome, small drum ; Chester Morse, bass drum. ''Ned Kendall," as he was familiarly called, figured promi- nenth' at musters near this time. He was about the onlj^ person who pla^'ed the bugle at general musters, and receiAxd $10 per day for his serAaces. Bugles were then made wdthout keys, and Cullen Whipple improved his bj- making finger-holes at the bend of the horn, by which he secured important variations in the tones of this instrument. A few years afterwards another ])and (also under the leadership of Dorris Taft) was started, of which David Perry of Worcester was the teacher. It was composed of the following members : Willard Taft,Francis Taft. Edwin Moore, Malvern Wheeler, Dudley Balcome, Caleb Legg. George Reynolds. S. W. Heath, Sumner Sutton, William B. Amidon. Homer A>'hipple, Ansel Newton, Amasa Coggeshall. Austin Packard, and Sunnier Balcome. About the year 1840 this band gave a concert at Sutton street. and on the way home the stage conveying them was upset. Homer Whipple had his shoulder br(^ken and his bugle thoroughly jammed, and Dudle}^ Balcome's trombone was also so badl}- broken and jammed as to be deemed worthless. The company continued its organization only a short time after the accident. Mr. Whipple turned over his bugle to Dorris Reynolds, who was then about fourteen years of age, and he was so successful in repairing it that it was rendered highly serviceable again. After practicing for a while in the old lower axe shops at Douglas Center he was rein- forced by Clark Balcome, who had secured the loan of a trombone, and the two devoted most of their waking hours to practice — often by the light of a candle far into the night. After becoming some- what proficient in the use of their instruments they made their first pubUc appearance by marching in solenni procession through the streets to the tune of "• Yankee Doodle." Such an excitement did this arouse in the village that a mass-meeting was immediateh" called at the vestry of the Congregational church, and a band was organized with Mr. Amidon as leader on the E flat bugle, and Dorris Reynolds second leader on the B flat bugle. The following names were identified with this band : H. C. Re^uiolds, Isaac Balcome, Jonah Morse, Levi Stoddard, Gideon Turner, Peter Bal- come, John (Tibson, Mowry Lapham, James Balcome, Warren DOUGLAS BANDS, SOCIETIES, ETC. 133 Baleome, Augustus Baleome, Samuel Balcoine, Pxlwiu Balcome, Luther Balcome. Clark Balcome, Charles Balcome. aud David Dudley. In 1858-9 a uew baud was formed, with A. A. Goodspeed of Putnam, Conn., teacher ; D. T. Rej-nolds, leader, and A. F. Jones, second leader. 8. N. Jones, N. H. Jones, Amos Steere, Edward Thayer, M. M. Luther. Thomas J. Calden, Henry C. Fitts, W. D. Balcome, Stillman Russell, Bennett W. Thomas, Charles Whipple, Cornelius Emmons, Enoch Converse, and Thomas Southwick were associated with them. In 1861, at the outbreak of the Rel^ellion, nearly all the mem- bers of this band enlisted. Three times during the war was the band reduced and again filled. It^retained its organization until about 1870. In 1872 another company was organized, with A. A. Good- speed as teacher, D. T. Reynolds leader, A. F. Jones second leader, and including also the following members : George W. Spencer, C. A. W. Spencer, Arthur Sutton, Walter E. Cooke, Frank Young, Charles Hall, Westley Metcalf, L. A. Thayer, C. F. Russell, Still- man Russell, Nelson Jepherson, and M. M. Luther. This band continued its organization for about two years. The present flourishing band was started June 2, 1875, with Dorris T. Reynolds leader, and X. H. Jones second leader. In April, 1876, Mr. Reynolds resigned, and Mr. E. F. Darcey of Putnam. Conn., was chosen leader and teacher. James H. Bal- come, James B. Williams, M. M. Luther, F. F. Young, L. A. Thayer, Nelson Jepherson, T. O. Murph}-, C. F. Travis, S. P. Copp, A. D. Bowers, A. E. Sutton, Chester Williams, Herbert W. Jones, George I. Hopkins, Stillman Russell, Elmer H. Bal- come, Moses H. Balcome, H. E. Boardman, W. P. Hough, W. F. Young, J. R. Darling, H. W. Sutton, C. F. Russell, Arthur F. Jones, H. B. Martin, William H. Balcome, and Eli Messier con- stitute the remaining members. THE DOUGLAS LITERARY SOCIETY was organized on the 5th of October, 1875, the mutual improve- ment of its members being the object contemplated in its forma- tion. It had the following names on its roll of members at the time of its organization : Misses Chandler, Robbins. Sibley, and 134 HISTOIIY OF DOUGLAS. Phillipps ; H. R. Titus, G. B. South wick, J. E. Cummings, W. F. Aniidon and E. F. Sibley. It has received additions from time to time since then, and now has twenty-six members, and is in a flourishing condition. The society has a librar}' of about one hun- dred books and pamphlets, and its funds are expended in replen- ishing the librar}" almost entirely. There is a great amount of talent in this society, and its public entertainments have displayed an unusuall}' high order of literary ability. DOUGLAS SOCIAL LIBRARY. On the Hth of April, 1799, the Douglas Social Library Associ- ation was formed, with Rev. Isaac Stone for librarian. The li- brary was composed of standard works, of which a full list is not now in existence, but it probably contained not more than about sixt}' volumes. These comprised a set of Rollin's Ancient History, Josephus' Works, Winterbottom's History of America, Robertson's Scotland, Edwards' History of the Reformation, Goldsmith's Eng- land, Marshall's Life of Washington, and a few others of a like nature. The fines imposed for damages done to the books, etc., were rigidly enforced. It may be well to note some of these : For a leaf turned down, six cents ; for a drop of tallow, or any other spot, six cents ; for a tear, or writing that does not deface the read- ing, six cents. •' If a member keeps a book out over two ordinary' months he shall pay a fine of one cent per day until returned. Any person that doth not return the book or books they may have taken out, at least four hours before the time of day stated for the annual meeting, shall pay a fine of twenty-five cents for such neglect ; and if any member shall lend a book out of the comjjan}^ they shall pay a fine of fifty cents." These rules, no doubt, account in a measure for the fine state of preservation in which the books are found even at the present day. On the 10th of April, IHlo, Rev. David Hol- man was chosen librarian, but the library was not removed to his house till 1825. The books and other property of the Association were offered at public sale, and the proceeds were to be divided among the members. Not finding a purchaser, the books remained for years with Mr. Holman, and all who cared to read them had full libertv to do so. DOUGLAS BANDS, SOCIETIES, ETC. 135 UNION LODGE, NO. 88, I. O. OF O. F. This Lodge was instituted Marcli 10, 1846, continuing in ex- istence till December, 1852. Like other organizations of this or- der, its object was the mutual benefit of its members. The sum of $0 per week was paid those suffering from sickness or disability. In the event of the death of a member $30 was paid as a funeral benefit, and $15 on the death of the wife of an}' member. A con- tingent fund, formed by contributions, donations, and the interest arising from the general fund, all fines collected, and also one-third of the quarterly dues, was held by a board of trustees for the wid- ows and orphans of deceased members. A widow, so long as she remained such, was to receive $25 per year. In the case of the orphans or children of deceased members the trustees were to en- deavor to place them in situations w^here the}' might earn a liveli- hood, and also obtain an education. The Lodge was quite success- fully carried on until its disbandment. The charter members were : Dr. P^zekiel Wood, Ro3'al Cum- mins, Seba Carpenter, George Reynolds, Loren C. Munyan, and George Young. In connection with this was formed an Auxiliary Lodge, composed only of the wives of Odd Fellows, and called the " Daughters of Rebecca." HOWARD LODGE, NO. 119, INDEPENDENT ORDER OF GOOD TEMPLARS, was instituted March 23, 1866, with the following hst of officers : ^y. C. T., William H. Moore ; W. V. T., Sarah F. Abbott ; P. W. C. T., Alphonso Luther ; W. S., Julius D. Whipple ; W. T., Emma A. Emmons ; W. C, Dea. A. A. White ; W. M., Frank D. Whip- ple ; W. D. M., Mrs. Frank D. Whipple; W. I. G., Mary R. Williams; W. O. G., Loring A. Thayer: W. R. S.,Mrs. J. D. Whipple ; W. L. H. S., Mrs. Emma Converse. The design of the Order was to be progressive as well as educational, to strive to reclaim the fallen, and to throw the right influence over the pure and virtuous, that they might never become victims of intemperance. Prohibition was the watchword written on its banners and heartily adopted by its members. The meetings of this Lodge were for several months held in the vestry of the Congregational church in East Douglas. The place proving at length not large enough to accommodate its increasing membership, a mo.re commodious place was secured in the build- 136 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. iug at the corner of Cottage and Depot streets. From that time the Lodge steadily and rapidly increased, until it reached a mem- bership of 116. At its meetings the important questions of the day were freely discussed, and good, efficient temperance work was done by many of its devoted members. On the 5th of March, 1867, a Degree Lodge was formed, in which all important matters for discussion or investigation were to be considered, by which more time was secured in the subordinate lodge for educational and preparatory work, and much time was given such literary exercises as were calculated to interest and benefit the young. Its spic}- debates on methods of temperance work and the general questions of the day will long be cherished in the memories of its members. The Lodge was discontinued Dec. 3, 1870, after nearly five years of active la])or in the temperance field. During that time it accompMshed much, although it might have done vastly more had- it been favored with the sanction and support of all good friends of temperance ; but some among the prominent temperance men in town were unfavorable to secrecy in temperance work, and op- posed the movement most sincerely but persistently. MUMFORD RIVER LODGE, A. F. AND A. M. A dispensation for organizing this Lodge was granted Jan. 2o, A. D. 1877 (A. L. 5877)' and the charter was granted March 13, A. D. 1878 (A. L. 5878). The following were the charter mem- bers: A. J. Thayer, W. M. ; Noah H. Jones, S. W. ; John. McArthur, Jr., J. W. ; William H. Moore, Luke Keith, S. D. ; Marcus M. Luther, Secretary ; Preston Goddard, S. 8. ; J. Fred Brown, S. ; Nelson Emmons, Benj. F. Hodgdon, C. ; William Abbott, Treasurer ; Edwin P. Heath ; Stillman Russell, J. D. ; John Robbins, T. ; WiUiam L. Church, Arthur J. Dudley, Chilon Hough- ton, Caleb Hill, Dorris T. Reynolds, Aaron F. Jones ; Brigham Morse, Merrill A. Woodard, George B. Adams, John M. Rawson, J. S. ; George Cleaveland, M. ; Edward F. Darcy. For a short time the communications were held in the Band Hall, afterwards in the hall in Thayer's new building, which has been leased and fitted up as a permanent Lodge-room. The Lodge is in a flourishing condition. DOUGLAS BANDS, SOCIETIES, ETC. 137 THE SOCIAL UNION. On the 29th of October, 1875, the " Social Union" (a literaiy society) was organized, and meetings were held in Central Hall through the winter of 1875-7G. The exercises at its meetings consisted of music, dramatic and other readings, dialogiies, dec- lamations, etc. The last meeting was held June 8. 1876, and the society soon after dissolved. THE DOUGLAS LYCEUM. Like most New England towns, Douglas has witnessed the birth, prosperity, struggles, decline, and death of a local Lyceum. The records of the earlier debating societies, if such existed, are not preserved, but in the fall of 1872, at the instigation of the High School teacher and several active young men, the Douglas Lyceum was organized, with the following list of otficers : President, A. F. Brown ; Secretaiy, G. W. Spencer ; Treasurer, William H. Moore ; Executive Committee, G. F. Stone, G. F. Hutehins and Dr. Hamilton. A constitution and by-laws had been previously framed and adopted, and meetings were regularly held throughout the ensuing winter, the exercises consisting of select readings, essa3's, music, recitations and debates, with an occasional lecture or entertain- ment. The meetings were held in Citizens' Hall. All sorts of questions, political, theological, philosophical, simple and pro- found, were discussed by the citizens, young and old, with the Usual incidents, laughable and provoking ; and the influence of the Lyceum, as a whole, while it was sustained by the public, was salutary bej^ond question, although the rulings were as contradic- tory as they were multitudinous ; and although some personalities, such as will almost inevitably be indulged in at a popular gather- ing, sometimes occurred, the institution was successfulh- and profitably conducted for two 3'ears. Then it lost some of its ablest supporters in consequence of their removal from the place ; others began to neglect their appointments and also the meetings ; and although it existed more than a year in a state of alternate revival and decline, its day of prosperit}" was over. In the fall of 1875 Citizens' Hall, that had begun to look Hke an ancient attic, was repaired and put in decent shape, and also 138 HISTORY OP DOUGLAS. painted and. varnished, and furnished with seats. Owing to some personal feelings and prejudices brought to bear the hall was refused to the executive committee for Lyceum purposes, its managers having decided to let it only for singing-schools and lectures, and some few other general objects which could be and were made to cover any profitable show, from acrobatic turnings to a peace jubilee. The Lyceum could not very well resolve itself into a society for the promotion of psalmody, and, disdaining anj^ but open and honest measures, a public meeting was called at the old Methodist church, for the purpose either of sustaining the Lyceum and pro\iding it accommodations or of giving it a decent burial. The meeting was a large one, and filled the church to overflowing. A. F. Brown, Esq., presided. Music and literary exercises were given, and speeches were made concerning the managers of the hall, and in favor of sustaining the L^'ceum. The meeting showed plainly, however, that the days of the institution were numbered ; and after appointing a committee, whose functions practically were those of the bearers at a funeral, nothing further was or has been done for its revival. EAST DjOUGLAS DISTRICT, Many of the leading and public-spirited citizens of the village for a long time were desirous of introducing certain improvements of a local character, such as sidewalks, street lamps, etc., for which it seemed a little hard to assess those outsiders who could be expected to reap but little practical benefit from them. The interest in these matters finally reached such a point that on the evening of Nov. 30, 1874, about seventy-five legal voters, residing within the limits of the village, assembled in Citizens' Hall and accepted a vote which had been passed by the town authorizing the organization of a Village District. The authority thus con- vej'ed empowered them to maintain street lamps, build sidewalks, employ watchmen, organize and support a fire department, and various other things contributing additional convenience and security to the citizens as well as to the outward prosperit}- of the village. On the 18th of the following month, acting under these provisions, the first street lamp was erected by AVilliam H. Moore and E. T. Tha^'er. Others speedil}- followed, and since that time DOQGLAS BANDS, SOCIETIES, ETC. 139 the number has increased to twenty-- nine, so that the village is now well lighted. The plan has worked suceessfnll}" thus far. and man}' and marked advantages will undoubtedly result. EAST DOUGLAS 5IUSI0AL SOCIETY. The Musical Society of Douglas, which has been in existence now for nearly ten years, has done much to develop and edu- cate the musical talent of the town. On the 15th of March, 1868, a permanent organization was etfected, the following officers being chosen : President, AViUiam Hunt ; Secretar}-, G. W. Spencer ; Treasurer, Stillman Russell ; Musical Director, John C. "Waters ; Pianist, Miss H. A. Hutchius ; Directors. A. liutler, A. M. Mill, and Edwin Moore. The first rehearsal took place under the direction of Mr. J. Astor Broad, now of Worcester, and on the 18th of March of this 3'ear the society gave a concert in the Congregational church in East Douglas, in which they rendered Haydn's '' Creation." Subsequentl}- they repeated the concert in Putnam and Webster. Aside from the large amount of miscellaneous music (much of it being of a high order) with which the society has become familiar since its organization, they have performed Root's " Haymakers" for two seasons in Douglas and Upton, and also Broad's Cantatas of '* Ruth" and " Joseph," the former publicly rendered in Douglas and Slatersville, the latter in Douglas alone. The society was fully represented at both the Peace Jubilees in Boston, sending fort}' members to the second, and devoting a whole season to preparation for it. Since its organization the membership has varied from forty-five to sixty. It has been the dual object of the oflBcers of the society to introduce and develop a taste for the higher kinds of sacred and other music, much time having been devoted to oratorios, and to encourage the development of the musical talent of the young- people of the village. In both directions their success has been marked and highly commendalile, meriting the public approbation that has always attended their efforts. DOUGLAS LIBRARY ASSOCIATION. For about fort}- years the association known as the Douglas AgTicultural Libraiy has had quite a flourishing history. It was 140 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. the only library in the eastern portion of the town, and was com- posed of aliout one hundred volumes of strictly agricultural works ; but after a while, to supply the demand for a more general course of reading, other books of a miscellaneous character were added. The library retained its original name and organization until April 10, 1865, when its proprietors met and organized themselves into a corporation, under the name of the '' Douglas Library Associa- tion." Since that time the number of books has been increased to , 500 volumes. The library was removed to G. W. Spencer's room in the post-office building, afterwards to the office of the Douglas Axe Co., and in September, 1878, to the present location in Thayer's Block on Main street, a central location, easy of access, and well patronized by the reading public. UNION TEMPERANCE SOCIETY. At a public meeting of the citizens, held May 1.3, 1874, the draft of a constitution, together with a list of officers, was pre- sented by a conmiittee previously appointed for the purpose of aiding to organize a "Union Temperance Society." The com- mittee consisted of Rev. William T. Briggs, Rev. W. M. Hub- bard and A. J. Thayer. The report of this committee, including a pledge, was accepted, and a list of officers was chosen as follows : President, Edwin Moore ; Secretaiy, C. A. Hunt ; Treasurer, Walter E. Cook ; Councilors, Dea. A. Butler, A. F. Brown, J. C. Hammond, A. J. Tha3'er, W. D. Jones, Luther Wing, Mrs. Ezra Jones, Mrs. William T. Briggs, Mrs. S. Kelley, Royal Keith, Luther Hill, and Miss Nancy Hammond. The constitution provided for an annual meeting, to l>e held on Fast Day of each year, the officers having the authority to call special meetings whenever it was thought desirable. In April, 1877, it was voted that the society hold its regular meetings on the last Sabbath of each month, alteruatel}- at the two churches (Methodist and Congregational) in East Douglas, and at this meeting A. J. Thayer was chosen president. Through the earnest efforts of the president the meetings soon assumed unusual interest as well as profit. They were well sustained, also, and did much to aid the cause of temperance in the community. During that year the Reform Club movement had been making great progress throughout the State, and its influence was felt in our DOUGLAS BANDS, SOCIETIES, ETC. 141 own community'. Several of the active temperance men in town w^ho had lately reformed felt that there ought to be a society or- ganized with especial reference to this new phase of temperance work, under the auspices of men who had once been addicted to the use of intoxicating liquor, and the organization of a Reform Club was proposed. As it did not appear practicable to attempt to sustain two societies, the former society, although in a flourish- ing condition and doing a good work, w^as discontinued, and its officers and members united in helping to organize and sustain the Reform Club. THE EAST DOUGLAS REFORM OLUH was organized May 1, 1878. with the following officers: Presi- dent, Leonard C. Belding ; Alce-Presideuts. W. II. Jones, W. D. Jones, and Timothy Bernard ; Secretary, C. A. Hunt ; Treasurer. A. F. Jones ; Chaplain. Fielder Converse ; Executive Committee. E. Moore, A. F. Brown, C. A. Whipple. Charles Fairtield, and H. C. Metcalf. The club is at the present time (1878) in a prosperous condi- tion, with a good prospect of future usefulness before it. Its pres- ident is an earnest and efficient officer. He is not only a reformed man, but he is also an advocate of gospel temperance as the only true basis of reform. The meetings are held monthly, and are well sustained. CHAPTER XIV. BIOGRAPHICAL AND GENEALOGICAL DEPARTMENT. DOCTOR WILLIAM DOUGLAS. UoCTOR WlLLFAM DoLOLAS. aftCl* whom the town was named, Avas born and edncated in Gift'ord Hall, East Lothian. Scotland, receiving a [)art of his education in Paris also. He came to America while quite young, establishing himself in Boston as a pl^ysician in 171tli. Barnabas, wlio married Abigail Kingsbury. Ebenezer Hill died Oct. 16, 1852, and his wife Betsey May 10, 1854. The following are the children of Ebenezer Hill and his wife Betsey, who are the 7th generation : 1. James Hill, born Dec. 14, 1795, died Jan. 21), 1875, aged 79 years U months. 2. Wil- liam Hill, died Sept. 18, 1866, age 67 years. 3. Betsey Hill, born Dec. 11, 1.S12, died May 11, 1875. 4. Sarah Hill, living. 5. Learned Hill, died Sept. 21, 1831, aged 29 ^^ears, 9 months, 17 days. JAMES HILL, of the 8th generation, son of Ebenezer and his wife Betsey, had the following children : 1. Delia C, born April BIOGRAPHICAL AND GENEALOGICAL DEPARTMENT. 161 28, 1824 ; married Joseph Cutler, and have issue. 2. Aaron R., born Dec. 26, 1828. 3. James F. Hill, born Aug. 12, 1839, mar- ried, and has issue. 4. William G. Hill, born Oct. 15, 1840, married, and has issue. 5. Ellen E. Hill, born Noa'. 20, 1856. Sarah married' S. Fuller. WilHam and Learned Hill left no issue. Betsey Hill married George L. Winter Nov. 15, 1835 ; George L. was born Nov. 15, 1808, and died Feb. 23, 1856, leaving the following issue : 1. Harriet M., born Oct. 15, 1836, married, and has issue. 2. Sanford H., born Oct. 11, 1838, single. 3. George L., Jr., born Nov. 16, 1840, died Nov. 11, 1859. 4. Aurilor B. Winter, born April 4, 1854. BARNABAS PHLL, of the 7th generation, son of James Hill and grandson of Caleb Hill ; married Miss AbagaIl Kingsbury, and the following are their issue : 1. Daniel K. Hill, born April 1, 1809, and married Mary Ann Fitts, who was born Oct. 24, 1822. 2. Abagail, who married Benjamin F. Gilmore. 3. Lucy, who married John Stone. 4. Ehzabeth, who married Daniel Whitford. 5. Rufus Hill, born in Dudley March 15, 1811, and married Mary Florrence. DOROTHY HILL, daughter of James Hill, and granddaugh- ter of Caleb Hill ; was of the 7th generation, and married David Freeman. They had the following issue, viz. : Ruth, Nancy, Jo- seph, Dorothy, Thamar, David, Oliver, and Jerusha. TRYPHENA HILL, daughter of James Hill, and granddaugh- ter of Caleb Hill ; was of the 7th generation, and married Abel Davis. The}' had the following issue : 1. Barnabas Davis, who married for his first wife the daughter of Minor Morse, of Douglas, 2. Abagail, who married S^'lvester Phipps, of Oxford. 3. Sarah. 4. Lament, who married Albee, of Uxbridge. 5. Abel. 6. Di- antha, who married Loren W. Cad}', of Oxford, who was born March 22, 1822, and died Aug. 19, 1865. Diantha was born March 4, 1822. 7. John M. DANIEL K. HILL, of the 8th generation, son of Barnabas Hill and his wife Mary Ann, had for their issue George K. Hill, who married Emma Fitts. u 162 HISTORY OP DOUGLAS. DIANTHA DAVIS, of the bth generation, daughter of Try- phena Hill Davis, and husband, Loren W. Cady, had the follow- ing children : 1. George D. Cady, born Sept. 20, 1847, and died Aug. 22, 184y. 2. Wilham C. Cady, born June 29, 1851. 3. Flora A. J. Cady, born Aug. 18, 1861. JAMES F. HILL, son of James Hill, of the 8th generation, was born Aug. 12, 1839, and married Lucv Smith Buroe of Michigan, Aug. 9, 1866, who was born March 17, 1838. Issue, Frank Burge Hill, born Jan. 18, 1870. James F. Hill graduated at Kalamazoo College, June, 1863, and received from that institu- tion the title of A. B. at the time of his graduation. He also graduated at Rochester (X. Y.) Theological Seminary in 1866. He received the title of A. M. from Kalamazoo College , 1866, and was ordained pastor over the Baptist Church in Norwalk, O., Sept. 4, 1866, and remained there nearly four years. Thence he removed to and settled over a church at Muskegon, Mich., Sept. 1, 1870, and is there at the present time. He has baptised one hundred and thirty-seven persons, officiated at one hundred and twenty-eight funerals, and married eighty-six couples. WILLIAM GILBERT HILL, son of James Hill and Sarah his wife, married Kate C. Thompson, of Richmond, Va., Nov. 20, 1867, who was born Sept. 6, 1848. Issue, William Hill, born July 10, 1871 ; Clarence Edward Hill, born June 8, 1876. William G. Hill became engaged as a merchant in the hide and leather trade in Boston in 1865, and has continued in the same to the present time. BIOGRAPHICAL AND GENEALOGICAL DEPARTMENT. 163 GENEALOGY OF THE HUNT FA3IILY. The Hunts of Douglas are descended from Ezekiel Hunt, a blacksmith, who came to the town more than one hundred years ago. He was the son of Ezekiel Hunt, of Concord, of the third generation from the first settler. WILLIAM HUNT, of Concord, born 1605; married ^ Eliza- beth Best, died 1661 ; married "^ Mercy Rice, 1664. CHILDREN. 1. Nehemiah, b. 1631 ; d. March 6, 1718. 2. Samuel, b. 1633. 3. Elizabeth, m. Barron. 4. Hannah, b. 1640. 5. Isaac, b. 1647 ; d. Dec. 12, 1680. SAMUEL HUNT, of Ipswich, son of William, born 1633 ; married Elizabeth Redding. CHILDREN. 1. Samuel, b. Nov. 17, 1657; d. Jan. 11, 1743. 2. Wniiam, b. April 23, 1660 ; d. April 29. 1660. 3. Ehzabeth, b. May 29, 1661 : m. Palmer. 4. William, b. 1663 ; d. Dec. 12, 1747. 5. Joseph, b. Oct. 28, 1665. 6. Peter, b. Aug. 8, 1668 ; d. young. ^ 7. Peter, b. May 14, 1670 ; d. under 21 years. WILLIAM HUNT, 2d, of Ipswich, son of Samuel, born 1663 ; married ^ Sarah Newman June 9, 1684 ; maraed ^ Rose News- man ; published March 6, 1724. children. 1. Sarah, b. June 6, 1685 ; m. Riggs. 2. WiUiam, d. Aug. 16, 1753. 3. Agnes, m. Heard. 4. Mary, m. Ingerson. 5. AbigaO, m. — - Hodgkins. 164 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. 6. Elizabeth, b. Dec. 26, 1694 ; m. Davis. 7. Rebecca, b. April 21, 1697 ; m. Smith. 8. Ezekiel, b. 1699 ; d. Aug. 11, 1700. 9. Hannah, b. July 4, 1701. 10. Dorothy, b. Aug. 13, 1703 ; m. Da\'is. 11. Mehitable, b. July 12, 1705 ; m, Blackstone. 12. Ruth, b. May 22, 1708 ; m. Smith. 13. Ezekiel, b. July 1.5, 1710 ; m. ' Berry. "' Hodg- kins. EZEKIEL HUNT, of Ipswich, son of William 2d, born 1710; married 'Susanna Berry, published April 15, 1732: married ^Elizabeth Hodgkins, published March 8, 1743. CHILDREN. 1. Ezekiel, 2d, b. April 6, 1735 ; d. Jan. 25, 1803. 2. Susanna, b. Oct. 17, 1736. 3. Nathaniel, b. Sept. 15, 1738. 4. William, b. March 28, 1741. 5. Joseph, b. 1744 : d. Nov. 11, 1771. 6. Isaac. 7. Rebecca, b. 1746 ; m. Roberts. EZEKIEL 2d, of East Douglas, sou of Ezekiel, born 1735; married Eunice White May 27, 1761. CHILDREN. 1. vSusanna, b. Jan. 5, 1762. 2. William, b. Jan. 12, 1764; d. Nov. 15, 1832. 3. Judith, b. 1766 ; m. Trask. 4. Ezekiel, b. 1771 ; d. March 7, 1849. 5. Joseph, b. 1773 ; m. Balcome. 6. Oliver, b. 1775. 7. Otis, b. 1778. 8. Eunice, b. 1781 ; m. Balcome. 9. Clark, b. 1783 ; m. ' Alexander, - Pickering. At this point we take the Douglas line of Hunts (the descend- ants of Joseph, Oliver, Eunice and Clark,) and trace it down to the present time : BIOGRAPHICAL AND GENEALOGICAL DEPARTMENT. 165 JOSEPH HUNT, of East Douglas, son of Ezekiel, born 1773 ; married Betsey Balcome May 29, 1799. CHILDREN. 1. Merric, b. Feb. 23, 1800; d. 1829. 2. Sally, b. 1802 ; m. Northam. 3. Betsey, b. Dec. 23, 1804 ; d. Feb. 0, 1805. 4. Joseph, b. March 16, 1809. 5. John B., b. Oct. 11, 1812. MERRIC HUNT, son of Joseph, born 1800; married Re- becca Carpenter ; published Nov. 15, 1823. CHILDREN. 1. Elona C, b. Oct. 6, 1824 ; m. Bursley. 2. Sabra, b. Nov. 5, 1825 ; d. early. ELONA C, daughter of Merric, born 1824; married Sam- uel C. BusRLEY, of Northb ridge, May 22, 1859. No children. SALLY, daughter of Joseph, born 1802 ; married Joseph NORTHAM Oct. 1, 1820. CHILDREN. 1. Sally Maria, b. June 17, 1821 ; m. Taft. 2. Joseph Francis, d. young. 3. Betsey E., b. Dec. 19, 1823 ; m. Tatt. 4. Mary Whitman, d. young. SALLY MARL^, daughter of Sally, born 1821 ; married Samuel N. Tajt May 2, 1843. CHILD. Josephine Maria, b. Feb. 2, 1844 ; d. Feb. 28, 1844. BETSEY E., daughter of Sally, born 1823; married Sam- uel N. Taet Sept. 7, 1846. CHILDREN. 1. George Henry, b. June 28, 1849. 2. Josephine Maria, b. March 10, 1852. 3. William Northam, b. Apiil 11, 1857. 166 HISTORY OP DOUGLAS. GEORGE HENRY TAFT, sou of Betsey E., born 1849 ; mar- ried ^ Mary J. Goodman Aug. 28, 1871, d. Nov., 1871 ; married ''Mary J. Reed. CHILD. 1. Arthur R., b. Jan. 28, 1877, by Mary J. Reed. JOSEPH HUNT, of East Douglas, son of Joseph, born 1809 ; married ^ Sarah Whitcomb Aug. 11,1839; married * Sarah L. Adams Sept. 15, 1869. CHILDBEN. 1. Mary E., b. Dec. 16, 1832 ; m. Taft. 2. Luke Livingston, b. Aug. 16, 1834. 3. Emma Rachel, b. Nov. 12, 1842 ; m. Converse. 4. William Whitcomb, b. Dec. 6, 1846 ; d. Aug. 22, 1848. 5. Willard Whitcomb, b. Oct. 15, 1855. 6. Grace Louise, b. Nov. 14, 1870. MARY E., daughter of Joseph, born 1832; married Nelson F. Taft, of Lowell; published May 2, 1854. CHILDREN. 1 Mary Nora, l^^.;^^^ 2. Emma Flora. ) LUKE LIVINGSTONE HUNT, son of Joseph, born 1834. EMMA RACHEL, daughter of Joseph, born 1842 ; married Enoch Converse. WILLARD WHITCOMB HUNT, son of Joseph, born 1855. JOHN B. HUNT, of East Douglas, son of Joseph, born 1821 ; married Ann B. Peck. CHILD. Josephine C, b. May 14, 1834 ; d. Jan. 7, 1842. OLIVER HUNT, of East Douglas, son of Ezekiel, born 1775 ; married ^Diadem A Whiting June 29, 1797 ; married '^Phcebe Bal- COME Jan. 28, 1802. BIOGRAPHICAL AND GENEALOGICAL DEPARTMENT. 167 CHILDKEN- 1. Warren, b. April 30, 1799 ; m. Kelley. 2. Otis Whitney, h. Jnly 19. 1801; d. Dec. 21, 1858; m. — Cummings. 3. Diadema, b. Aug. 19, 1802 : m. Stone. 4. Anderson, b. Jan. 31, 1804 ; m. Forbush and Chamberlain. 5. Austin, Nov. 24, 1807. 6. Oliver, b. Nov. 28, 1809 ; m. Forbush. 7. Leander B., b. July 15, 1812 ; ni. ' Nourse, ^ Han- chet.' 8. Harriet N., b. Nov. 21, 1814 ; m. Hutchius. WARREN HUNT, of East Douglas, son of Ohver,born 1799 ; married Martha Kelley July 12, 1821. CHILDREN. 1. Francis Warren, b. Aug. 2, 1827: m. Balcome. 2. Martha Jane, b. Jan. 30, 1830 ; d. Nov. 23, 1837. 3. Caroline Augusta, b. Sept. 7, 1833 ; m. Bryant. FRANCES W. HUNT, son of Warren, born 1827 ; married Eunice D. Balcome May 22, 1849. CHILDKEN. 1. AVarren Lyman, b. May 2, 1851. 2. Henry Frank, b. Jan. 8, 1853. 3. M. Jennie, b. Jan. 16, 1857 ; m. Elwell. 4. Sumner Balcome, b. Nov. 19, 1861. M. JENNIE, daughter of Francis W., born 1857 ; married Joseph A. Elwell, of Woonsocket, Nov. 2, 1876. CHILD. 1. Albert Francis, b. March 30, 1878. CAROLINE AUGUSTA, daughter of Warren, born 1833 ; married Geoege P. Bryant Jan. 12. 1854. CHILDREN. 1. Carrie Hunt, b. March 15, 1856. 2. Paul Lincoln, b. Oct. 15, 1868. 168 HISTORY OP DOUGLAS. OTIS W. HUNT, son of Oliver, born 1801 ; married Submh' CUMMINGS. CHILDKEN. 1. Charles Edwin, b. July 25, 1824 ; d. Jan. 10, 1826. 2. p:dwin Augustus, b. Feb. 25, 1826 ; d. May 8, 1857. 3. William, b. April 4, 1828 ; m. Balcome. 4. Franklin L., b. Sept. 1, 1834 ; m. Graves. 5. Mary Louise, b. Feb. 13, 1839 ; m. Waite. 6. Otis W., b. Nov. 13, 1849. EDWIN AUGUSTUS HUNT, son of Otis W., born 1826 ; mar- ried Mary A. Joslyn, 1848. CHILDREN. 1. Edgar A., b. Nov. 9, 1854. 2. Edwin A., b. June, 1856. WILLIAM HUNT, son of Otis W., born 1828 ; married Laura A. Balcome May 22, 1849. CHILDBED. 1. Charles E., b. June 1, 1851. 2. Walter B., b. July 15, 1854. 3. Josephine L., b. Aug-. 9, 1857. 4. Robert W., b. Jan. 28, 1859 ; d. March 13, 1859. DIADEM A, daughter of Oliver, born 1802 ; married Luther Stone 1825. CHILD. 1. Louensia Augusta, b. 1826; m. Lincoln. LOUENSIA AUGUSTA, daughter of Diadema, born 1826 ; married Charles Lincoln. ANDERSON HUNT, son of Oliver, born 1807 ; married ^ Eliza FoRBUSH May 18, 1831 ; married " Nancy Chamberlain May 30, 1842. CHILDREN. 1. Lysander Perry, b. Sep. 3, 1832 ; m. Batcheller. 2. Charles Anderson, b. June 23, 1834 ; m. Chamberlain. 3. Harlan Page, b. July 6, 1836 ; m. Cunhff. 4. Ellen Ehza, b. March 3, 1843. BIOGRAPHICAL AND GENEALOGICAL DEPARTMENT. 169 5. Anna Francelia, b. Nov. 11, 1845. 6. George Warren, b. Nov. 11, 1847. LY8ANDER P. HUNT, son of Anderson, bom 1832 ; married MiXERVA A. Batcheller, 1857. CHARLES A. HUNT, son of Anderson, born 1834 ; married Sakah Chamberlain, of Boston, Oct. 20, 1859. CHILDREN. 1. Arthur Chamberlain, b. Oct. 11, 1866. 2. Clarence Mellen, b. June 17, 1870. HARLAN P. HUNT, son of Anderson, born 1836 ; mamed Sarah Louise Cunliff Nov. 26, 1863. CHILDREN. 1. Nellie E., b. Oct. 23, 1865. • 2. EmmaL.,b. March 20, 1874. GEORGE W. HUNT, son of Anderson, born 1847; married Josephine M. Taft, daughter of Newell Taft, Nov. 14, 1878. OLIVER HUNT, son of OUver, born 1809 ; married Persis G. FoRBUSH May 10, 1832. CHILDREN. 1. Julia Ann, b. July 19, 1833 ; m. Howe. 2. Helen Maria, b. Feb. 22, 1835 ; d. Aug. 30, 1838. 3. Mary Elizabeth, b. April 19, 1837 ; d. Nov. 15, 1838. 4. Sarah Elizabeth, b. Jan. 30, 1843 ; d. Sept. 5, 1843. 5. Anna Ohvia, b. July 27, 1845 ; d. Aug. 14, 1845. JULIA ANN, daughter of Oliver, born 1833 ; married Elijah Howe, Jr., Jan. 3, 1857. CHILD. 1. OUver, b. 1860. LEANDER B. HUNT, son of Oliver, born 1812 ; married ^Lydia B. Nourse Nov. 8, 1836; married ^ Mary H. Hanchet Oct. 27, 1852. CHILDREN. 1. Antoinette Eliza, b. Oct. 25, 1839 ; m. Thayer. 2. Louis Herbert, b. June 21, 1846 ; d. Oct. 2, 1846. 170 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. 3. Herbert Eugene, b. Oct. 29, 1848 ; in. Pabner. 4. Alfred Epher, b. Marcb 31, 1855 ; m. McQuesten. 5. Arthur Leander, b. Aug. 7, 1856 ; d. April 23, 1860. 6. Mary Tobjs b. Nov. 21, 1857 ; d. Nov. 14, 1858. ANTOINETTE E., daughter of Leander B.. born in 1839; married Lucius M. Thayer Sept. 7, 1864. CHILDEEN. 1. Walter Nourse, b. April 8, 1870. 2. May Hunt, b. Oct. 29, 1873. 3. Daisy Lillian, b. Feb. 10, 1877. - HERBERT E. HUNT, son of Leander B., born , 1848 ; married Amklia Paumek, at Boston, May 29, 1870. CHILDKEN. 1. Mabel Gertrude, b. June 11, 1871 ; d. Sept. 9, 1871. 2. Bertha Grenville, b. Aug. 17, 1873. 3. Elizabeth Baker, b. Feb. 9* 1876. ALFRED E. HUNT, son of Leander B., born , 1855; married Minnie T. McQuesten, of Nashua, N. H., Oct. 29, 1878. HARRIET N., daughter of Oliver, born , 1814 ; married Charles Hutchins, pubhshed Oct. 12, 1837. CHILDREN. 1. Alice Ann, b. Feb. 14, 1839 ; d. April 22, 1861. 2. George Francis. 1). Oct. 5, 1841 ; m. ^ Bodkin ; '^ Fairbanks. 3. Harriet Augusta, b. June 15, 1844 ; m. Richards. 4. Charles Heniy, b. Jan. 13, 1847 ; m. Knowles. 5. Ohver Clay, b. Feb. 21, 1850. 6. Jessie Gertrude, b. Oct. 1, 1859. GEORGE F. HUTCHINS, son of Harriet N., born 1841 ; married ^ Annie L. Bodkin Dec. 28, 1869; married ^Edna P. Fairbanks May 12, 1875. CHILDREN. 1. Charles Francis, b. Feb. 1, 1871. 2. Willie Lee, b. Jan. 27, 1873. 3. Hem-y Talbot, b. Feb. 3, 1877. BIOGRAPHICAL AND GENEALOGICAL DEPARTMENT. 171 HARRIET A., daughter of Harriet N., born 1844; married Seth Richards Oct. 3, 1871. C. HENRY HUTCHINS, sou of Harriet N., born 1847 ; mar- ried LiLA E. Knowles Sept. 2, 1873. CHILD. 1. Arthur Knowles, b. 1878. EUNICE, daughter of Ezekiel, born 1781 ; married Ellis Bal- COME. CHILDBEN. 1. Sumner, b. Sept. 23. 1799 ; m. Knapp. 2. Eunice, b. Feb. 23, 1808 ; m. Dudley. 3. Rehef, b. Aug. 3, 1810 ; m. Luther. SUMNER BALCOME, son of Eunice, born 1799 : married Laura Knapp, of Bridgeport, Conn. CHrLDKEI^^. 1. Brigham, m. Julia Balcome. 2. Emily, m. Nathan Sprague. 3. Laura A., m. William Hunt. 4. Eunice D., m. F. W. Hunt. 5. Smnner W., m. Lizzie Walls. 6. Hattie A., m. Edgar Spinney. 7. Jennie, m. Hooker. 8. Mary Elizabeth, m. Blinn. EUNICE, daughter of Eunice, born 1808; married Willard Dudley. childkex. Edwin, Francis, and Betsey-. RELIEF, daughter of Eunice, born 1810; married Jeremiah Luther. childben. 1. Eliza G., b. Aug. 8, 1831 ; m. Hazelton. 2. Marcus M., b. Sept. 1, 1833 ; m. Mannehau. 3. Marion R., b. Nov. 14, 1836 ; m. Calden. 4. Alphonso, b. Oct. 13, 1838 ; m. Eimiions. 5. Jeremiah E., b. Sept. 27, 1843 ; d. Oct. 14, 1863. 6. Jane S., b. Aug. 16, 1847 ; m. Oakes. 7. Hannah H., b. July 29, 1850 ; d. Sept. 23, 1850. 172 HISTORY OP DOUGLAS. ELIZA G., daughter of Relief, b. 1831 ; married William Hazelton. CHILD. 1. Charles Edward, b. May 8, 1855. MARCUS M. LUTHER, son of ReUef, born 1833 ; married Ellen M. Maxnehan. CHILD. 1. Alice Ehza, b. July 15, 1874. MARION R., daughter of Rehef, born 1836 ; mairied TnoMAii J. Calden. CHILDBEX. 1. Walter A., b. Feb. 29, 1857. 2. Etta E., b. Nov. 26, 1859. 3. Eddie L., b. July 13, 1861 ; d. Oct. — , 1861. ALPHONSO LUTHER, son of Relief, born 1838; married Emma A. Emmons. " CHILDREN. 1. Helen, b. Aug. 14, 1868. 2. Julia Annie, b. Dec. 29, 1874. JANE S., daughter of Relief, born 1847 ; married Jonas Oakes Nov. 22, 1870. CHILDBEN. 1. Charles Francis, b. Aug. 13, 1871. 2. Freddy Jonas, b. April 23, 1877. CLARK HUNT, of Danby, Vt., son of Ezekiel, born 1783; married ^Zilphia Alexander, published Dec. 8, 1805; married '^Cyrene Pickering March 12, 1811. children. 1. Celia A., b. April 28, 1805 ; m. Smith. 2. Harriet, b. Feb. 13, 1807 ; m. Buxton. 3. Carohne, b. Feb. 28, 1812 ; m. Coggeshall. 4. Hiram, b. Oct. 6, 1814. 5. Homer P., b. Aug. 30, 1816. 6. Zilphia, b. Oct. 9, 1819 ; m. Cook. 7. Cyi-ene, b. Jan. 24, 1821 ; m. Vallet. 8. Clark, b. Sept. 29, 1823 ; d. Nov. 4, 1859. BTOGRAPHICAL AND GENEALOGICAL DEPARTMENT. 178 9. Venner, b. May 2, 1827 ; d. Feb. 21, 1828. 10. Nelson V., b. IFeb. 17, 1829 ; d. April 2, 1840. HOMER P. HUNT, son of Clark, born 1816 ; married ' Mary D. Davis May 9, 1841; married "Mary J. Hodges Nov. 29, 1848. CHILDREN. 1. Mary E., b. 1841 ; d. July 6, 1842. 2. Homer P., b. July 1844 ; d. Aug. 8, 1844. 3. Lewis H., b. June 13, 1853 ; d. Oct, 2, 1859. 4. HoAvard N., b. Aug. 16, 1855 ; d. Feb. 18, 1858. GENEALOGY OF THE THAYER FA3IIL.Y. THOMAS THAYER, of Braintree, Mass., and Margery - his wife ; were from England. CHILDREN. 1. Thomas. 3. Shadrack. 2. Ferdinand. FERDINAND THAYER, son of Thomas, married Huldah Hay WARD, of Braintree. 1^52. CHI 1. Sarah. \ LDREN. 5. Naomi. 2. Huldah. 1 6. Thomas. 3. Jonathan. 7. Samuel. 4. Da\id. ~^ 8. Isaac. CAPT. THOMAS THAYER, son of Ferdinand, married Mary Adams, of Mendon, 1838. CHILDREN. 1. Mary. 6. Elizabeth. 2. Thomas. 7. John. 3. Samuel. " 8. Wilham. 4. Temperance. • 9. Margaret. 5. David. 10. Jemima. SAMUEL THAYER, son of Captain Thomas, born 169fi ; manned 'Sarah Farmer, of Uxbridge, Ma}- 3, 1754; married * Sarah AYalker. 174 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. CHILDREN. 1. Amos. 5. Martha. 2. Jabez 6. Eunice. ,3. Asa. 7. Louisa. 4. Lois. !^. Nahum. 9. Stephen. 11. Maiy. 10. Samuel. ASA THAYER, son of Samuel, born 1761 : married Mart MuRDOCK, of Newton. Mass., April. 1780. CHILDRElSr. 1. Olive, 1). Aug. 1 272 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. be told that among all the men emploj^ed in this division of the estabUshment not one can be enrolled on any life insurance com- pany's books. But nevertheless such is the case, so perilous to an average length of life is the grinder's task. Tlie huge and rapidly- whirling stones over which the}^ bend in their daily toil not only wear awa}- the hard metal from the axe, but the almost impalpable dust developed in the process, both from the iron and the stone, so pervades the room that its inhalation with almost every breath is inevitable, notwithstanding the stones themselves are constantly dripping with water. Tlie " grinders' consumption " is the doom of only a few years' postponement in most cases. Adding somewhat to the peril, many of the men seem really to be sitting astride their stones, " riding horses" as it is termed, that they ma}- bring their whole avoirdupois to bear upon the tool while grinding, and thus materially expediting the work. The rate at which these huge grindstones are used up is astonishing. One of them measuring full seven feet in diameter will have been so worn away by three weeks' use as to require replacing with a new one. And now and then, but fortunately not often, a stone bursts, in consequence of some imperceptible flaw, or the too great centrifugal force acquired in its rapid motion, when the track of the flying fragments is marked by the fearful mutilation if not the instant death of the man who chances to be grinding probabl}', but certainly by the terrible shattering of the machinery or building. The axe is now ready for the third stage in its progress, and the temperers next assume its management. However essential the preceding operations maj' be regarded, this must be conceded to be of the first importance, since however finel}^ shaped, well forged, or how excellent soever the materials entering into the construction of an axe, without the most skilled attention to the tempering it is just about worthless. The first thing done by the temperer is to make the tool as hard as possible, and this is effect- ed by heating it until it becomes cherry red in color, and then immediately plunging it into a bath of the strongest brine. It is then exposed to the heat of a small coal fire until, from the thin edge to the thickest part of the blade, the precise colors are brought out which indicate the exact temper required, when an- other cold bath puts it in a permanently serviceable condition, reminding us of the legend of the warrior, who could not wait for BROAD HATCHET, SHINGLING HATCHET. LATHING HATCHET. AJCE PATTERN HATCHET. PATTEENS OF HATCHETS MADE BT THE DOUGI.AS AXE MANUFACTUEmG CO. 18 274 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. the finishing of his armor at the forge, but seizing it red hot, rode swiftl}^ forth, and was surprised at finding the cold air had tempered it into an excellent steel weapon. The utmost care is taken in this department, so different from the practice in other establish- ' ments, in order that each individual axe may have the same durable quality secured to its entire steel equipment ; and the emploj'es here, for that reason, would come under the head of watchmen more strict- ly than workmen, since only through the most careful observation of the varying color in every tool while under this fiery test can the differing degrees of hardness at the edge and middle of the blade be secured. CLAW HATCHET. The finishing up of the axes in the polishing rooms is the last process. This is accomplished by the aid of emery-wheels large and small, coarse and fine, and needs no description from us. It is simply the aesthetical department, where the painstaking artisans may well be pardoned for pausing a little while just to beautify an implement so well cared for b^' their brother workmen, from first to last, as they send it out to win golden compliments from the great army of " hewers of wood and drawers of — " blood, sometimes, if those who wield a Douglas axe are not as sharp as these tools are capable of being, with fair usage, alwaj's and ever^'where. It only remains for us to follow the bright^ polished axes to the apartment where, after being separated into the three grades manufactured, they are stamped, bronzed and labeled ready for packing in boxes, some with the helves and handles complete, and the rest in nests of a dozen, for convenience in handling. CHAPTER XIX INCIDENTS. ROBBERY OF THE AXE COMPANY'S SAFE. MOXG the various inci- dents connected with the histoiy of the town, none probably have caused so deep an interest as the following, the main par- ticulars of which we tran- scribe from the columns of the Douglas Weekly Herald of May 22, 1869 : Our usually' quiet com- munity was suddenly thrown into the wildest excitement last Saturday morning (May 15) , by the discovery that the office of the Douglas Axe Manufacturing Co., which is located in a building standing by itself in the very heart of our village, and almost literall}' surrounded by dwelling- houses, had been during the preceding night made the scene of one of the most daring burglaries. The startling fact was not discovered until after 7 o'clock, when Mr. Charles A. Hunt, one of the clerks, was engaged in opening the office for the daj' as usual. The Agent, Mr. Eldwin Moore, was quickly notified of what had taken place, and himself andthe office employes as soon as practicable commenced an investigation as to the extent of the depredations committed. It was soon ascertained that the burglars eflfected their entrance to the building through the east outside door, by turning the door- 276 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. key which had been left in the lock on closing the office the even- ing previous. This key was found subsequently on the bridge below the office which leads to the finishing shops. After getting inside the building, the door leading to the counting-room was easily forced open, apparently with one of several jimmies with which the burglars were equi})ped. The Company's heavy iron safe was situated in the farther corner of a room opening from the counting-room, and this was moved entirely across this room, through the door and into the middle of the counting-room, a dis- tance of nearly fifteen feet. This was done evidently for the purpose of getting the safe as far as possible from the dwellings in the rear of the office, as less likely to expose their operations to be heard. And now, of course, the real work of the gang com- menced. Up to this point it had been to them but child's play, and with their accomplished burglars' outfit they attacked the mass- ive safe. Probabl}' its outer door was opened with comparative ease, but the inner door must have given them a good deal of trouble, as they evidentlj^ found themselves completely baffled, even after cutting off the hinges of this door, and were at last com- pelled to abandon their efforts at this point. They then turned their attention to the top of the safe, where the}" tried the driving of iron wedges into tha angle formed by the junction of the front and upper plates of the inside compartment. In this they so far succeeded that, with the aid of a peculiarly-shaped iron hook with which they had come provided, they fished out of the drawers in the upper part of the safe nearly' everything of value which the}' contained, comprising government bonds, certificates of stock, and some $50 in money. The latter they probabl}'' overlooked, and it was found where it had been placed at the close of Friday's lousiness. This robber}' must have been the work of a gang of pretty thoroughly experienced l)urglars. No two persons could easily have moved the ponderous iron safe for such a distance, besides lifting it over the threshold of the door through which it was taken. An experienced safe manufacturer, after closely examining the matter, pronounced the job skillfully done, the only thing indicat- ing inexperience in the business being the attempt to get at the valuables by cutting the hinges of the inside door. This must have taken them considerable time and hard work to accomplish, and besides it was all labor lost, since when this had been effected INCIDENTS. 277 they were not any nearer their object than when they commenced, as the hinges were merely designed for the door to swing upon, and the strong lateral working bolts inside this door effeetnally resist- ed all attempts at forcing it open. Their expertness at the desperate business is made still clearer from the fact that when they found themselves foiled at this point, where they evidently expected only a slight obstacle, they directed their efforts to the only remaining vulnerable point in the safe. The edges of the top RESIDENCE OF A. F. BROWN, ESQ. and front plates did not overlap each other, but simply met together, leaving just enough of a chink to admit the entering of a sharp wedge, and in this manner the work of distending this small open- ing sufficiently for their purpose was comparatively an easy task. The scene presenting itself to the clerk on opening the door of the main office, on that Saturda}^ morning, must have been shock- ing indeed. Close by the door which he had just opened stood the wreck of what was, on the previous evening, a highly finished and apparently immovable safe. Scattered about the floor, in every 278 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. direction, was a perfect medle}' of burglarious implements, such as jimmies, cold chisels, wedges, hammers, etc., while the fractured lid of the office desk, with the open door of the safe which had been so secure h^ locked the night before, completed the picture of violence and ruin so suddenl}" and unexpectedly bursting on his astonished vision. The safe was permitted to remain undisturbed till the following Monday, to enable the officers to make all necessar}' examinations preparatory to entering upon their search for the perpetrators. Several experienced detectives came from Boston, Providence, and other points, including the chief of police from Boston, and Sheriff Shumwa}' from Webster, A detective from Providence took a description of a couple of suspicious-looking pei'sons who had been seen lurking about town the day previous to the robbery, to see if the}- could not be identified as a couple of New York roughs who had been ' ' spotted " in that city. The professional burglar always proceeds S3'stematicall3' about whatever scheme he undertakes, rareh' venturing upon the con- summation of his plans till they are thoroughly matured, even if to secure this weeks and months of closest watching and plotting are requisite ; and that this was true in this instance there is little room to doubt. In the" first place the members of the gang were evidently aware of the fact that as a rule the funds for pa3ing off' the emploj'es are sent from the Boston office to the resident offi- cers here only on the afternoon prior to pa^'-day, which comes regularl}' on the 15th of each month. The works of the Company were now running at nearly or quite their maximum capacity, re- quiring some $25,000 monthly for the wages of the men, and no better time for the " planting " of their job, as in burglarious tech- nology the commencement of active opei-ations is st3'led, would be likely to offer itself. Very fortunately for the Company, however, on this occasion the money was forwarded somewhat later than usual, greath' to the chagrin of the thieves. And then again, the night of Friday chanced to be one of those in which mist and darkness combine to favor such clandestine operations. Their method of procedure was also quite as characteristic of the profession as the circumstances were seemingly favorable. The task of forcing apart with iron wedges the stout iron front and top of the safe, not to mention that of cutting the solid iron hinges of INCIDENTS. 279 the inner door, must apparently have been attended with noise sufficient to awaken the occupants of the closely adjoining houses ; and the only ix)ssible reason why all this heavy work failed to arouse the entire neighborhood was that copper sledges were evi- dently' used, thus deadening to a mere thud the blows which oth- erwise would inevitabl}' have rung out a sharp alarm to the entire neighborhood. As it was, with all these well-planned precautions, Mr. Caouette, one of the nearest residents, twice left his bed dur- ing that night, thinking some one was committing depredations around his house. On one of these occasions he threw open a window directl}- facing the office, and looked carefully around, but seeing nothing to' excite any farther suspicions he again retired. Mr. William H. Moore, a son of the Agent, also employed in the otiice, passed b}' the building at about 12 o'clock, but neither heard nor saw anything to excite his suspicions. Mr. James Smith also passed the building not far from the same hour, and remembers hearing distinctly a succession of dull, heavy thumps, as of some one pounding, but suspecting nothing wrong he paid no farther attention to them. No light was seen in the building by any one at an}- time during the night. During the day previous, as alread3' intimated, suspicious char- acters were seen lurking about town, and in the evening they en- gaged a team and driver of Mr. T. H. Baker, hvery stable keeper, to go to Worcester, stating that they wanted to take the early morning train for Boston. They seemed to be in a great hurry to reach that place, and when asked why they did not wait till morn- ing, and take the first train direct, as they would get there sooner, the}' only gave vague answers. These same men stopped at the Bay State House in that city until morning, and were known to have been there as late as 8 o'clock, and it is surmised that they waited for the boat train to New York, which leaves at about 10 o'clock. The Worcester Gazette says the names the}- wrote on the hotel register were of course fictitious, and one of them was the name of a young man emplo3'ed b}' the Axe Compan}', who was at that time in this place. One of the two was marked very con- spicuously by a broken nose, and is known to be a noted burglar. There were strong grounds for suspicion that these men were in some way implicated in the robber}', and steps were immediately taken to hunt them up and cause their arrest. 280 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. The following is a list of certificates taken from the safe : — A certificate of ten shares of Axe stock, belonging to the heirs of Charles Hutchins, .... $1,000 A certificate of five shares of stock, belonging to Edwin Moore, . 500 Certificate, No. 72, of five shares of Central National Bank stock, Worcester, belonging to Anderson Hunt, 500 A certificate. No. 336, of one share of Central National Bank stock, belonging to Anderson Hunt, . . 100 LIST OF THE STOLEN BONDS AND THEIR NUMBERS. N08. 78,191 17,796 8,611 8,610 8,699 6,463 4,108 28,875 31,993 17,172 110,027 25,688 Amt. Nos. ,000 28,812 100 58,486 50 38,086 50 91,265 50 116,412 100 91,264 50 214,552 500 96,771 500 45,013 500 28,347 500 6,439 100 24,837 Amt. $50 50 500 500 50 500 100 1,000 1,000 500 500 100 The following is a list of the bonds, showing the numbers and amounts, belonging to the heirs of William Kendall : — 6-81S. 87,173 . $1,000 2,375 $50 87,172 . 1,000 51,659 1,000 17,740 100 10,006 100 9,392 500 21,768 1,000 9,306 500 12,445 500 80,189 . 1,000 INCIDENTS. 281 5_20s. — 1862. PRINCIPAL LOSERS. Heirs of Wm. Kendall, about . . $9,000 Roj-al Keith, . . 1,250 Rev. Wm. T. Briggs, . 1,700 Edwin Moore, . . $1,500 Heirs of Chas. Hutchins, 2,700 Anderson Hunt, . 2,600 Douglas Axe Co., 500 The entire losses reached the sum of $20,000." DAY AFTER THE ROBBERY. Owing probably more to excitement than any real grounds for suspicion, an itinerant vender of moth powder, who wasted con- RESIDBNCE OF CHARLES HUTCHINS IN 1870. siderable breath in accusing some of our towns-people who are above suspicion of complicity in the robber}", and made some other bold and improbable statements, was regarded by many as knowing more about the robbery than he wished to acknowledge. His braggart style made the place too warm for him, and he con- cluded to try his luck at exterminating moths in some other locality. 282 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. About the 25th of Jul}- a New Yorker named Daniels was also arrested and brought to town, on suspicion of being implicated in the robbery, but no evidence was found corroborative of the sus- picion, and he was discharged. OTHER IXCIDENTS. In 1790 Capt. Benjamin Dudle}', Samuel Wallis, Paul Dudley, James Wallis and Ebenezer Curtis went to Boston on snow-shoes, drawing hand-sleds loaded with produce, which thej' exchanged for such commodities as the}' were unable to procure at home. At Roxbury they were beset by a party of about forty roughs, who, notwithstanding their numbers, were no match for the strength and prowess of our hearty backwoodsmen. The Douglas boys won a signal victory, and their fame spread far and near. One of the characteristics of the men of that day was a pas- sion for militar}' display, and in the days of trainings and musters some of the best military and cavalry companies in the State had their headquarters in Douglas. Captain Stockwell, in 1820, com- manded an organization known as the Douglas Light Infantr}^ which was presented with a stand of colors by Sarah Titus, a most beautiful and accomplished young lad}-. It was a gala occasion, which some of the older inhabitants still remember with pride. Oliver Emerson, the ensign of the company, received the colors, and most jealously guarded them while in his keeping. Capt. Peter Balcome was the commander of a company of cavalry. He is described as a man of imposing presence, and, as he appeared on horseback at the head of his troops, would shout, ^'■Attention, all God's creation!" The large frames, physical strength and endurance characteris- tic of the early inhabitants of the town was the subject of wonder and admiration far and near. It is related that, when the meet- ing-house was being built, the workmen by mistake got one of the plates on wrong end to. It was a very heavy piece of timber, and for a long time resisted the eflfbrts of half a dozen strong men to place it in its correct position. Finally Capt. Ben Dudley, a man of herculean strength and enormous frame, said, " stand back, INCIDENTS. 283 boys, and I will turn it alone !" And sure enough, he did ; but the pressure was so great that both of his heels were forced out through his boots ! Of this singular prodigy of ph3-sical strength it is also related that he had a brother who was also noted for his strength, besides being a f-imous wrestler. His name was Paul Dudle}-, and he had established his right to the championship b}' throwing the best men that neighboring towns could pit against him. One da}' a muscular KESIDENCE OF JKSSE B. SHERMAN. fellow on horseback rode up to the door of the cottage, and in- quired for Mr. Dudley. He was directed to the mill, whither he had gone for a load of cider. Elding off in the direction indicated, he met Mr. Dudley, who was plodding along beside his ox team, and accosted him as follows : ' ' They tell me you are the best wrestler in the world. Have 3'OU any objection to testing that point with me?" "Not in the least," replied Mr. Dudle}' ; " but let 's have some cider first." While his would-be antagonist was dismounting, Mr. Dudley went to the back of the cart, drew one of the barrels towards him, and after extracting the plug delibe- 284 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. ratel^y lifted the barrel by the chimes to his mouth, and drank from the bung-hole. The stranger looked on in blank amazement, and then, without a word, remounted his horse and galloped away. The forefathers of the town were troubled about idle, hungry, immoral paupers with rich relations, just as their descendants are to-day. Bitter animosities grow out of family broils ; religious wars are, of all others, most horrible and wretched ; but neither of these evils compare with a contest to settle the abiding-place and continuing cit}^ of a vermin-haunted pauper. As the law then stood, whenever a person who had no resi- dence was likely to become a public charge, the Selectmen issued a warrant warning him to leave the town, which, on being recorded in the town clerk's office, relieved the town of all responsibility. About this time some ugly, misanthropic spinster gave birth to the threadbare saying, " out of the world into Douglas," and as this was repeated from place to place the idea became general among the paupers of the county that the law did not appl}' to Douglas, and the}' flocked thither in such numbers that the money spent in testing the law would Ixive comfortal)ly fed and clothed them all. The Selectmen tried a " little game," and, as is usual in such cases, emptied the town treasur}^ of money, though they amply replaced it with experience. A pauper named Jonathan Stearns, whose lawful residence was unknown, was assisted by the Select- men, who charged the expense to half a' dozen different towns, hoping that in some way or other one of them might acknowledge him as its resident. Of course they all promptly disowned him. and suits were brought, in which the town of Douglas was invariably beaten, until, after having led to costs and correspondence enough to have kept him in food and reading all his days, poor Stearns was finally thrown upon the county. The whole transaction is like the case of greed}' heirs-at-law who spend a thousand dollars in litigation to find out which is entitled to a legac_y of five hundred. Minors who became paupers were frequently ' ' bound out " during their minority by the Selectmen. Inventories of their per- sonal eflSects were filed with the town clerk. It is not ever}' rich maiden of to-day that has "seven shirts" (alias shifts, alias smocks) to her back, as did Mary Aldrich, indentured to Abel INCIDENTS. 285 Morse, whose inventory was as follows: " 1 green skirt, 1 chect apron, 2 woolen aprons, 12 handkerchiefs, 5 linen loose gounds, 1 callicogound, 2 woolen loose gounds, 1 cloak, 5 pr. woolen stock- ings, 5 pr. linnin, 3 petticoats, 7 shirts (alias shifts, alias smocks), 3 pr. shoes, 1 bonnet." Aunt Eunice B was one of those practical persons in whom the useful virtues outshone the ornamental. Ellis, her husband, was seduced by an itinerant pedlar into trading a good proportion of his available property for a watch — a genuine bull's eye, one of those comfortable specimens of antiquity we sometimes see to- day, too large to be carried round without fatigue, and too small for a town clock. Watches were rare in those days. Oppressed with anxiety lest the precious article should be lost or stolen, he asked his wife to tind him a safe place to hang it. Without a word she rose, and after lighting a candle, and requesting him to bring a hammer and nail, she led the way down cellar, stopping in front of the empty pork barrel. "Drive the nail about three inches from the bottom of that barrel, and hang the watch on it," said she ; " there is room enough, and no one will ever think of looking for anything there ! " It is needless to say that the watch was soon exchanged for nioi'e productive property. Fuller M was famous for practical joking, and never lost an opportunity to indulge this propensity. Returning from Boston in company with one Peter B one daj', in the good old times when everj'body rode horseback, a A-enerable Quaker turned in from a cross road, and jogged along the "Hartford pike" just ahead of them. He was mounted on a plump and rather vicious- looking sorrel mare, with small ears and a bob-tail, bounded on either side by capacious saddle-bags, while his grey coat, long neck, thin hair and broad-brim rose above the saddle, with the combined humility and dignity of a veritable Moses. Fuller saw his chance in a moment. Telling Peter to hold up, he galloped forward and overtook the Quaker, and in mj'sterious tones warned him as a friend to beware of the evil person in their rear, telling him that Peter, if not exactly craz^', was certainly ' ' possessed of a devil," that he was always aroused by the sight of a stranger, and had been known in such a case to attack the hapless person and rend him limb from limb. 286 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. These things so wrought upon the excited Quaker, the effect being heightened by the solemn waj' in which Fuller had made the startling revelations, that he would have plied whip and spur and fled for his life at once if Fuller had not gravely warned him that this course would be sure to draw on him the immediate vengeance of the hair-bi-ained maniac. He left the Quaker with a final ad- monition to flee if pursued, and returned to Peter. " Peter," said he, "I'll bet 3'ou a 'Douglas bet' (a gallon of nmi) that you can't catch that old feller ahead there !" 'Twas done ! Peter started, and so did the Quaker. Kicking both feet clear of the stirrups, and wrapping his long legs together under the animal's body, the Quaker lashed his nag till the little mare flew like Tarn O'Shanter's when the witches gave chase. One after another the bulky saddle-bags parted and burst asunder on the road ; the flap of the broad-brim flared aloft in the wind ; the Quaker's long hair streamed in elfin terror ; and , looking neither to right nor left, he went ahead like Jehu. The sight was too much even for Peter. He began to laugh. His horse began to run. Finally, an unlucky stumble landed him end over end in the bushes. " Did yer catch him?" meekly inquired Fuller, as he came up. "Catch him!" muttered Peter, " catch lightnin ! Yew just set here, an' ef he don't git over his scare he'll go round the world and go by us again in half an hour ! " On reaching home Fuller had his laugh, and something more, that lasted through haying. Another incident connected with the Revolutionary era was pertaining to and illustrative of a military gentleman of those historical days — he who at the age of twenty left the arms of his bride in sunny France, fitted out two vessels with arms and pro- visions, sailed for Boston, was received b}' Washington and his army with acclamations, joined the ranks as a volunteer, was wounded in his first action near Philadelphia, and commanded the vanguard of the patriot arm}' at the capture of New York — Mar- quis DE Lafayette. The illustrious Frenchman was traveling from Boston to New York, over the old Boston and Hartford turnpike. He had break- fasted either at Mendon orUxbridge, and on reaching Douglas his horses, which had become spiritless by the long journey from Bos- ton, exhibited much fatigue. Lafa3'ette directed his driver to stop at Douglas and obtain a change of horses. Independence Whip- INCIDENTS. 287 pie's father then kept the hotel in Douglas. He was asked by the Marquis if he could let him have two fresh hoi'ses in exchange for his tired Bayards. " I have but one suitable for j^our Excellenc}'," said Jonathan Whipple ; " but our minister (we think it was Rev. Mr. Day) has a good horse. I will borrow that." And the minister's and land- lord's horses were hitched together, and bore the gallant Marquis to the " land of steady habits." He guaranteed that the horses should be returned within a certain number of days, and a gener- ous sum was to be paid for their use. The limited time expired, and week after week went b}-, but the horses of Messrs. Whipple and Day were not returned. The clergyman was sorely vexed. His favorite nag was considered indispensable to the faithful performance of his pastoral duties. The sick were to be visited, the impatient were to be married, and the dead were to be buried. 'T is true other horses were to be had, but they were not orthodox! How could a " Presbyterian, true blue," ride a heterodoxical horse? Parson Day might " Prove his doctrine orthodox By apostolic bows and knocks," but he could not do justice to himself and his parishioners without that horse. He worried Jonathan Whipple, and Jonathan Whip- ple worried himself concerning the horses and the French Marquis. Finally Mr. AA'hipple heard that Lafayette was again in Boston. Taking the great mail coach he rode to the tri-mountain cit^', and anxiously sought an interview with Lafayette. He found him. " Please, what does Monsieur want ?" inquired the polite French- man. " I want my horse," said Mr. Whipple. ' " Excuse, Monsieur, but I don't know either you or your horse." "Well, does your Excellency remember borrowing two horses in Douglas ?" "Exactly, Monsieur; but the horses were returned." " No, no !" exclaimed Jonathan Whipple, a little excited ; " the horses have never come back." "Xe diable !" exclaimed Lafayette, and he at once called his sec- retary. It turned out that this functionary had failed to order the return of the horses, as dh-ected by Lafayette. The matter was explained 288 HISTORY OP DOUGLAS. to Mr. Whipple, with many apologies, and he was giA-en a generous sum in gold to cover his expenses to and from Boston, and to pay for the use of the horses. The animals were soon after returned to Douglas, to the great delight of their owners. DUEL. In the year 1820 a number of persons arrived at Dudley's tavern, coming by way of Worcester, and meeting an equal num- ber who came by way of the old Boston and Hartford turnpike. The}' spent the entire night in playing cards. Very early in the morning the teams were ordered, and the part}' proceeded in com- pany to Rhode Island, first inquiring of the landlord the direction they were to take, and ascertaining from him how far they should drive before reaching the boundary line between the two States. They stopped in a valley surrounded by dense woods in the town of Burrillville, about half a mile west of what is now known as " Cripple Corner," and two miles from the Massachusetts line. A small brook crossed the road near this place. One of the principals was named Babbitt, a Lieutenant in the navy, belonging in Brook- field, but the other was unknown to our informant. Both of them were attended b}' surgeons, and Dr. Batcheller of Douglas, was called upon to attend and offer such services as might be needed of him. The particulars of the duel are not known, but pistols were used, and the Lieutenant's opponent was liadly wounded. A boai'd covered with blood was found near the brook. When the carriages returned to Dudley's tavern one of them bore unmis- takable evidence of a bloody encounter. Both parties left on the following day, leaving the honest people of the place in a state of amazement and wonder. Among the first men who represented the town in the General Court was Lovell Pulsipher, a genuine backwoodsman, rough in manners and dress, but possessing many elements of statesman- ship, including an ambition for political distinction. At that time the town was considerably in debt, and no way could be seen to clear it off except by an abatement of the Province tax. This Mr. Pulsipher pledged himself to accomplish, and, accoutered in an old leather apron that had seen much service at the work-bench INCIDENTS. 289 and forge, he made the joiirnej^ to Boston. He experienced some difficulty in gaining admission at the court-house, owing to his shabby appearance, and to the fact that he neglected to provide himself with proper credentials, but he succeeded finall3' in gain- ing his seat, and entered at once upon his mission. He plead for the town well, and succeeded in getting the Province tax abated. But, notwithstanding the sympathy of his fellow members was enlisted in behalf of his cause, they could not resist the opportu- nit}' for a little fun at his expense. In the course of the investi- gation Pulsipher was asked if there were accommodations in his town for a committee who might tind it necessary to go there and inquire more carefully into the matter. " W-a-1," he replied, in a peculiar drawling tone, " there 's a leetle rye straw down there ye can sleep on !" ' ' Are there no smarter men in Douglas than you ?" asked a bantering member. " Yes," was the repl}', " there 's plenty o' men to home smarter 'n I be, but they hain't got no close fit tu wear tu the Gineral Court!" These arguments were sufficient to convince the body that the town was reall}' unable to pay the tax imposed. Keziah R and Sybil W , while %isiting an acquaintance in the village, became enthusiastic in praising the fertilit}^ of their lands. Keziah boasted that two kinds of mint grew on her farm — spearmint and peppermint. " Pooh !" said Sjbil, " there 's three kinds of mint growin' on our'n — spearmint, peppermint, and — yarrer!" 19 CHAPTER XX. THE CENTENNIAL FOURTH OF JULY IN EAST DOUGLAS. NDIVIDUAL birth- deijs, as they come and go, will doubt- less never lose their interest among any thoughtful people, and the more there is of thoughtful- ness characteriz- ing men the more precious become these annual returns of the natal daj^, for the3'' are recognized as marking the beginnings of lives invested with the most wonderful of human possibilities. And since, as a matter of fact, these lives are found, in the vast majority of instances, to have been attended with the most thrilling actualities, it is safe to accept the all-prevailing and touching custom of their formal observance as one entirely coinciding with the best of the instinctive convictions of our race. An anonymous writer in the London Magazine in the following lines thus beautifully apostrophizes this event of mortal birth : — " A life has just begun! Another soul lias won The glorious spark of being. Pilgrim of life, all hail! He who at first called forth From nothingness the earth, — Who piled the mighty hills and dug the sea, — Who gave the stars to gem Night like a diadem, Oh, blessed child, made thee, fair creature of the earth, Heir of immortal life! Hail! all hail! " THE CENTENNIAL FOURTH OP JULY. 291 If what we have said be true in reference to an individual among the millions of beings composing the human race, of whom only an almost insignificant fraction are known outside their family circle, how grand in comparison becomes the birthday of a nation ! So thought our fathers from the first, and naturally' " Independence Day " has been the S3'nonym for the wildest and most jubilant ovations in its honor throughout the land, the popular inclination on its annual return being well nigh emancipated from all the usual restraints put upon the demonstrative and boisterous natures of old and young. But the one-hundredth anniversary of this event is at hand — what shall be done properl}' to observe the nation's first centennial, was the querj' among the many in Douglas who felt that they could never have the opportunity to repeat the devoutly patriotic cele- bration they were planning for this. The question seemed to thrill simultaneously- all hearts, and became more emphatic as the mind tried to take in the events transpiring during the hundred ^ears of testing that had intervened. Our nation's twice-repeated victor}', made possible b}' the unnatural attitude of the mother country, stands out sharply in the memor}' of the aged ones ; the matchless career of prosperity in the history' of nations vouchsafed to us by a kind Providence equally challenges the admiration of all — even of the most far-seeing among foreigners ; and the mournful recollection of our people's fratricidal struggle, so recentl}^ ended in triumph, in which so many millions of their hard-earned treasure were lost, with many hundreds of thousands of lives as the darkest feature in the melancholy review, — these and kindred thoughts conspired only tO' intensify the conviction that some specially appropriate service should mark the Centennial Fourth. And so, by common consent, the good people of Douglas re- solved that July 4, 187G, should be really a red-letter day in the history of the town. Indeed, had it been otherwise we should feel that a good portion of the record we have made in these pages touching the loyalty of our fathers must needs be expunged. So general and spontaneous was the interest cherished on this subject by the citizens of all classes that the advent of the day was fore- stalled by a general illumination of the public and private build- ings, and also by a torchlight procession and baud concert on the preceding evening. But for the seeming invidiousness, we should 292 ' HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. yield to our inclination to specif}' .some of the residences and grounds which were more profusely arranged for this occasion, the degree to which it was carried being generally in keeping with the abilit}- of the individual proprietors. The torchlight procession was a marked feature of the occasion, one hundred brilliant torches casting their lurid glare on the build- ings and shrubbery along the streets through which the procession moved, while a number of transparencies conspired to heighten verj- materially the pleasing effect of the novel pageant. The mirth-provoking items in this latter feature of the evening's enter- tainment were entirely original in their conception. They were admirabl}- carried out as well as planned, being the result of the combined efforts of several local artists. The Calithumpians took up the programme where the torchlights left it, making the balance of the night as redolent of the more demonstrative kind of patriot- ism as the procession had rendered it enjoyable to all. The morning's dawn was signalized by the usual sunrise salvo of artillery, mingled with the ringing of the church bells through the town. This over, and the matutinal meal scarcely finished, the festivities were resumed by the introduction of an item not down on the bills of an old-time Fourth, which was, in the opinion of our sires and grandsires, entirely too serious an occasion, and asso- ciated with altogether too momentous questions of public polity to admit of much that was either jocose or farcical. But the lovers of fun must have a part in rendering the occasion memorable, so the " Horribles and Antiques" join the trades' turn-out, which commenced forming at the earl}- hour of 8 o'clock, under the com- mand of Wm. H. Moore, as Chief Marshal, who was aided by As- sistant Marshals Wm. A. Emerson and Chas. J. Batcheller. The line was formed at the junction of Main and Cemetery Streets, in order as follows : — Chief Marshal and Aids. Douglas Brass Band — E. F. Darce}-, leader ; W. E. Cooke, Drum Major. Jean Baptiste Society — Joseph Lem'a}', President. Horribles, Antiques, etc. — Austin Packard, Captain. Trades' Procession. Citizens in Carriages. RESIDENCE OF L. S. WHIPPLE, EAST DOUGLAS. EESIDENCE OF EDWIN MOORE, EAST DOUGLAS. 294 . HISTORY OP DOUGLAS. The procession made a most imposing appearance, and was greeted bj the heartiest demonstrations during its passage through the streets. The wliole affair was pronounced the best of anything of the kind, and altogether the most satisfactor}- CA'er witnessed in tlie histor}' of the town. Nearly all the traders were most credita- bly' represented in the procession. Mechanics' Block, with its varied departments of industry, made an excellent and appropriate show on one large wagon. Williams & Hanson displa3'ed their clothing establishment to the best advantage. The printing office of Charles J. Batcheller, seemingly forgetful of its newly-acquired itinerating character, was throwing off sheets along the route as nicely as if at home. The tinsmithery of W. S. Martin, tired or ashamed of forever waiting at its ordinary place of business for its patrons, was going about town to show how it was done. Harness-making was in full tide of successful operation by Hugh Greene. W. A. Willis started and well nigh " topped out" a brick chimney while keeping up with the rest of his fellow trades- men in the pleasing panorama. Dealers in fish and meats did everything but "catching" and "killing;" and so we might go through the list of representative artisans who took this " lively" way of showing how they appreciated the day, and were willing to do their part towards making the celebration a grand success. The Antiques and Horribles we must be excused from at- tempting to portray, since the main effort of the participants evi- dently was to bid defiance to the pen or pencil of any one but a Hogarth to give them so much even as a fifth-rate setting out. They must needs have been seen to be either appreciated or identified. One of the best things in the display, however, was the comical affair so ingeniously devised by Henr}- Hutchins, in the shape of an engine, under the management of the Douglas Fire Department, which afforded an immense amount of amusement to the throng gathered on the Common. A committee on prizes (Messrs. AVm. Abbott, A. F. Jones and Fenner Batcheller) went through the process of inspecting the gro- tesque crowd which so well represented Falstaff's regiment, and as the result of their discriminating labors awarded three prizes, of five, three and two dollars respectively', Larr}^ Desmod}^ taking the first, " Douglas Fire Department" the second, and Miller Hindon the third, when the procession was formally dismissed. THE CENTENNIAL FOURTH OF JULY. 295 At 11 o'clock the public exercises were held in the Congre- gational church, in the following order : — Music by the large choir. Praj'er by Rev. William D. Bridge. Reading of the Declaration of Independence by Rev. William T. Briggs. Music b}" the Band. Historical Address by A. F. Brown. Music by the choir. Oration b}-^ William H. Briggs. Music b}" the choir. Mr. Edwin Moore, President of the Day, officiated with the ease and dignity so characteristic of him, and Rev. Mr. Briggs read the Declaration in his usual clear and impressive tone. Of the historical address by Mr. Brown it may be said it was an ad- mirable production, evincing great painstaking by its author in gathering up the interesting and valuable facts it embodied, for which he received the thanks of many as rendering the citizens the most important service yet accomplished towards compihng a history of the town. The oration followed, which was a very fine production indeed — terse, discriminating, and sparkling with brilliant thoughts, and eliciting warmest praise from his deeply- interested auditors. It was loudly applauded at its close. It is not often that a voung man, in one year, and that the year of his majority, is admitted to the bar and chosen as the orator of the da}' on such an occasion by his townsmen, yet just this coinci- dence occurred in the case of Mr. Briggs, and marks an event in his history of which he may well cherish the pleasantest memory. At 1 o'clock a clam dinner was served in the orchard at the rear of Hayden's boot and shore store, the Band furnishing music while the hungry' crowd were devouring the toothsome bivalves. President Moore called the assembly to order at the close of the dinner, and announced Mr. W. D. Jones as the toast-master for the occasion. As the several sentiments were read the following gentlemen responded, much to the delight of their listeners : Dea. A. Butler, Mr. A. F. Brown, Rev. W. W. Dow, Rev. W. D. Bridge, Dr. White, Rev. W. T. Briggs, Mr. W. H. Briggs and the President of the Day. 296 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. In obedience to the terms of President Grant's proclamation, a nnion prayer service was held, after the exercises at the dinner- table, in the Methodist vestry, continuing for an hour. This meeting was one of much interest, and drew together those who felt that under God only had we as a people attained the eminence we occupy among the nations on this our hundredth birthday. The balance of the da}^ was given up to a variety of sports and plans for the diversion of the young and old. At 5 o'clock a tub- race was witnessed from the shores of Hunt's Pond, the banks surrounding which were lined with a large crowd of spectators, who greatly enjoj'ed the scene ; and at half-past 6 o'clock there were wheel-barrow, sack, potato and running races on the Com- mon, which created a deal of merriment for another large crowd ; and in the evening there was a fine exhibition of fireworks, thus closing up a daj^ replete with interest to the hundreds who were drawn together as witnesses and participants in the rare proceed- ings. It was repeatedly remarked that the very best order pre- vailed throughout the day, and no disturbance of any kind has yet been chronicled as marring the occasion from beginning to end. CHAPTER XXI EDUCATIONAL ADDENDA. ROM various records and other authentic sources the material for this chapter has been collated, thus com- pleting the educational history of the town — a portion of which was given in a pi-evious chapter, but bringing it down only to about the year 1800. COMMON SCHOOLS. From the town records we learn that at a meeting held on the first Monday in April, 1797, it was " voted to accept of the report of a committee, as far as respects the school Districting, which is as follows, viz. : That there be a district on Walluni Pond Hill, including Aaron Jepherson, the Widow Kelley, and all the inhabitants that live west of them, to be called Wal- lum Pond Hill District. ' 'And that the Friends' District shall be annihilated, and that they shall be included in the district where they live, and that Thaddeus Thayer District be annihilated, and that Thaddeus Thayer be an- nexed to Benjamin Walker's District, and that there shall be a Dis- trict to be called the South District, to include all the inhabitants that are in Douglas that are east of Wallum Pond Hill District, and that are south and west of the following persons and including them, that is, Simeon Harrendon, Daniel Aldrich, Noah Aldrich, Jun'r., Jacob Aldrich, Israel Thayer and Richard Bolster." On the first day of May of the same year it was voted to divide the school mone}^ among the squadrons according to the number of scholars, and the age of the scholars to be from four j^ears 298 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. old to twenty-one, and that the return of the scholars shall be made to the Selectmen and assessors by the committee of the squadrons on the first Monday of November annually. "Mar. 7, 1808, the sura of forty dollars was appropriated by the town to the South School District, for the purpose of enabling them to rebuild their school-house, which had previously been de- stroyed by fire. "March 10, 1821. — The town appropriated Two Hundred and Seventy-three dollars for the purpose of defraying the expenses of building a School House in the Wallis District (so-called) ." " Nov. 4 1822. — Paul Dudley, Aaron Wallis, Benjamin Craggin, George Emerson, Wilhs Walker, Ebenezer Balcome, Prince Par- ker, and Comfort Martin, Jr., were appointed a committee to define the limits of each school district, which dut}^ they performed to the acceptance of the town." "Aprils, 1830. — The Town voted that each School District choose its own Prudential Committee, and in April of the follow- ing year voted that each District have the privilege of choosing them in such manner as they may decide." The method of conducting the common schools of the town, adopted at the beginning, and known as the " School District System," has been adhered to until the present time, with the exception of the 3^ear 1869, at which time the State Legislature passed the following act : — "Chapter 110. — an act to abolish the school district system. " Be it enacted, etc. , as folloivs : — ' ' Section 1 . The School District System in this Commonwealth is hereby abolished. " Sec. 2. Each District in which the district system now exists shall forthwith take possession of all the school-houses, land, apparatus and other property owned and used by the several school districts therein, which said districts might lawfullj"^ convey, and shall appraise the same, levy a tax therefor, and remit said tax in the manner provided by section third, chapter thirty-nine RESIDENCE OF JOHN M. KAWSON. BESIDENCE OF A. M. HILL, DOUGLAS CENTER. 300 HISTORY OP DOUGLAS. of the General Statutes ; provided^ that the appraisal of the school property in an}' district, or the amount to be remitted, shall not exceed the sum that has been actually raised by taxation in such distinct for such property' ; and provided further, that any money or property- held in trust by virtue of ixny gift, devise, or bequest for the benefit of any school district now existing, shall hereafter continue to be held and used in the same manner and for the same purpose according to the terras thereof. " Sec 3. The corporate powers and liabilities of any school district abolished by this act shall continue and remain for the purposes expressed in section six, chapter thirty-nine of the General Statutes " Sec. 4. All acts and parts of acts inconsistent with this act are hereb}- repealed. " Sec. 5. This act shall take effect upon its passage." (Ap- proved March 24, 1869.) The following year another act was passed, allowing any town in which the school district system was abolished to re-establish such districts by a two-thirds vote of the legal voters. By virtue of this last act between fifty and sixty towns, including Douglas, voted to " re-establish 'the school districts therein." During that year, for the purpose of convenience, the several schools were known and designated by the corresponding number of the old school district. In March, 18G7, by vote of the town, the school committee were directed to provide suitable school accommodation for the school children of East Douglas. In ac- cordance with these instructions, the school-houses in Districts 3 and 9 were repaired so as to make a suitable recitation room, in each for the use of an assistant teacher. In 1875 the school-house in District No. 9 was thoroughly re- paired and reseated, and in 1878 a considerable addition was made to that in District No. 10, besides other necessary repairs, including reseating. The following extracts from the last annual report of" the school committee will be invested with some degree of interest from the fact that it shows more fully the condition of the public schools at the present date : — EDUCATIONAL ADDENDA. 301 REPORT OF THE SCHOOL COMMITTEE OF THE TOWN'oF DOUGLAS FOR THE YEAR ENDING APRIL 1, 1878. STATISTICS. The whole number of children in town May 1, 1877, be- tween 5 and 15 years of age, .... 447 Whole number attending school during the year of all ages, . ._ 477 Average daily attendance in all the schools, . . 305+ Whole number attending school under 5 3'ears of age, 6 Whole number attending school over 15 years of age, 41 Aggregate of months all the schools have been kept during the year, . . . . . . , 109|f Average number of months the schools have been kept during the entire year, ..... SA- Number of male teachers in district schools, . . 2 Average wages paid male teachers in district schools, per month, .;..... $32 00 Number of female teachers in district schools, . 15 Average wages paid female teachers in district schools, per month, . . . . . . $31 124- Town appropriation for district schools, March, 1877, Unexpended balance last year. Dog fund, .... State school fund. Town school fund, interest, Total, $3,782 66 EXPENSE OF DISTRICT SCHOOLS. Wages paid teachers, .... $3,163 00 Fuel and care of school-rooms, . . 286 25 $2,500 00 792 98 231 68 201 52 56 48 Total, $3,449 25 Balance unexpended April 1, 1878, . $33341 The schools in Districts Nos. 1, 2, 4 and 5 were under the supervision of A. M. Hill ; Nos. 6, 8 and 9 under the supervision 302 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. of Levi White, M. D. ; Nos. 3, 7 and 10 under the supervision of A. F. Brown ; the High School under the general supervision of all the Superintending Committee. The School Committee were : — Oliver W. Adams, . Term expires March, 1879 A. M. Hill, ii 1879 A. F. Brown, ic 1879 J. E. CUMMINGS, . (( 188a Edw^in Esten, u 1880 Levi White, M. D., (( 1880 A. E. Kemp, M. D., . u 1881 W. D. Jones, (1 1881 N. W. Preston, (I o rv i_ _!_?__ 1881 The Committee organized for the year 1878-9 by choice of A. F. BROWN, Chairman. W. D. JONES, Secretary. A. F. BROWN, W. D. JONES, Superintending Committee. high school. Previous to 1846 there was no established school in town where the higher branches of learning were taught. The necessit}^ for such a school at last became so apparent that steps were taken tO' make the necessary provisions. An association of several promi- nent citizens was formed, and suitable school accommodations pro- vided at East Douglas. The association was known as the Citizens' Hall Association, and the following is a copy of the original subscription list, which states the purposes of the society and the men who were then prom- inent in educational affairs : — East Douglas, June 30, 1846. ''We, the undersigned, feeling the importance of affording to our youth in this community' greater facilities for the attainment of a higher literar}' education than can be expected from the public or town school, and, on account of the proposed erection of a school-house in District No. 9 in this town, believing the present a favorable time to make an effort to secure the above-named object, do hereby agree to pay for the purpose of adding another EDUCATIONAL ADDENDA. 303: story to the school-house about to be erected in District No. 9, in Douglas, in the count}' of Worcester in Massachusetts, and for other necessary expenditures connected with the same, the sums hereunto affixed to our names, provided the sum of six hundred dollars be subscribed for the aforementioned object or purpose, and provided the same six hundred dollars or stock be divided into shares of twelve dollars and fifty cents each ; and provided also, when said sum shall have been subscribed, the subscribers are no- tified to meet for the choice of Directors, who shall he authorized to expend said fund for said purpose : — "Warren Hunt, Moses Knapp, Otis W. Hunt, . Moses Hill, . . Oliver Hunt, . Edward F. Stone, Samuel W. Heath, Fenner Batcheller, Anderson Hunt, . Leander B. Hunt, Lyman Parsons, . Albert Butler, . . Artemus Knowlton, Charles Hutchins, Justin B. Whipple, fAMI :s. . . $50 00 50 00 . 100 00 12 50 37 50 12 50 . 25 00 25 00 25 00 25 00 12 50 . 12 50 12 50 12 50 . 12 50 subscribers' names. Adna Taft, .... $12 50 Jonathan Sprague, . . 12 50 Dexter Whipple, . 12 50 Horace Emerson, . 25 00 Sumner Balcome, . 12 50 Luther Stone, 12 50 Joel Utle}', . . . 12 50 Mowrey Prentice, . . 12 50 Chaunce}' D. Rice, . 12 50 Seth Hunt, . . 12 50 Edward F. Stone, . 25 00 Simeon and James Smit h, 12 50 $600 00 At a proprietors' meeting, Oct. 20, 1846, the Trustees of the so- ciety. Rev. Chauncey D. Rice, Dea. Warren Hunt, and Moses Knapp, Esq., together with Col. Horace Emerson, were chosen a Building Committee, and began the work of building soon after that date. At a meeting of the proprietors of Citizens' Hall at the hotel of Horace Cummings, April 1, 1847, the Trustees were empowered to procure a teacher and establish a school in the Hall whenever the same should be ready for use. For several years after the completion of the school-house a High School was thus provided for, and supported by the payment of tu- 304 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. itiou b}^ those who had children to send, and the Hall was let for other purposes as occasion offered. The school not being largely attended the expense was necessarily borne by a few. With a view of making the burden lighter for those who had children to send, Dr. Ezekial Wood, not having children of his own, provided schooling for two or three children, and at his death, the year fol- lowing, left a permanent fund for the benefit of the High School, the following being an exact copj^ of the note and will : — NOTE. $500.00 Douglas, Nov. 13th, 1849. " For value received, I promise and agree shall be paid out of my estate, to the Trustees of the High School in Douglas, or their successors in office, the sum of Five Hundred Dollars, in the fol- lowing manner, by my Executors or Administrators after my de- cease, as follows, to wit : — One Hundred Dollars in one year after the appointment of said Executors or Administrators and One Hundred Dollars per annum for the four successive 3'ears next thereafter, to be applied by said Trustees to the advancement of education in said High School; and in case said School shall not be kept the term of one whole j^ear together during the five years in which said payments ai'e to be made, as aforesaid, then, in that case, this note, promise and agreement is to become null and void, and said pa3'ments become forfeited and go into m}^ estate, to be administered b}" m}^ said Executors or Administrators according to law and my will." (Signed) EZEKIEL WOOD. Attest : WARREN HUMES. WILL. (Only that part is quoted which relates to this bequest.) Douglas, Nov. 30th, 1849. ' ' I have given a certain note to the Trustees of East Douglas High School, in said Douglas, provided the Stockholders and Trustees are entitled thereto by complying with the terms and conditions of said note, and not otherwise." (Signed) EZEKIEL WOOD. I— I t) C o I— ( ;> CO H t) O c1 O t* >■ CO ao 306 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. About the year 1874 the proprietors, in connection with the- Committee of District No. 9, made extensive repairs on their school building, and a portion of the Dr. Wood fund was used to- help defray the expenses thus incurred. This led to a suit at law, in which the course of the trustees was sustained. In 18G7 a fixed standard was decided upon for pupils entering the High School, and during the three years previous to IcSGT this school furnished twelve teachers for Douglas and neighboring towns. Since that time the standard has been gradually raised, and in 1878 the School Committee made several important advances, which are referred to in the following extract from their annual report for 1877, and the plan is now being carried out : — " Your committee intend, at the commencement of the next school year, to prescribe a course of stud}" for a three years' course, requiring all scholars, as far as practicable, to pursue the full course, with the understanding that those who do so success- fully shall be entitled to and receive a diploma at the close of the third year. By this means we hope to reduce the number of classes without detriment to the scholars, and to give to each scholar who shall pursue the full course a fair practical educa- tion. We also recommend to the town the establishment of a Grammar School — a department between the Intermediate and the High School." It is hoped that this plan may be successfull}' carried out, and the attempt is now being gradually' made. With the heart}' co- operation of the townspeople much can be accomplished, and our schools advanced to that grade where the}" will be on a par with the majority of similar institutions in the State. For two years past the school has been in charge of Ralph H. Bowles, Jr., A. M., under whose thorough instruction the progress has been commendable, and has more than answered the expecta- tions of parents and friends. In conclusion we desire to make mention of other teachers whO' in years past rendered efficient service in this school, and became endeared by ties of friendship to many who were associated with them as pupils. From 1853 to 1861 the school was taught by W. H. Kingsbury, Edward F. Williams, ]\Iiss Cook and Miss Susan Wingate ; from 1861 to 1864 Charles W. Moore (assisted by his wife during his- EDUCATIONAL ADDENDA. 307 absence in the army) ; from 1864 to 1868 by Thomas H. Tucker. R. M. Streeter, his successor, remained until the fall of 1869, when he went to Toledo, Ohio, to accept an important position there. Since that time the following teachers have been em- ployed : M. R. Chace, Isaiah F. Pray, George F. Stone, Philip Berry, G. Irving Hopkins, L. N. Cummings, and M. R. Hurd. CHAPTER XXII. THE MOSES WALLIS DEVISE. Y a singularly-drawn will, Moses Wallis, a native of Douglas, bequeathed a certain portion of bis es- tate to the town, for the purpose specified minutely in his will, and for ''none other whatsoever." If this document is singular in its tenor, as every one must concede, some might deem it nearly as singu- lar that the town should ever have assumed the ob- ligations imposed b}' accepting the trust. As will be seen, the fund in the custody' of the town must remain on in- terest till Nov. 10, 1901, when the accumulated principal and interest forms a new principal, which " shall forever thereafter be kept on interest, the annual interest " of this new principal, when it reaches $12,000, and not till then, to be applied to the building of a town hall, etc. The present status of this devise, after thirt3'-seven years' in- vestment, will appear b}' the last report of the town agent, which is as follows : — Report of the Agent on the Moses Wallis Devise^ to Feb. 1, 1878 : — 1877. Feb. 1. Value of notes drawing interest, . . $10,078 97 Cash in hands of agent, . . . 596 11 67.5 00 u 1, 1. Accrued interest, about $11,350 08 The Agent has received on Devise, for 1877, as follows : — April 1. Principal on Warren B. Thaj'er's note, $200 00 June 8. rdncipal on Willard Dodge's note, 250 00 THE MOSES WALLACE DEVISE. 309 Sept. 10. Principalon Samuel Balcome's note, 100 00 Oct. 25. " Abel Parker's note, 200 00 Interest on notes for 1877, . . . 593 28 Cash from 1876, 596 11— $1,939 39 The Agent has loaned and paid on Devise as follows : — 1877. Loaned Amos A. Humes, " John G. Buffum, *■' J. Elwin Cummings, '' Phoebe Young, Paid appraisers, Trip to Worcester to exami: Discharging two deeds, Recording one deed. Expense to Worcester, Recording one deed. Paid appraisers. Discharging one mortgage, Paid appraisers, Paid James Daniel for cleaning Moses Wallis' monument, . . 7 00 Paid town, count}", and State tax, 142 50 " Appraisers . . . 4 50 Services for taking care of Devise, for 1877, . - . .60 00—11,762 85 April 12. March 22. Sept. 22. Nov. 9. April 5. I ( 5. a 5. li 5. i I 12. I i 12. I i 12. i i 28. Sept. 20. C( 22. Oct. 12. Nov. 9. 1878 « Feb. 1. $350 00 375 00 500 00 300 00 6 00 e titles, 5 00 50 . 1 10 . 2 50 . 1 00 . 4 50 25 . 3 00 1878. Leaving cash in hands of Agent, ... $176 54 Value of notes drawing interest, . . . 10,853 97 Accrued interest, about .... 722 70 $11,753 21 Increase of Devise for 1877, .... $403 70 All of which is respectfully submitted. NELSON POTTER, Agent of said Devise. SIO HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. MOSES WALLIS' WILL. MOSES WALLIS, of Douglas, in the county of Worcester, Common- wealth of Massachusetts, being in a very infirm liealth, and sensible too of my liableness to sudden death, at the same time l)eing, in m}^ own appre- hension, of a sound mind, do judge it best to make, and accord- ingly do hereby make this my last will and testament, hereby re- voking all former wills by me at any time heretofore made. It is my will that all just debts and charges of my funeral be paid and discharged by my Executor, hereinafter named and ap- pointed, out of that part of my estate hereinafter designated for that purpose, as soon as convenient after m}'^ decease. I give, devise and dispose of all mj' estate, both real and per- sonal (save what shall be necessary for the payment of my just debts, funeral charges, and to procure a set of good marble grave- stones, of the value of not less than fifty dollars, to be procured by ray said Executor, and by him erected at my grave as soon as con- veniently may be after my decease) , in the following manner, to- wit : — I give to my brother, Peter Wallis, two undivided third parts of all of that part of my Lapham wood lot lying in the westerly part of said Douglas, to hold to him, his lieirs and assigns forever. I give and devise unto my brother, Benjamin AVallis, and his son, Waldo AVallis, my saw-mill and privilege, with all my land laying together and adjoining said saw-mill and saw-mill privilege, with all the residue of my said Lapham wood lot (not hereinbefore devised to said Peter Wallis) lying upon the north and south side of said pond, and all situate in the westerly part of said Douglas, to hold to them, said Benjamin and Waldo, and their heirs and as- signs forever, together with all the privileges and appurtenances to the same belonging, and the tools and irons belonging to said saw-mill. THE MOSES WALLACE DEVTSE. 311 I give and devise unto m}- brother, Joseph Wallis, all of my Willard Wallis wood lot, so-called, situate in the westerly part of «aid Douglas, to hold to him, his heirs and assigns forever. I give and devise unto ni}' brother, Rufus "Wallis, all of that mowing lot lying at the north end of the lane (running northerly from said Kufus' cider-mill yard), as the same is enclosed b}' the fences surrounding it, to hold to him, his heirs and assigns for- ever. I give and devise unto my said brother, Joseph Wallis, Peter H. Wallis (son of m3' brother Peter) , Elbridge G. Wallace, and Benjamin Wallis (son of m}' brother Rufus), all of that part of any real estate h'ing between the road (leading from the David Walker place in said Douglas to and by the dwelling-house of John Hunt in Sutton,) and the west line of Ezra Morse's land, and said west line continued in the same direction from the N. W. cor- ner of said Ezra's farm (which he purchased of the inhabitants of Douglas) northerly to Sutton south line ; bounded east by the ■east line of a part of the same premises which ni}' father purchased of EUsha Hill, north by Sutton south hue, west by said road, and south by the road leading from said Walker place to said Morse's, .to hold to them, their heirs and assigns forever. I hereb}' order and direct mj' Executor, hereinafter named, to sell and convey all of my wood lot 13'ing upon the west side of, and adjoining the Oxford and Providence turnpike road, formerly so-called, bounded south by land of said Joseph Wallis, west by land of Aaron Wallis, and north b}' land of Samuel Dudley, together with all my wood lot lying at the northeast corner of my farm, bounded south by said Ezra Morse's said farm he purchased of said inhabitants, west by that tract of land herein before devised to said Joseph, Peter H., Elbridge Q., and Benjamin son of said Rufus, north by Sutton south line, and east by land of the Morses ; and I hereby farther order and direct my said Executor to sell at Public Auction, and so to dispose of all my movable personal propert}', including all my ha}^ grain, farming tools, carts, wagons, neat stock, horse, sheep, swine, household furniture and provisions, etc. Reserving, however, so much of my pro\'isions as shall be necessary' to be used in boarding those persons who my said Exe- outor may appoint to take the charge and care of my said personal 312 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. property, until he may dispose of the same as aforesaid. P^xcept- ing also the following articles of personal property, which I other- wise dispose of, to wit : — I give to my brother Benjamin m}' Desk, Chest and small Trunk in said Chest, all my papers and Account Books. I give to said Waldo Wallis my Bible, Rollin's Ancient History,, in two volumes, and McKenzie's Receipts. I give to Prudence Wallis, wife of my brother Joseph, my History of the United States and Barber's Historical Collections, my feather bed, bol- sters, pillows, bedstead and cord, in mj' north Chamber, and m}' Chest of Drawers which were my mother's. I give to said P'lbridge G. Wallace my Book of the United States, Napoleon's Campaigns, Manners and Customs in two volumes. Laws of Massachusetts, Yankee Notions and Daboll's Ai-ithmetic, all my wearing apparel,, gun and all my military' accoutrements* I give to my four brothers, Peter, l^enjamin, Joi^eph and Rufus and said Elln-idge, all of the residue of my Librar}', to be equally divided between them. I give to my brothers Peter and Benja- min all m}' wool not manufactured into 3'arn. I give to my brother Rufus the chest of drawers which were my grandfather's. I give to my brother Peter m}' smallest Iron Bar, and the next in size I give to my brother Joseph, and the next in size I give to brother Benjamin, and my largest Iron Bar I give to Brother Rufus : with all my undivided personal property which I hold in common with said Rufus, I give to him. I give also to said Joseph all my Cooper and Carpenter tools. It is my desire that all the white and 3'ellow pine planlv, door studs, with the arms and boards for the doors belonging tO' my Parker Barn, be kept and not sold, except with the Real P2state, and it is my desire that my clock shall be sold and go with my dwelling, and that my feather beds, bolsters and pillows be sold by weight, and all my other personal property to be sold, be sold in such a manner as will be most beneficial to all concerned. I hereby order and direct my said Executor, that out of the proceeds of the sale of my said wood lots hereinbefore directed to be sold, and the proceeds of the sale of my said personal property, together with the amount of all the collections of all my securities, dues and demands owing and due to me at ni}^ decease, to pay the following Legacies to the following persons, in one vear after ray THE MOSES WALLACE DEVISE. 313 decease, and interest on the same after payable, to Avit : (and after paying my just debts and the charges of my funeral) I give to my sister, Lydia Mclntire, the sum of one hundred dollars. I give to my deceased sister Sarah Dudle3''s five surviving chil- dren as follows : — To Sarah Dudle}', the sum of sixteen dollars and sixty-seven cents. To Samuel Dudley, Jr., the sum of sixteen dollars and sixtj'-seven cents. To Benjamin Dudley, the sum of sixteen dol- lars and sixty-seven cents. To Azubah Adams, wife of Oliver W. Adams, the sum of twenty-five dollars. To Nelson Dudley, the sum of twenty-five dollars. And in case there shall be any surplus left of said collections and proceeds of the sale of said personal property, after pacing said debts, charges. Legacies, and charges of administration or execution of this my said will, I hereby give unto Julia Ann Seism, wife of Uenr}^ vScism, the sum of fifty dollars, or the whole amount of said surplus, provided it does not exceed the sum of fifty dollars, and in case there shall still remain an^' surplus after paying said legacies, debts and charges, including the legacy to said Julia Ann, it is my will that the same shall be equally divided between Waldo Wallis above named, and Elbridge G. Wallace, after deducting the following- Legacy, to wit : — I give to Elbridge G. Wallace the sum of six hundred dollars. I give and devise unto the Inhabitants of said town of Douglas and their successors all the rest, residue and remainder of my Real Estate, to hold to them, their succ^essors and assigns forever, for the sole exclusive use and purpose of raising a fund to be ap- plied to and for the express uses and purposes hereinafter named ^ and none other whatsoever, and said Estate to be managed and disposed of, as well as said fund, in the manner I hereby order and direct, as follows, to wit : — I hereby order and direct the said inhabitants and their succes- sors (provided they accept of this devise to them in six months after the approval of this my said Will by the Probate Court of said County), by their agent or attorney selected for that purpose, by the legal voters of said Town, in Town meeting legally called for that purpose, to enter in and upon all of said Real Estate devised to said inhabitants, and the same to sell at Public Auction or private sale, in lots or otherwise, as said Inhabitants may deter- 314 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. mine would be most for the benefit of said Town, and good and sufficient Deed or Deeds thereof to make, execute and dehver to the purchaser or purchasers, and so to do, finish and complete Avithin two 3'ears after the Probate of this my said Avill, and the proceeds of said sale of all said Eeal Estate devised to said Inhab- itants and their successors, shall be received by said agent or attorne}", or other person duly authorized (b}^ said Inhabitants or their successors ibr that purpose) , and under good and sufficient bonds to said Inhabitants, and approved by the Selectmen for the time being of said Town, and said proceeds so received I order and direct to be put out and secured on interest on good and suffi- cient title or titles to Real Estate of three times the value of the amount of the sum loaned, said value of said Real Estate mort- gaged to secure the sum or sums loaned, to be ascertained and determined by three disinterested freeholders of said To;5V'n (hav- ing no other interest in the loaning of said sum or sums, or the giving of the title or titles to secure the payment of the sums loaned, than that in common with said Inhabitants under this devise) , to be selected for that purpose by the said Inhabitants and their successors at a legal meeting called for that purpose in either of the months of March, April or November in each and every year, so long as there' shall be any of said proceeds of said sale or sums growing out of the same from the interest thereof to be loaned, and also as often as it will be necessary to change the security from the foreclosing of the mortgage or mortgages, and selling said mortgaged estates, to the end that said sum or sums shall be on interest for the benefit of said Town, according to the intent and meaning of this devise, and that no one person shall receive by loan as aforesaid a larger sum than five hundred dol- lars out of said proceeds or the interest which may thereon accrue during the time the said proceeds shall be kept out for the benefit of said town. And the said proceeds, so loaned, put out and secured on interest, I hereb}- direct shall be so kept on interest, to be paid annually and loaned out on the security aforesaid annually, for the term of sixty years from the time of the sale aforesaid, after deducting from said interest annuall}', as the same are incurred, the amount of the reasonable charges for taking the charge and care of said fund, of such person or persons as said Town may select for that purpose, including the fee of the THE MOSES WALLACE DEVISE. 315 appraisers of the Estate mortgaged. I order and direct that at the expiration of said term of sixty 3'ears the said proceeds of said Real Estate, with all the interest and compound interest which may have been collected and secured on interest as aforesaid (after deducting as .nforesaid said chai'ges and fee), shall be so forever thereafter kept on interest to be paid annually, the said annual interest after the expiration of said term shall first be applied to the building of a good and durable town Hall, with galleries upon three sides of it, with a good clock and bell attached to it, and sufficiently large to accommodate said Inhabitants in the transac- tion of town business, and with the letters M. W. enscribed in gilt in some conspicuous place upon the wall at the head of said hall, the whole expense whereof not to exceed twelve thousand ■dollars, which hall shall at all times be open and free for all Lec- tures, discourses and discussions upon the subject of politics and religion, not interfering with said Inhabitants in the transaction of any town business. And after said annual interest shall have paid and discharged the expense of the building of said hall, so much of said interest thereafter accruing as shall be necessar}- to keep said hall, clock and bell in repair, shall be expended for that purpose so long as :Said building shall stand (and in case said hall should be destroyed by fire, or otherwise, it is my desire that it be rebuilt out of said ■annual interest thereafter accruing) , and in case there shall be any surplus left of said annual interest, after discharging the expense •of building said hall and keeping the same in repair as aforesaid, it is my will that the same shall first be applied for the support of the Paupers of said town, and in case after supporting said Pau- pers there shall still a surplus remain unexpended, the same shall 1)6 apphed to the Public Highways of said Town of Douglas, and so forever after the building of said hall, subject onl}', in the ■destruction of the first aforesaid hall, of rel)uilding as aforesaid, and the expense of taking the care and charge of said fund, as herein before named, said hall to be located in the most central and convenient place to accommodate said Inhabitants. And in case said Inhal)itants shall, for the space of six months after the approval of this my last will by the Probate Court as aforesaid, neglect or refuse to accept of this devise to them, and do not accept of the same, In^ a vote taken in Town meeting (to 316 HISTORY OP DOUGLAS. that effect) and called for that purpose, then this devise to them shall become null and void. Then, in that case, I give and devise the same Real testate I herein before devised to said Inhabitants, nnto Elbridge G. Wallace, to hold for and during the term of hia natural life. It is m}- will that said Inhabitants take the profit and income of the Estate devised to them, from my decease until sold as aforesaid, in case they accept of said devise, and not otherwise. I give and devise unto the male children of my lu'others, Peter,. Benjamin and Joseph, all the rest, residue and remainder of all the Real Estate above devised to said Elbridge (in case said In- habitants do not accept of the devise to them as aforesaid)., to be equally divided between them, except Dexter Wallis and Mason Wallis, sons of my brother Joseph, who it is my will shall take nothing b}' this devise. And I hereby nominate, constitute and appoint my brother, Benjamin Wallis, sole Executor of this my last will and testament. In witness whereof I, Moses Wallis, have hereunto set m}'" hand and seal, and publish and declare this to be my last will and testament, this sixteenth day of November in A. D. 1841. The words, " in my north chamber," interlined between the 24th and 25th lines from the top on page 3, and the erasure between the last word on page 4 and the first word "given" on page 5, and the word " s'd," interlined between the 14th and loth lines from the top on page 6, and the words " no one," interlined between the 26th and 27th lines of page 6, and the erasure directly under said words " no one," in line 27 on page 6, and the erasure of the first w^ord in line 28 of page 6, from the top, were all made before signing and sealing of this instrument. MOSES WALLIS, (l. s.) Signed, sealed, published and declared l)y the said Moses Wallis, as his last will and testament, in the presence of us who, in his presence and at his request, have hereunto set our names as. witnesses. AMOS HUMES, ELIJAH BIGLOW,. A copy, WARREN HUMES. Attest, CHAS. G. J^RENTISS, lieg. APPENDIX. Having already stated the action taken by onr town in the suppression of the War of the Rebellion, and placed on record the names of Douglas men who had the courage to fight, and to die if need be, in the defense of their country, it seems but fitting, in a work of this kind, to make a permanent record of their army ex- periences during the four years' struggle. F'or this purpose we liave gatliered and prepared from various sources the following- sketches of the several regiments, endeavoring to bring out the prominent points in the history of each, more particularly those in which our town was largel}' represented. By way of introduction we will make a brief allusion to the early Massachusetts regiments answering the first call of the President for three months' men, to aid in suppressing the Rebel- lion. The assault upon Fort Sumpter was made April 12, 1861, and on the 15th of April Governor Andrew received, through Sen- ator Henr}' Wilson, a telegram from Washington asking for twenty' companies of volunteers to be sent on immediately. In the course of the day formal requisitions were received from the Secretary of War and the Adjutant-General of the arm}' for two full regiments, upon receipt of which Governor Andrew caused a special order to be immediately issued by Adjutant-General Schouler requiring the commanding officers of the Third, Fourth, Sixth and Eighth Militia to muster the regiments under their command in uniform on Boston Common forthwith, in answer to the call made by the President, the troops to go to Washington. On the morning of the following day the troops began to arrive in Boston from the towns where they were located in different sec- tions of the State, the Third Regiment coming from New Bed- ford, the Fourth from Quincy, the Sixth from Pepperell, and the 318 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. Eighth from Lynu. Before night every company that had received' its orders in time had reported at headquarters for duty. The question as to who can claim the honor of first reaching- Boston has since occasioned some controversy among military men, but is conceded ])y Adjutant-General Schouler to the three companies of the Eighth Regiment belonging to Marblehead. While the troops were making their way to Boston, with all possible dispatch, another telegram was received from Senator Wilson, stating that Massachusetts was to furnish four regiments. Accordingly the Fifth Regiment was ordered to report, and Briga- dier-General Benjamin F. Butler was, on the 17th, detailed to command the troops (which were designated as the Massachusetts Brigade) , and established his temporar}' headquarters' at the State House. On the afternoon of the IGth the Third, Fourth and Sixth Regiments were ready to proceed, and the following day the Sixth started for Washington, passing through New York on the 18th, and earl^' on the morning of the 19th proceeded in company with a portion of the Seventh Pennsylvania, on that memorable march through the Cit}^ of Baltimore, in which they were assailed by an infuriated mob of 8,000 people, resulting in the killing of three and wounding of thirty-eight of their number. On the od of May the President issued his first call for volun- teers to serve for three years, or during the war. On the 4th of May the Secretary of War issued an order stating the number of regiments to be raised, and the way in which they were to be or- ganized. It was, however, more than a fortnight after the Presi- dent's call before the necessary authority was granted for muster- ing them into the service. Nearly ten thousand were already en- listed as militia. At last, on the 22d of ]\Iay, Governor Andrew received a letter from Secretary Cameron, permitting Massachusetts to furnish six regiments of three years' men. The plan of organization of regiments, as prescribed in the or- der issued under this call, was as follows : Each regiment was to be composed of ten companies, each companj^ to have a captain, two lieutenants and ninety-eight enlisted men. The staff and field officers of a regiment were to consist of a colonel, lieutenant- colonel, major, adjutant, quartermaster, assistant surgeon, ser- geant-major, quartermaster-sergeant, commissary-sergeant, hospi- APPENDIX. 319^ tal steward, two principal musicians, and a band of twentj'-foui"^ musicians. This plan of organizing regiments was kept up dur- ing the war, excepting that the regimental bands were discon- tinued. In order that there might not be a repetition in numbering the Third, Fourth, Fifth and Sixth (three months' regiments) were al- lowed to retain their own designations, and the next three years' regi- ment was called the Seventh. It was recruited by Colonel Couch at "Camp Old Colon}-," near Taunton. The First and Second Regiments were included in the six selected to complete the requi- sition of the Secretary of War. The First was from Camp Cam- eron, in North Cambridge, and left for Washington June 15, passing through Baltimore June 17, and was the first three years' regiment that reached Washington. The Second was recruited by Colonel Gordon and officers under his command, establishing themselves at " Camp Andrew " in West Roxbury, leaving for the seat of war on the 8th of July, 1861. The Eighth was a three mouths' regiment, and retaijied its orig- inal number, and the next three years' regiment w'as called the Ninth. It was composed almost entirely of men of Irish birth, and was recruited by Colonel Thomas Case on Long Island, in Boston harbor, and left for Washington on the twenty-fourth of June. The Tenth was recruited in the western part of the State, was in camp near Springfield for a time, until completely organized, when it was transferred to Medford, remaining there until July 25, when it was ordered to Washington. ELEVENTH REGIMENT MASSACHUSETTS VOLUNTEERS. This regiment was oi'ganized May 9, 1861, at Fort Warren, and mustered into the service of the United States June 13, marched to Camp Cameron, North Cambridge, June 15, and left for Washington June 24. The Eleventh was engaged in the first battle of Bull Run, July 21, 1861, and during the year 1862 at the battles on the Peninsula and before Richmond, second Bull Run, and Fredericksburg. It left the State under the command: of Colonel George Clark, Jr., who resigned October 11, 1861, and "was succeeded by Colonel William Blaisdell. The following nar— 320 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. rative, furnished b}'^ Lieutenant-Colonel Tripp, gives a history of its services during the year 1863 : — " On the morning of the 11th of December, 1862, in obedience to orders from superior headquarters, our regiment marched towards the Rappahannock river, crossed the river at Franklin's Crossing on the night of the 12th, and was detailed to guard the pontoon bridge at that point ; performed this duty until the night of the loth instant, when we were ordered to the front ; remained at the front until the night of the 16th instant, when we recrossed the river, and marched back to the old camp. During this cam- paign the regiment did not become actively engaged with the enemy; the only casualties were two men slightly wounded. "On the 20th of January, 1863, we again moved, and after marching about six miles in a drenchins; rain-storm we were com- pelled to halt, owing to the bad state of the roads, it being found impossible to move the trains. We remained here building and repairing roads until the 23d instant, when we marched back to camp. Nothing of importance transpired until the 5th of Febru- ary, when we were ordered to support a force of cavalry which was sent to destroy a bridge across the Rappahannock at the station above United States Ford. Marched to United States Ford, a distance of seventeen miles, and after the object for which we were sent out was accomplished we returned to camp, where we arrived on the 7th. " We remained in camp until the morning of the 29th of April, when we marched to Franklin's Crossing, on the Rappahannock, and from there to United States Ford, where we crossed the river and marched to Chancellorsville. The regiment was ordered to report to General Hancock for dut^^ ; reported on the morning of the 2d of May, and were ordered to reconnoitre and feel the enemy's position on the left of our line of battle, and on the plank road. The regiment became hotly engaged with the enemy earh' in the day, and though the enemy's force was greater than ours we succeeded in repulsing them four times from attacks which they made on our position on the plank road. General Hancock thanked the regiment for the gallantry it displaj'ed on that occa- sion. Next morning at two o'clock joined the division, became hotly engaged with the enemy early on the morning of the 3d instant, suffering considerable loss ; we remained on the south side APPENDIX. 321 of the river until tlie 6th instant, when we recrossed and proceeded to our old camp. The distance marched during this campaign was about forty-two miles. Remained in camp until the afternoon of the 11th of June, 1863, when we were ordered to march. Marched to Hartwood Church, and halted for the night. Marched to Beverly Ford on the Rappahannock, and after remaining here one day, and at Gum Springs five days, crossed the Potomac into Maryland at Edward's Ferry. Moved by way of Poolesville, Burkittsville, Middleton, Frederick, Tane^'town, and Emmettsburg, reaching Gettysburg on the afternoon of July 1st. Was engaged with the enem}' during the 2d and 3d instants, with a very heavy loss (over one-half of what was engaged). Remained at Gettysburg until the morning of the 7th instant, when we took up the line of march towards Wil- liamsport, moving by wa}^ of Emmettsburg, Mechanicstown, Frederick, and Middleton. Crossed South Mountain to Antietam Creek near Keedysville, and arrived at Williamsport on the 14th instant. Here we found the enem}- had retreated across the river. Started again on the 15th of Jul}", moving in the direction of Harper's Ferr}-. Crossed the Potomac into Virginia at this point, and moved to Upperville, near Ashby's Gap. Here we remained until the 22d instant, when we again started, and reached Manassas Gap about noon on the 23d instant. Here the enemy was found in force, and dispositions made for a battle. This regiment was held in reserve, and did not become engaged. During the night the enemy evacuated, and in the morning we were started in pursuit, chasing him as far as Front Roj'al, where we found he had crossed the river. Marched back through the Gap, and halted for the night at Markham's Station on the Manas- sas Gap Railroad. Next morning took up the line of march for Warrenton, where we arrived on the 26th instant, and went into camp. Remained here until the morning of the 1st of August, when we marched to Beverly Ford. Arrived there the same night, and went into camp. During this campaign the regiment marched four hundred and ten miles in a hot summer's sun, and participated in one of the hardest contested battles of the war. Remained in camp near Beverly Ford, furnishing daily details for picket and other duties, until the loth of September, when we inarched to Culpepper, crossing the Rappahannock river at Free- 21 322 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. man's Ford, arriving at Culpepper on the morning of the 17th in- stant, and went into camp. We remained in this camp until the morning of Oct. 8, when we were ordered to march to James City and support Kilpatrick's cavalry division. Reached cavalry head- quarters early in the day, and remained here supporting the cav- alry, who had frequent skirmishes with the enemy, until the night of the 10th instant, when we marched back to Culpepper. Left Culpepper next morning, and recrossed the river at Freeman's Ford on the night of the 12th instant. Remained picketing Bev- erly and other fords on that river till such time as the army had fallen back. The enemy's cavalrj^ made their appearance near Beverl3''s Ford, but did not attempt to cross. Ordered to join the division on the morning of the 14th instant. After marching all day and night, arrived at Greenwich at 4 o'clock a. m. on the loth Instant. Started again at daybreak, and arrived at Centreville Heights on the night of the 15th instant. Moved to Union Mills, on the Orange and Alexandria Railroad, and went into camp at that place on the afternoon of the 16th instant. Distance marched, since leaving Culpepper, fifty-one miles. Broke up camp at Union Mills on the morning of the 19th of October, and moved up the Orange and Alexandria Railroad to Bristow's Station, where we halted for the night. Next morning marched through Greenwich towards Catlett's Station, and halted for the night about four miles from the latter place. Arrived at Catlett's Station on the after- noon of the 21st instant, and went into camp. The regiment was detailed to guaixl a supply-train to the depot at Bristow's Station and back to camp. Marched twent3'-two miles. Bi'oke camp on the 30th instant, and marched to within three miles of Bealton Station, where we encamped. Remained here until the morning of the 7th of November, when we marched to Kelle3''s Ford on the Rappahannock. Arrived there about 3 o'clock p. M. Found the First Division of this corps engaged with the enemy. We did not become engaged. Crossed the river and moved to Brand}' Station, where we went into camp on the evening of the 8th instant, having marched twent}^-three miles since leav- ing camp near Bealton Station. Remained in camp near Brandy Station until the morning of the 26th of November, when we marched to Jacob's Mills Ford, on the Rapidan. Crossed the river at this point, and bivouacked APPENDIX. 323 for the night about three miles from the Ford, having marched dur- ing the day seventeen miles. Next morning we started (after some delay in finding the right road) , and encountered the enemy at a place called Locust Grove. We became engaged with the enemy earl}^ in the afternoon, and after a brisk engagement, which lasted till dark, we were relieved by the Third Division, Sixth Corps. Lay on our arms during the night, about fift}^ yards from the bat- tle-field. Moved next morning to Robinson's Tavern, and the same night moved up to a position near " Mine Run," where the enemy was found in an intrenched position. After marching and countermarching through the woods during the entire day of the 29th instant we went into camp for the night. We were ordered to report to General Warren, on the plank road, at 2 o'clock a. m. the same night. Reported at 4 o'clock a. m., and formed line of battle in front of the enem3r's works. We were in the line of .«tormers that were ordered to charge the enem3^'s line of fortifica- tions. The project of storming the works was abandoned. On the morning of Dec. 1 we were ordered to join Gregg's cavalry division, and act as rear-guard on the plank road. Performed this dut}', and crossed the river, on our way back to camp, near Brandy Station, Dec. 2, 18G3. Reached camp on the afternoon of the 3d •of December, and at once made preparations for winter quarters. REPORT OP CASUALTIES. Battle of Fredericksburg, Va., December 11, 12, 13, 14 and 15, 1862: — Enlisted men — Wounded, . . . . . . 2 Battle of Chancellorsville, May 1, 2, 3 and 4, 1863 ■Commissioned officers — Killed, .... Wounded, Enlisted men — Killed, ..... Wounded, ..... Missing, 2 5 9 52 11 Battle of Gettysburg, Pa., July 2 and 3, 1863 : — Commissioned officers — Killed, ..... 1 Wounded, ..... 5 Missing, . . . . . 2 324 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. Enlisted men — Killed, . . . . . . .25 Wounded, 88 Missing, ....... 8- Battle of Locust Grove, Va., November 27, 1863 : — Commissioned officers — Wounded, ..... 2 Enlisted men — Killed, ....... 4 Wounded, . . - . . . .15 Missing, . . . . . . . 8 One commissioned officer and eleven enlisted men died of wounds received in action who are reported wounded in the above report. In the spring of 1864 General Grant, having been called to the command of the Union forces, and the campaign against Richmond being planned, the Eleventh was again brought into active service, and suffered severely in the bloody battles of the Wilderness, Spotts^dvania, before Petersburg, and at Hatches' Run, Va., where the fighting and courage exceeded an^'thing we have recorded in previous campaigns. On the 1st of January', 1865, the battalion lay in the works in front of Petersburg, attached to the Third Brigade, Third Division, Second Arm}^ Corps, performing picket and fatigue dut}' until the 5th of February, when it took part in a movement and action designed to extend the lines. The regiment assisted in the con- struction of a new line of works, and occupied a portion of them until March 26. On the 29th the regiment made a gallant charge on the enemy's main line of works, in which Captain Bennett and Lieutenant Harrington, with a number of men, becoming separated from the rest of the command, were overpowered and captured. During the retreat of the enemy, which soon followed, the Eleventh took an active part in the capture of tlieir trains and munitions of war, and was in the advance when the formal surren- der of the ' ' Army of Northern Virginia " took place. The regi- ment tlien moved to the vicinity of Washington, D, C, and per- formed light guard duty until orders were received for its discharge at Readville, Mass., to which place it was transported and dis- charged July 14. The Eleventh took part in the following engagements : First Bull Run, Yorktown, Williamsburg, Fair Oaks, Savage Station, APPENDIX. 325 Glendale, Malvern Hill, Bristoe Station, Second Bull Run, Chan- tilly, Fredericksburg, Chancellorville, Gettysburg, Kelly's Ford, Locust Grove, AVilderness, Spottsylvania, North Anna, Tolopo- tomy. Cold Harbor, Petersburg, Strawberry Plains, Deep Bottom, Poplar Spring Church, and Boydton Road. FIFTEENTH REGIMENT MASSACHUSETTS VOLUNTEERS. This regiment was recruited in Worcester county, fourteen of its men being from Douglas. It was mustered into the service of the United States June 12th, 1861, under the command of Col. Charles Devens, Jr. The regiment, during the process of recruit- ing, organizing and drilling, was encamped at Camp Scott in the ,l^L I I J JJJ PLAN OF THE BATTLE-FIELD AT BALL'S BLUFF. city of Worcester, from which place they left for Washington Aug. 8th, 1861. The Fifteenth was first engaged at the battle of Ball's Bluff, Oct. 21st, 1861, which made it one of the marked Tegiments of Massachusetts. The loss sustained was heavy in killed, wounded and missing. The forces engaged were unskill- fuUy handled, pressed into needless danger, surrounded andslaugh- 'Cred. The following account of the tragedy is given by one who witnessed the scene, but fortunately escaped by swimming the river after being wounded : — " About 1 o'clock on themorningof October 21st Colonel Dev- ens crossed the Potomac river with his regiment to the Virginia shore, 326 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. and ascended the heights known as Ball's Bluff, a steep embank- ment rising nearly a hundred and fifty feet above the river to a level with the adjacent country. Bj^ da3light he had formed his men on the summit of the blutf. A compan}' of the Twentieth, under command of Colonel Lee, also crossed and took up its position near by. Scouts were sent out to learn the position of the rebels, but discovered no traces of them. Upon -advancing towards Lees- burg they were met by a body of rebel infantrj', and soon after rebel cavalry' appeared in the road leading to Leesburg, whereupon Colonel Devens fell back to the bluff, where he remained until noon. The men were formed in a field of five or six acres, surrounded on three sides by woods, being attacked by the enem}^ who had sta- tioned themselves in the woods for that purpose. He fell back again to the very edge of the bluff, where he was reinforced by a California regiment. Colonel Baker, who assumed command of the forces, nearly two thousand men in all. The battle was now fairly begun, and for more than two hours •was kept up, our men fighting desperatel}^ and with great loss of life by reason of the unprotected position they occupied. About 5 o'clock Colonel Baker fell, shot through the head. His successor, Colonel Cogswell, made an attempt to cut his way through the enemy's lines to Edward's Ferry, where the Union forces were sta- tioned, but was overpowered, and under a most destructive tire retreated down the embankment. The enem}' gathered on the bluff, pouring volle}^ after volley into the helpless mass below. Many were shot on the bank, or in the water while attempting to swim across. The boats were overcrowded and sunk, and many were carried down by the current and drowned ; others were fortunate enough to escape in the darkness unobserved, and reach the Union lines safely." It is estimated that at least one-half the men engaged in this, battle on the Union side were either killed, wounded, or taken prisoners. The Fifteenth was next engaged at the battles on the Peninsula, and afterwards at Antietam and Fredericksburg. Colonel Devens was promoted Brigadier-General of Volunteers, and left the regi- ment to take command of a brigade at Yorktown. He was suc- ceeded by Colonel (then Lieutenant-Colonel) George H.. Ward. APPENDIX. 327 The regiment went into winter quarters near Falmouth, Va., on the same ground occupied by it previous to the battle of Fredericksburg, about the 20th of December, 1862. On the 5th of February', 1863, Colonel Ward joined the regi- ment, having been absent (sutfering from the loss of a leg) since the battle of Ball's Bluff, October 21st, 1861. The regiment was subjected to a heavy detail for picket duty during the winter and spring, nothing worth}' of note occurring until the spring cam- paign, under General Hooker, commenced. On the 28th day of April the First and Third Divisions of the Second Corps moved towards Kelly's Ford, leaving the Second Division — of which the Fifteenth regiment formed a part — to picket the line formerl}- occupied by the corps. On Saturday, the 2d of May, orders came to the Fifteenth reg- iment about 12 o'clock (midnight) to move. The regiment marched to the Lacy House, and at a little before sunrise the Second Division crossed the Rappahannock on pontoon bridges — at the same point where the Second Corps crossed in December, 1862 — with little or no opposition, the rebel pickets having been principally withdrawn from the city to the first line of works. The Fifteenth was soon after directed to take a position on the extreme right of the First Brigade, and commenced moving to a point on the right of the city, and at the same moment the enem3''s batteries opened from three different points with solid shot and shell, which they kept up while the regiment was going the distance of half a mile. At the same time this movement was going on the enem}' were hurrying up their infantry' at double- qnick, and filling the rifle-pits on the crest of the hill in our front, almost in rifle range. It was our good fortune to have a slight embankment for a cover, where we remained for two hours, until the position known as Mary's Heights, in rear of the famous bank-wall rifle-pit — where so many brave men laid down their lives at the first battle of Fredericksburg — was flanked by Gen- eral Sedgwick's Sixth Corps, and the enemy in our front began to fall back. A canal, some thirty feet wide, and too deep to ford, prevented our advancing directl}' in front, and we were obliged to return to the city before doing so. During the time we had remained there the enemj- had placed two guns in such a position on the bluff, on the south side of the river, that they had an enfi- 328 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. lading fire on our line while returning to the cit)'', but, either through their great haste to join their fleeing comrades, or bad practice, they did us little harm — but two men slightly wounded during the whole shelling. After following up the enemy two miles, the Second Division was ordered back to the cit}" — the Fifteenth to the north bank of the river, supporting battery A, First Rhode Island Artillery, which covered the pontoon bridge, where we remained until the following da}" about dusk, when companies A, B, E and G- moved into the rifle-pits above and below the bridge, to cover its removal. The regiment camped near the banks of the river until the 8th instant, when we moved half a mile to the rear, to get better ground for camping purposes. Here the regiment remained, doing picket duty along the river, until Sunday, the 14th of June, when it moved, about 9 o'clock p. m., towards Stafford Court-house. After going three miles it countermarched and returned to our old camp, and bivouacked until 3 a. m. of the 15th, when it again started, passing Stafford Court-house about 11 a. m. The day was excessively hot, and the roads dusty, and a great portion of the way leading through valleys shut out from air, and terribly exposed to the hot rays of the sun, which told fearfully on the men. Halted about 6 p. m. for the night. June 16. Moved about 3 o'clock a. m., passing Dumfries at 8, and arrived at the Occoquan river about sunset — being another sultry and tedious day. Bivouacked for the night. Moved, the 17th, at 8 o'clock, and arrived at Sangster's Station, on the Orange and Alexandria Railroad, at 2 o'clock p. m. Here the regiment went into camp, and remained until Friday, the 19th. Marched, at half-past 12 p. in. for Centreville, five miles distant, where it arrived at dark. June 20. The regiment moved to Thoroughfare Gap, a dis- tance of eighteen miles, arriving there about midnight, after a tedious march. It remained there until the 25th. Our forces moved towards the Upper Potomac. The right wing of the regi- ment was deployed as flankers, covering the line of march, which for a considerable distance was harrassed by the enemy's cavalry and artillery. One man of the regiment was wounded. The bivouack this night was at Gum Springs, fifteen miles from Thor- oughfare Gap. A heavy rain rendered the marching very tire- gome. ' APPENDIX. 329 On the morninof of the 2Gth the reoiment marched to Edward's Ferry, where, after many wearisome Iialts, it crossed the Potomac, bivouacking about midnight on the Maryland bank of the river. Distance marched about ten miles. On the 27th marched about 3 p. m. Bivouacked at 11 p. m., near Sugar-loaf Mountain, after marching a distance of twelve miles. Previous to this march the following order was read to the reoiment : — ■'» " Headquarters Second Division, Second Corps, [ Edward's Ferry, Va., June 26th, 1863. ' [General Orders, No. 105.] The Fifteenth and Nineteenth Massachusetts Volunteers, for march- ing to-day in the best and most compact order, and with the least strag- gling from their ranks, are excused from all picket duty and outside details for four days. By command of Brigadier-General Gibbon. J. P. Wood, Captain and Assistant Adjutant-General." June 28. Marched to Frederick City, a distance of eighteen miles. June 29. Moved at 8 a. m., and bivouacked at 9 p. m. near Uniontown, Md., after acc-omplishing a march of thirty -three miles. The men were much prostrated by this terrible tax on their endurance. Tuesda}', June 30. The regular muster for pay was made, and the order of General Meade, assuming command of the army, published. Julyl. Started at 8 A. M., and marched to Taneytown. About noon heavy cannonading was heard to the northward. The troops were at once put in motion, and marched rapidly towards the Pennsylvania line, under stringent orders to allow no man, for any •cause, to fall behind. Bivouacked at night behind a barricade of rails, three-miles south of Gettysburg. Distance marched this day ;seventeen miles. Thursday, July 2. The regiment started an hour before day- light for the battle-field, and got into position about sunrise, be- hind Cemeteiy Ridge, where a large portion of the Second Corps was massed. Though there was constant skirmishing, no demon- 330 HISTORY OP DOUGLAS. stration of any importance was made from either side until about 1 p. M., when the enom^' opened fire with artillei\y on the Second Corps, bursting their shells with great accurac}' over its position. The Fifteenth, with another regiment of the brigade, was now moved out to position full three hundred 3'ards in front of the main line. Here a barricade of rails was hastily thrown up. About sunset the enemy made a furious assault upon our lines. Having driven in the Third Corps, they speedily gained the flank of this advanced detachment of the Second. The batteries on the ridge opened on their advance with grape and case-shot, but through some deplorable mistake most of the shots fell short, and tore with destructive effect through the ranks of the Fifteenth. Ex- posed thus to a fire in front, flank and rear, the regiment waa forced, after considerable loss, to fall back to the position behind the ridge. The regiment bivouacked on the battle-field. On Friday, Jul}' 3, the rebels opened on our lines with over a hundred pieces of artillery', at about 1 p. m. This terrible fire was continued for over two hours, but, though the air seemed filled with the fragments of bursting shells, comparatively little dam- age was done. At 3 p. m. the rebel infantry moved to the as- sault. Our men sprang promptly to meet them, glad at a prospect of work — relieving them from their painful recumbent position, which a broiling sun rendered the more intolerable. This contest lasted an hour or two, during which both armies showed a deter- mination to hold its ground, regardless of the results. A slight wavering of the rebel line was detected, and, at the suggestion of Colonel Hall, commanding Third Brigade, the colors of the Fif- teenth were ordered to advance, when the remnant of the regiment rallied promptly around them, and the whole line, as if moved by one impulse, rushed forward and carried the position. The regi- ment was sent out to picket the field, and at daylight on the morning of the 4th skirmishing commenced, and continued until the regiment was relieved, at 8 o'clock. The regiment went into- action with 18 oflScers and 221 enUsted men. During the three days it lost 3 officers (Colonel Ward and Captains Murkland and Jorgensen) killed, and 8 officers wounded, and 19 enlisted men killed and 85 wounded — many of whom have since died. Satur- day', Jul}' 4, was spent on the field. At 2 p. M., Sunday, Jul}' 5th, the regiment left the battle- APPENDIX. 331 ground and marched to Two Taverns, a distance of six miles, where it remained until the morning of the 7th, when it moved five miles further to Taneytown. Leaving Tanej-town on the 8th, in a pouring rain, the march was continued over horrible roads, through Woodsborough to the neighborhood of Frederick Cit}', a distance of eighteen miles. On this march the dispatch announc- ing the capture of Vicksburg was published to the troops, and was received with the greatest enthusiasm. July 9, the march was resumed at an early hour. Crossed South Mountain at Crampton's Gap. Bivouacked at 9 p. m. Distance marched, twenty miles. July 10, marched to the vicinity of Antietam battle-fleld, a dis- tance of eight miles. July 11, moved three or four miles, to a point near Hagerstown. On the 12th the regiment took its position in the line of the Second Corps in front of the enem}', and built a strong breast- work of earth and logs, behind which it lay until the morning of the 14th, when, the enemj- having retreated across the river, our forces moved up and occupied Williamsport. On the 15th the regiment marched to Sharpsburg, and from thence by the " tow-path" to the vicinit}- of Sandy Hook, a dis- tance of seventeen miles. July 16, moved about five miles to Pleasant Valley, and camped until the 18th, when, crossing the Potomac and Shenandoah rivers at Harper's Ferry, the line of march was taken up down Loudon Valley, over the same ground traveled in the fall campaign of the previous year. Distance marched this day ten miles. July 19, moved about eight miles, to the vicinity of Snicker's Gap. July 20, moved to Bloomfield, six miles, at which place a halt was made until the 22d, when the march was continued to Ashb^^'s Gap, a distance of eleven miles. On the 23d moved to Markham Station, on the Manassas Gap Railroad. Here a halt of some hours was made. Meantime a por- tion of the Third Corps, having become engaged with the enemy at Manassas Gap, the Second Corps was started to their assistance. Hurrying as fast as possible over paths frightfull}' rough, it reached the scene of conflict about midnight, when the exhausted men were allowed to make coffee and to bivouac for the remainder of the night. Distance marched this day seventeen miles. 332 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. On the 24th the rebels having retreated, our forces began to move out of the Gap. The Fifteenth bivouacked at Markham Station, five miles back. On the 25th marched to White Plains, a distance of twenty miles, and continuing the march on the 26th, via Warrenton to the Junction, a distance of twenty-three miles, went into camp near the latter place. Here the regiment remained nntil the 30th. Tents were struck at 6 o'clock p. m., and the corps moved towards Morris ville. Being the rear-guard of trains, our move- ments were necessarily very slow, making but five miles before 2 o'clock A. M. of the 31st. Bivouacked by the roadside until morning. Moved again about 9 a. m,, and reached Morrisville at 5 p. M., and encamped in the woods. Weather very hot. Augnst 4, moved one mile toward Bealton Station, for the pur- pose of getting better ground for camping purposes. Weather excessively hot. August 15, received one hundred and seventy-nine recruits under the " Conscript Act." Augnst 18, again changed our camping ground by mo\-ing ■about one mile in a northerly direction, these camps being known ■as " Camp near Morrisville." August 30, orders came for the regiment to be ready to move at 3 o'clock a. m. of the 31st. The Second Corps marched at that hour toward Falmouth, Virginia, to guard the fords along the Rappahannock, while the cavalry force, with flying artillery under •General Kilpatrick, moved farther down, to destroy two small gun- boats in the river, captured by the enemy two days before. The regiment, with the rest of the Second Division, went to Banks' Ford, arriving there about sunset. Distance marched, twentv miles. Remained at this point until September 3d, when, the object of the movement having been successfully accomplished, namely, the destruction of the gunboats, we took up the line of march for our camp at Morrisville, at half-past 6 o'clock p. m., which place was reached at 2 o'clock a. m. of September 4th. September 12, the regiment broke camp at 10 o'clock a. m., and with the rest of the Second Corps marched to Bealton Sta- tion, and bivouacked near the railroad. September 13, very rainy in forenoon. The regiment moved at 7 a. m.j and crossed the Rappahannock at Rappahannock Sta- APPENDIX. 333 tion, the Second Corps being a support to the cavalary, which ■vras advancing towards Culpepper Court-house, which place we reached at 4 o'clock p. it. Remained here until the 16th, when the regiment moved out through the town one mile and a half in a westerly direction, and was directed to go into camp. All the while rapid cannonading was distinctly heard towards Raccoon Ford, on the Rapidan river. The men had scarcely got their tents pitched when orders came to be ready to move at a mo- ment's notice. Every man laid himself down that night with the feeling that he would be called upon to meet the enemy on the anniversary of the bloody battle of Antietam. September 17, orders came to move at 5 o'clock a. m., when the regiment moved towards Raccoon Ford, where it arrived about noon. The Second Corps relieved the cavalry, and picketed along the river from the Ford to Cedar Mountain, this regiment being situated opposite Robinson's Ford. For several days the enemy kept up a constant fire on our pickets, whenever exposed to view, themselves being concealed among the scrub-oaks on the bluff on the south side of the river. They seemed to take the oc- casion of our relieving pickets to fire upon us, which compelled our men to deploy and reach their position at the double-quick. October 5, the Second Corps was relieved by the Sixth Corps, and the regiment marched on the 6th back to Culpepper, and encamped about a mile north of the town. October 10, orders were received about noon to strike tents immediatel}', and the regiment had scarcely got packed up when the bugle sounded the " assembly." Lines were formed, and we marched out some four miles west of the ground occupied, and formed a line of battle along a piece of woods, stacked arms, and bivouacked in rear of the stacks. October 11, turned out at half-past 1 a. m., and moved at 2 o'clock via Brand}^ Station to Rappahannock Station. Re- crossed the river about noon, and moved out one mile north of Bealton Station. October 12, the regiment received orders at 1 o'clock p. m. to move immediately.' Proceeded back to Rappahannock Station, and again crossed the river, and moved in line of battle to within some two miles of Brandy Station. Halted at sunset, and bivouacked. At 12 o'clock (midnight) the regiment received S34 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. orders to turn out and move at once. Again marched back to Rappahannock Station, recrossed the river, and took up a line of march via Bealton Station towards Sulphur Springs, where our cavalry had been repulsed the day previous by the enemy's infantry. Arrived within about two miles of that place at 7 o'clock A. M., when the Second Corps was massed b}^ divisions, stacked arms, and rested till about noon, when the regiment, together with the rest of the corps, moved towards iVarrenton Junction, which place was reached about dark, and bivouacked for the night, to enable the baggage trains to get well out of the way, that they might not interfere with the march of tlie troops. October 14, moved at 5 o'clock a. m. for Manassas Junction. While passing near Auburn the enemy attacked the Third Division of the Second Corps ; still the column pressed on, this regiment marching as flankers for the First Brigade, until it reached Catlett's Station. Here a halt was made for coffee, and the column moved on, the cavahy skirmishing with the enemy in the rear. When near Bristow Station the head of the column (this regiment being second in line) was attacked by the enemy's infantry and artillery', and our line of battle formed, under a sharp fire, along the embankment of the railroad. We were hotly engaged for about an hour, repulsing the enemy with heavy loss to them, and comparatively light to this regiment. Its total loss was one officer (Lietenant Charles H. Stevens) mortall}' wounded (who has since died), and two enlisted men killed, nine wounded, and two missing. Remained in this position until 9 o'clock p. m., when the regiment moved on via Manassas Junction, fording Bull Run at 3 o'clock a. m. of the 15th. Bivouacked on the north bank until daylight, when the regiment moved to the right, to a point one mile and a half from Centreville, and formed a line of battle. The pickets of the regiment were engaged with those of the enemy for the greater portion of the day, and the regiment exposed to the fire of their batteries, but no casualties occurred. Towards night tents were pitched, and the men directed to make themselves as comfortable as possible. October 19. The regiment moved at 7 o'clock a. m. via Manassas Junction, and halted about 2 p. m., one and a half miles north of Bristow Station, and bivouacked at night. Marched at 6 a. m., October 20th, towards Gainesville, fording APPENDIX. 335 Broad Run at two different points, and, later in the day. Muddy Run and Kettle Run. Reached Auburn at sunset, and bivouacked in the woods, near the point where a part of the Second Corps was attacked on the 14th. The regiment pitched tents the day follow- ing, and remained here till the 23d. Marched at 7 a. m. to within two miles of Warrenton, and went into camp along the Warrenton Branch Railroad. Here the men commenced building log-houses, and in some cases completed them, but were allowed to enjoy them but a short time, for on the 7th of November the regiment moved at 5 o'clock a. m. via Warrenton Junction and Bealton to Kelly's Ford, on the Rappahannock. Bivouacked at dark, half a mile from the river. This was one of the hardest marches, for the distance, that the regiment had ever experienced. Many of the men had just drawn clothing, which, together with eight da3's' rations and rapid marching over a dusty road, told on their strength severely, although the distance marched was but about twenty miles. November 8. Turned out at 5 o'clock a. m., and crossed the river on pontoon bridges about sunrise. The Second Division advanced in line of battle, by brigade (this regiment being in the second line), about one mile, then moved in a westerly direction some three miles, halting at intervals, while our skirmishers were -advancing slowlj'. At 4 o'clock p. m. pitched tents, and remained here until the 10th, when the regiment moved some two and a half miles west, and occupied the partially-built barracks of the "Stonewall" Brigade of the rebel General Picket's division. This camp was known as "Camp near Brandy Station." Re- mained here till November 24th. Orders came the night previous to march at 5 a. m. The regiment moved at that hour, and soon after it commenced raining. When about two miles out it rained in torrents, and the troops were ordered back to camp. November 20. Marching orders were again received, and the regiment moved at 6 o'clock a. m. and proceeded to Germania Ford, on the Rapidan river. Crossed on pontoon bridges at 4 o'clock p. M., and bivouacked two miles from the south bank. November 27. Turned out at 5 o'clock a. m., and marched at sunrise, making a rapid march to Robertson's Tavern, a dis- tance of six miles, where the Second Brigade of our division was already skirmishing with the enemy. Almost immediately this 336 HISTORY OP DOUGLAS. regiment was deplo3'ed as skirmishers, joining on the right of the- Second Brigade. The regiment exchanged hnt few shots with the enemy for some two hours, Avhen ordei's came to advance our line,, and in so doing the right and center became briskly engaged — the enemj^ at once throwing forward a line of battle which com- pelled it to retire to its original position, where, with the help of our supports, we held them in check, and finally drove them back.. In this skirmish the regiment lost two officers wounded — one mortally, and one missing (Lieutenant - Colonel Joslin), taken, prisoner ; nine enlisted men were wounded, and six enlisted men missing. The regiment was again ordered to advance about sun- set, supported by a line of battle, to open the road by which General French, of the Third Corps, was expected to arrive, in doing which it received two volleys from the enemy, but owing to the nature of the ground their shots went harmlessly' over our heads, and we gained the desired position, where we remained until half-past 9 o'clock p. m., when the regiment was relieved, and bivouacked in the second line of battle. November 28. A line of battle was formed by divisions, and advanced (this regiment in the front line) about one and a quarter miles through the woods, when we came up to their fortifications. Halted and stacked arms, and remained until the morning of the 29th (bivouacking by the stacks), when the regiment moved to the left, with the rest of the Second Corps, to a point some three miles^ below White Oak Church. Halted at 3 o'clock p. m., and. bivouacked by the roadside. November 30. Turned out at 2 o'clock a. m., and moved out in front of the fortifications, which the Second and Third Corps, and one division of the Sixth Corps, expected to assault at 8 a. m. The enem^', having anticipated the movement, were reinforced to such an extent, with both artillery and infantry, that the assault was abandoned and the line withdrawn, after dark, about half a mile to the rear. December 1 . The regiment laid in line of battle most of the day, and at 7 p. m. was ordered to relieve another regiment of the brigade in the front line, and at 9 o'clock p. m. were with- drawn and marched to El3''s Ford, on the Rapidan, which place was reached about 8 o'clock on December 2d ; crossed on pon- toon bridge ; halted to make coffee at 11 a. m., and moved againu APPENDIX. 337 at 1 P. M., and reached our old camp near Brandy Station at 9 o'clock p. M., having been twenty-four hours on the march. December 5. The regiment moved to a position one mile south of Stevensburg, December 7. Moved back about one mile north of Stevens- burg, camped in the woods, and built winter quarters. In the spring of 1864 the Fifteenth was again called into active service on the ground alread^^ made memorable by the events of the last campaign, being engaged in several of the bat- tles between the Rapidan and Richmond. July 28, 1864. The regiment was mustered out of the service, and those soldiers whose terms of service had not expired were transferred to the Twentieth regiment. , The following is a list of its engagements during the war : Ball's Bluff, Battles of the Peninsula, Antietam, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, Bristow's Station, Robertson's Tav- ern, Wilderness, Spottsylvania Court-house, Cold Harbor, and all other battles from the Rajoidan to Petersburg in which the Second Army Corps were engaged. The casualties to Douglas men belonging to the Fifteenth were as follows : Samuel Sible}', wounded severely in the leg at Ball's Bluff during the early part of the fight and removed in a flat-boat to Harrison Island (which was then occupied by the Union forces, and where a temporary hospital had been established) , was soon after removed to Poolesville, on the Maryland side, where he died November 6. Thomas A. Southwick was also wounded in the leg, escaped being captured, was honorably discharged and re- turned home. Hiram Ward was wounded in the arm, taken pris- oner, and confined at Libby Prison, Richmond, four months, when he was exchanged and returned to his regiment. At our request he has furnished a brief account of his experiences while in rebel- dom. After being captured at Ball's Bluff he was maf ched with nearly 500 other Union prisoners to Manassas Junction. While resting from their fatiguing march, a small amount of corn bread and bacon was issued, and the bo3"S, not having tasted food since go- ing into action on the morning of the 21st, made quick work of eating, and were soon ready to go forward. The trip to Richmond was made in coal cars, and to add to 22 338 HISTORY OP DOUGLAS. their other misfortunes it began to rain. Arriving at their destina- tion and leaving the cars, they were marched in a procession through the principal streets of the city to be inspected by the people who turned out in large numbers, crowding the sidewalks and temporar}^ stagings which had been hastily erected. It soon became evident that the news of their defeat had pre- ceded them. General Evans, commander of the rebel forces at Ball's Bluff, in his dispatches had grossly- exaggerated the facts by stating that he had driven /o?f?* times their number from the soil of Virginia, and killed and wounded a larger number than there were men engaged in the fight. In consequence of which the people wer3 inflated with an inordinate conceit of their own bravery and contempt for what they believed to be Yankee cowardice. This popular feeling was openly expressed all along the line of march, until they reached the place selected for their temporary confine- ment, a large building formerh' used as a tobacco warehouse. Here they were confined for a short time and then transferred to Libby Prison, where for two months thej* were not allowed a change of clothing, and for the first three months slept upon the bare floor without even straw to lie upon. The fourth month straw was pro- A'ided, which greatly increased their comfort. During this time our informant witnessed the shooting of several prisoners. One moonlight night two men were shot and instantly killed while standing side by side near one of the windows. A New York Zou- ave also shared a similar fate a few days afterwards. During most of this time the prison was so crowded there was scarcely room for the men to lie down at night, and deaths were of almost daily occurrence. After being exchanged, Mr. Ward rejoined his regiment and entered upon active service. At the battle of Antietam Sept. 17, 1862, was badl}' wounded in the right hand ; received an honorable discharge Feb. 23, 1863, and returned home. Benjamin R. Elliott and William Oakes were also wounded at Antietam. Harlan Fairbanks, corporal, acting sergeant, was badly wounded in the leg and foot at the battle of Fair Oaks or Seven Pines, near Richmond ; was brought home to Douglas, where he gradually recovered from his wounds. vS^'lvester Oakes was killed b}' a cannon-ball at Fredericksburg. His brother, Charles H. Oakes (enlisted from Grafton,) was in the same company and was by his side when he fell. APPENDIX. 339 EIGHTEENTH REGIMENT MASSACHUSETTS VOLUNTEERS. This regiment Avas from Norfolk, Bristol and Plymouth counties, ■recruited at "Camp Brigham," Readville, and left for Washington August 24, 1861. It took part in the following engagements : Battles of the Peninsula, Second Bull Run, Shepardstown, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, Gett^'sburg, Rappahanock Station, Wilderness, Spotts^'lvania, Cold Harbor, Petersburg, and Weldon Railroad. The regiment was mustered out of service Sept. 2, 1864. Those soldiers whose term of service had not expired at that date were transferred to the Thirtj'-second regiment. TWENTY-SECOND REGIMENT MASSACHUSETTS VOLUNTEERS. This was known as Senator Wilson's regiment, was organized at " Camp Schouler," Lynnfield, and left the State on the 8th of October, 1861, for Washington. It was recruited under the direc- tion of Hon. Henry Wilson, who was commissioned Colonel. Colonel Wilson having resigned Oct. 29, 1861, he was succeeded hy Col. Jesse A. Gove, who was killed before Richmond June 27, 1862. Colonel Gove was succeeded b}^ Col. Charles E. Griswold, who subsequently resigned. The regiment was engaged in the following battles during the war : Battles before Richmond, Antietam, Fredericksburg, Chan- cellorsville, Gettysburg, Rappahanock Station, Wilderness, Laurel Hill, Spotts3-lvania, Jericho Ford, Little River, Tolpotony, Bethesda Church, Shady Grove Church, and Petersburg. The regiment was mustered out Oct. 17, 1864, with the excep- tion of Company E, which was mustered out Oct. 20, 1864. Those men whose terms of service had not expired were transferred to the Thirty-second regiment. TWENTY-FOURTH REGIMENT MASSACHUSETTS VOLUNTEERS. This regiment was known as the "New England Guards Regi- :inent." It was recruited b}- Col. Thomas G. Stephenson at "Camp Massasoit," Readville, and left for Annapolis on the 9th of No- "vember, 1861. 340 HISTORY OP DOUGLAS. TWENTY-FIFTH REGIMENT MASSACHUSETTS VOLUNTEERS. This regiment was recruited iu Worcester count}', the town of Douglas being well represented. The regiment left the camp in AVorcester for Annapolis, Mary- land, Oct. 31, ISGl, where the}^ joined the Burnside expedition, and proceeded to North Carolina. They took part in all the prin- cipal engagements in that State, including Roanoke Island and Newbern. The other engagements in which the Twent^'-fifth bore a part wei-e Kingston, Whitehall, Goldsboro', Port Walthal, Arrowfield Church, Drury's Bluff, Cold Harbor, and at other battles- before Richmond, and Wise's Forks. The casualties to Douglas men in the Twenty-fifth were as fol- lows : Lambert B. vSimmons, died at Newbern, N. C, and was. the first soldier brought home and buried with military honors. Nathaniel C. Putnam died of consumption brought on b}^ expos- ure. Joseph Albee died of congestive chills at Newbern, N. C, and Jerrie E. Luther at the same place of congestion of the brain. Thomas M. Magee, wounded in the side by a grape-shot while charging the enemy at Roanoke Island ; re-enlisted in the Third Rhode Island Cavalry. Timoth}' Magary killed in the battle before Petersburg. Allen R. Hough, died of typhoid fever. James O. and Nathan S. Bart- lett, killed at Cold Harbor. Orlando Carpenter died from wounds received at Cold Harbor, and in the same battle George A. Glea- son wounded severely ; returned home and gradually recovered. Adjutant-General Schouler, in his report for 1865, speaks of this regiment as one that has "always and everywhere sustained the high character with which it left the State, and has vindicated the honor of Massachusetts. Its colors have never been yielded to the enemy." TWENTY-SEVENTH REGIMENT MASSACHUSETTS VOLUNTEERS. This regiment was raised in the western part of the State, and was mustered into the service of the United States Sept. 20, 1861. The}^ left the State November 2d, same year, and proceeded to Annapolis, where they remained in camp until Jan. 6, 1862, when they sailed for North Carolina as a part of the Buriiside expedition. The regiment took part in the principal engagements APPENDIX. 341 in North Carolina, including the capture of Roanoke Island and Newbern, also the battles at Washington, Gum Swamp, Walthal, Arrowfield Church, Drury's Bluff, Cold Harbor, and other battles before Richmond, and Southwest Creek. The main part of the regiment was mustered out at the expiration of their term of ser- vice, Sept. 27, 1864, while the balance, composed of re-enlisted men and recruits whose terms had not expired, w^ere retained, and were finally mustered out June 26, 1865. Dr. Franklin L. Hunt, Assistant Surgeon in the Twenty- seventh, was killed b}- guerrillas near Little Washington, N. C, Nov. 18, 1862, while riding in a carriage outside the picket lines. Dr. Hunt was the son of Otis W. Hunt, was a native and for sev- eral 3'ears a resident of Douglas, althongh credited on the quota of West Boylston. TWENTY-EIGHTH REGIMENT MASSACHUSETTS VOLUNTEERS. This regiment, composed mostly of men of Irish birth, left 'Camp Cameron, Massachusetts, Jan. 11, 1862, and proceeded to Fort Columbus, New York Harbor. On the 14th of February the}' left for Hilton Head, S. C. The regiment was first engaged at Fort Johnson, James Island, S. C. They evacuated James Island July 14. On the 3d of August, 1862, the Twenty-eighth isailed from Hilton Head, and arrived at Aquia Creek August 6, ■where they joined the army of the Potomac. They afterwards took part in the following-named engagements : Second Bull Run, Chantilly, South Mountain, Antietam, Freder- icksburg, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, Bristoe's Station, Mine Run, Wilderness, Po River, Spottsylvania, Tolopoton}', Cold Har- I)or, Petersburg, Strawbeny Plains, Deep Bottom, Reams' Station, Petersburg, and South Side Railroad. The five who enlisted from Douglas in the Twenty-eighth were members of the Douglas Band, and enlisted as musicians in the Regimental Band, twenty-four pieces, Samuel Cary, Leader. THIRTIETH REGIMENT MASSACHUSETTS VOLUNTEERS. This regiment was mustered into the service Jan. 4, 1862, and left the State Jan. 13, 1862. It was engaged in the following-named laattles : Vicksburg, Baton Rouge, Plains Store, Port Hudson, Donaldsonville, Winchester, Cedar Creek, and Fisher's Hill. 342 HISTORY OP DOUGLAS. This was the last Massachusetts regiment to return from the seat of war. THIRTY-THIRD REGIMENT MASSACHUSETTS VOLUNTEERS. This regiment was mustered into the service of the United States Aug. 13, 1862, and was mustered out June 11, 1865. It took part in the following-named battles : Fredericksburg, Chancellors ville, Beverly Ford, Gettysburg, Lookout Mountain, Missionary Ridge, and the battles of Sherman's campaign. THIRTY-SIXTH REGIMENT MASSACHUSETTS VOLUNTEERS. This regiment was mustered into the service Aug. 30, 1862, and mustered out June 8, 1865. Its battles were as follows : Fredericksburg, Vicksburg, Jack- son, Blue Springs, Campbell Station, Siege of Knoxville, Wilder- ness, Spottsylvania, North Anna, Cold Harbor, Petersburg, Pop^ lar Spring Church, and Hatcher's Run. The following were the casualties to Douglas men : Leonard A. Chapman, instantly killed at the battle before Petersburg July 9, 1864. In a battle at the same place Oct. 2d, 1861, Daniel A. Burton was severely wounded by a shell and died of his injuries. In the same battle Matthew Hudson was instantl3' killed by the bursting of a shell, which also killed three others and wounded William Mowry, another Douglas man. A piece of this same shell struck another man in such a manner as to strip off his coat, tear- ing it in shreds,' but leaving him uninjured. FIFTY-FIRST REGIMENT MASSACHUSETTS VOLUNTEERS. This regiment, commanded by Col. A. B. R. Sprague, was recruited at " Camp Wool," Worcester. The regiment embarked at Boston on the afternoon of Nov. 25, 1862, on board United States transport steamer Merrimac, with orders to report to Major-General Foster at Newbern, N. C. Went to sea the evening of embarcation, and after a rough voyage arrived at Beaufort, N. C, on the afternoon of Sundaj^, November 30, and thence by rail to Newbern, and went into quar- ters in the unfinished barracks on the south side of the Trent river. Upon arrival Avere assigned to the brigade commanded by Col. T. APPENDIX. 343 J. C. Amor}'. Commenced the issue of arms and the instruction of the men in tlneir use on the 5th of December. lu obedience to Department General Order No. 77, and Bri- gade General Order No. 31, the regiment took its place in line at daj'light on the morning of December 11, and formed a part of the column in what is known as the expedition to Goldsboro'. For a detailed report of the duties performed during that ten days* march reference may be had to the official report of the com- manding officer, as published in the report of the Adjutant-General of Massachusetts for the 3'ear 1862. The first death in the regiment occurred on the 1 1th of January, of the disease known in medical works as " Cerebro Spinal Menin- gitis." This singularly fatal malad}' during the two months fol- lowing consigned to tlie grave about twenty from among the hardiest and best soldiers. In conformity to Department General Order No. 18, of Jan. 15, 1863, the names " Kinston," " Whitehall " and " Goldsboro' " were inscribed on the colors of the regiment. 0^ Headquakters Fifty-first Massachusetts Regiment, > Foster Barracks, Jan. 21, 18C3. ) Lieutenant E. T. Parkinson, Acting Assistant Adjutant-General, Fi7-si Brigade, Department of North Carolina. On the 17th inst., in conformity to Special Brigade Order No. 14, joining a portion of the Fiist Brigade, and a detachment of artillery and the Third New Yoik Cavalry, I marched with seven companies of my command (Companies F, E and G being on detached service) by Brice's Creek, and the south side of the Trent river, to Pollockville, about thirteen miles distant. Arrived at .5 p. m., and went into bivouac for the night. On the morning of the 18th two companies, under the command of Major Harkness, marched With the main column towards Trenton, while I was ordered with the five remaining companies and a detachment of cavalry to guard the approaches, and hold Pollockville till the return of the main force. This was successfully accomplished, and upon the return of the main body at noon of the 19th inst. I received instructions to move five companies to Young's Cross-roads, and hold that point till the arrival of the main column. Without a guide we passed the spot known as Young's Cross-roads (about seven miles from Pollockville), and coming suddenly upon White Oak creek my advance guard received the fire of the enemy's outposts on the other side of the river, the bridge having been destroyed and a breastwork of logs formed for their i)rotec- tion. The advance, under the direct command of Lieutenant-Colonel Studley, returned tlie fire, and the enemy retired. In obedience to in- 344 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. structions we bivouacked at the Cross-roads, and at evening were joined by the Third New York Cavalry. Soon after daylight, 20th inst., crossed White Oak river with a detachment, and established an outpost on the Jacksonville road, to guard the approaches while the bridge over the creek was being rebuilt. The main force, under Colonel Amory, arrived, and a portion of the cavalry pressed forward to a point near Jacksonville, and reported the enemy in force at that place. The object of the expe- dition accomplished, we left "Smith's Mill" on the morning of the 21st, passing through PoUockville, and arrived at Newbern in the evening. A heavy rain during the preceding night made muddy roads and over- flowing streams. William P. Kent, of Company I, who marched in appar- ent good health, was taken suddenly ill, and died in an ambulance outhe route. I have the honor to be, very respectfully, your obedient servant, A. B. R. SPRAGUE, Colonel Fifty-first Massachusetts Regiment. On the 20tli of February, the regiment suffering severely from a steadily increasing sick-list and frequent deaths, six companies were moved from the barracks to Deep Gully, an outpost eight miles out on the Trent road, as a sanitarj^ measure. The weather being unfavorable, and the shelter tents proving quite insufficient for the comfort of men suffering from malaria, the regiment returned to barracks February 27th. In conformit}^ to Special Order No. 46, " that Colonel Sprague, commanding Fiftj^-first Massachusetts, with his regiment, relieve the companies stationed at different points along the railroad between Newbern and Morehead Cit}', also those at Morehead City, Beaufort and Evans' Mills," on the 2d and 3d of March the regiment was distributed as follows : — Company G, Captain T. D. Kimlmll, remaining at Brice's Ferr}'. Compan}- K, Captain D. W. Kimball, Evans' Mills. Companies D, Captain Proutj' ; H, Captain Hobbs ; B, Captain Bascora ; and I, Captain Tha3'er, Newport — Lieutenant-Colonel Studley. Companies A, Captain Wood, and C, Captain Goodell, Morehead City. Companies E, Captain Wheeler, and F, Captain Baldwin, Beaufort ; headquarters at Beaufort. Major E. A. Harkness was designated as Provost-Marshal of Beaufort and Morehead City. Headquarters Fifty-first Massachusetts Regiment, Beaufort, N. C, May 11, 1863. Coloxel: In obedience to instructions from Department Headquar- ters I left Newport Barracks on the morning of the 7th instant, with APPENDIX. 345 ■Companies B, C, D, H and I of my regiment, a section of Lee's Battery, Lieutenant Cady, and Captain Moshelle's company Third New York Cav- alry. Passing tlirougli tlie " pecosin " around the head of Big Broad Creek, we arrived at Cedar Point, opposite Swansboro', some eighteen miles from Newport, about 4 o'clock on the afternoon of the 7th. The steamer Wilson did not make her appearance at the mouth of White Oak river as arranged, and, as no other transportation could be procured to cross thei-iver, about one and one-half miles wide at this place, the troops encamped in the woods at Cedar Point. On tlie morning of the 8th, the Wilson not having arrived, I accom- panied Captain Moshelle's company of cavalry on a reconnoisance up the ■east side of White Oak river, to a point called Dorton's Ferry (about sixteen miles from Cedar Point by road), about six miles from Smith's Mills or Young's. We returned to Cedar Point, reaching camp soon after •dark. On the morning of the 9th communicated with Lieutenant-Colonel ■Lewis, who had reached Swansboro', coming down the other side of the river with a detachment of Third New York Cavalry. At 6 o'clock A. M., 10th instant, left Cedar Point and returned to Newport barracks. I saw nothing of the enemy during our advance and absence, and am convinced that they do not cross White Oak river in force, and that Swansboro' has only been occupied by some fifteen or twenty of the enemy as an outpost. I have the honor to be, very respectfully, your obedient servant, A. B. E. SPRAGUE, Colonel Fifty-first Massachusetts Regiment. Lieutenant-Colonel S. Hoffman, Assistant Adjutant-General, Eighteenth Army Corps. March 25th Lieutenant Sanderson and twentj'-two men were ordered to man the gunboat Hussar, Ijing in Beaufort Harbor, and were instructed in naval gunner}'. By Special Order No. 93, from Department Headquarters, ■dated March 30th, in addition to his other duties, Colonel Sprague assumed command of the post of Fort Macon, and Companj' C, 'Captain Goodell, was added to the garrison, one company of the Forty-fifth Massachusetts being relieved. On the 4th of May the regiment returned to Newbern, greatly improved in health, and Teoccupied their old quarters in Foster barracks on the Trent. The regiment left the barracks on the 22d of May, and selecting a spot near the junction of the Trent and Neuse, it was designated ■Camp Wellington. Some misapprehensions having arisen concerning the time of the expiration of the term of ser^'ice of the nine months' men, the 346 HISTORY OP DOUGLAS. commissary of musters for the Eighteenth Corps issued a circular^ and after stating the rule adopted by the government concludes- as follows : "Its fairness and liberality can hardl}' be questioned by any, save those whose patriotism is of so weak a nature as to begrudge to their country a short period additional to their speci- fied nine months. In order, however, that no possible ground of complaint ma}- exist, the General commanding authorizes me to state that any company in this department will, on application of its captain, approved b}' the Colonel commanding the regiment, be furnished with transportation, and allowed to proceed home in time to reach it in nine months from the time of its muster into- service." This circular was read to the regiment at the evening parade of the Wth of June, together with the following : — Headquarters Fifty-first Massachusetts Regiment, ) Caaip Wei-lington, Newbern, N. C, June 10, 1863. j I have caused to be read to the whole command a circular which was- drawn out by dissatisfaction with the direction of the War Department, in regard to the time of mustering out the nine montlis' men. Without entering upon an argument in regard to the justice or equity of this decision of the War Department, I rely upon the good judgment, the patriotism and intelHgence of the ofiicers and soldiers of this regi- ment who entered the service, and have stood together unflinchingly in the line of duty, to take no action which will compromise them in the eyes of the country and their friends. Rather let us be overzealous in the service than be relieved one moment too soon by our own action. A. B. R. SPRAGUE, Colonel Fifty-first Massachusetts. No company- of the regiment signified a desire to avail them- selves of the offer in the foregoing circular. It being understood tliat w-hile the rebel army under Lee was pressing northward into Maryland and Pennsylvania General Dix would move upon Richmond b}- way of White House, on the Pamunk}', this regiment, together with others, was offered to Gen- eral Dix, and on the 24th of June received orders from Major- General Foster to report at Fortress Monroe, Virginia, and with the exception of one hundred and eighty-three sick men, who remained behind, on the afternoon of that day embarked on steamer Thomas Collyer and schooner A. P. Plowe. Arrived at APPENDIX. 347 Fortress Monroe on the morning of the 27th, the commanding officer reported to the senior officer at that post, who directed the regiment to proceed to Cumberland, Virginia, on the Pamunky. Leaving the sick and all surplus baggage at the fortress, all embarked on the CoUyer and proceeded up the York river. While en route received orders to proceed to White House, and arrived about midnight. Earh- on the morning of the 28th reported to General Dix, whose whole force was in camp at White House. Upon learning that the regiment was in light marching order, without camp equipage, and the term of service of the regiment having nearly expired. General Dix ordered that the regiment return to Fortress Monroe, and there make requisition upon the quartermaster for transportation to Massachusetts, to be mustered out of service. Arrived back at Fortress Monroe evening of the 28th, and while awaiting transportation learning the critical condition of affairs in Pennsylvania and Maryland, the colonel commanding authorized General Naglee to offer the service of the regiment for the emer- genc}', and after communicating with Washington by telegraph they were accepted, and orders received from Genei'al Halleck for the regiment to report to General Schenek at Baltimore, who was in command of the Middle Department. Arrived in Baltimore on the 1st of July, and were ordered to occupj' Belger barracks, near the line of defenses of Baltimore, in process of construction, where they remained till the 6th of Jul}-. Sunday, 5th Juh', six companies, under command of Lieutenant-Colonel Studle^', were detailed to escort two thousand three hundred rebel prisoners, taken at Gett3'S- burg, from the railroad station to Fort McHenr}'. On the 4th of Jul}' the regiment received the honor of being detailed to search the houses of the citizens of Baltimore for arms, in conjunction with the city police, and successfully and creditably performed this delicate duty. Thousands of arms of various kinds were seized, and deposited at the office of the city marshal. In obedience to orders, at 6 o'clock on the morning of the 6th instant, the regiment in light marching order reported to Brig- adier-General Briggs, to whose brigade it had temporaril}^ been assigned, at the depot of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, with three days' rations and sixty rounds of cartridges. Proceeded as far as Monocacy Junction, where the regiment remained in the 348 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. ■cars till the morning of the 7th. Late in the afternoon of this day arrived at Sandy Hook, Maryland, from whence the rebels had just fled, but still held Harper's Ferry and the opposite bank of the Potomac. About 9 o'clock p. m. were ordered to proceed to Maryland Heights. The rain was steadily falling, and the night was dark. The Eighth, Fort^'-sixth and Fifty-first Massachusetts regiments, with a Pennsylvania battery, all under command of Colonel Sprague, of the Fifty-tirst, commenced the ascent. After hours of delay and weary marching the column arrived at Fort Duncan, on the heights, about 4 o'clock, morning of the 8th. The regiment here remained doing outpost duty on the Potomac and on the Sharpsburg road till the 12th of July, when orders were received ' ' to procure three days ' rations and proceed to Boonsboro', Maryland, to join the army of the Potomac," which was in that vicinity endeavoring to intercept the retreat of the rebel 'General Lee. The brigade of General Briggs, consisting of the Eighth, Thirty- ninth, Forty-sixth and Fifty-first Massachusetts regiments, left Marj-land Heights by Sharpsburg road at 9 o'clock p. m. Sun- day, Jul}^ 12th, marching all night. Arrived at the front about 3 o'clock on the afternoon of the 13th, having marched about twenty-seven miles. Surcharged with malaria contracted in the swamps of North Carolina, without camp equipage, kettles, or a change of clothing in wet weather, the men were poorly prepared to endure the fatigue, and large numbers became sick, and were sent back to Baltimore from Sandy Hook and Maryland Heights, so that when it arrived at the front there was present for duty an aggregate of only two hundred and seventj'-five men. The brigade was immediately assigned to the Second Division, First Corps, of the Army of the Potomac, and second line of battle. The enemj' disappeared from our front during the night, and •on the morning of the 14th the army was in motion in pursuit of the retiring reliels. The Fiftj^-first marched with the main body, and proceeded to Williamsport, where it was evident the enemy had effected a crossing. Encamped at Williamsport, and 15th instant marched back through Funkstown and Antietam to a point near Berlin, Maryland, where a pontoon across the Potomac had been thrown for the passage of our troops into Virginia. APPENDIX. 349 The enemj' having disappeared from our front, recrossed the Potomac, and in full retreat, the regiment received orders from Corps Headquarters, on the 17th of July, to return to Massachusetts, to be mustered out of the service of the United States. Reached Balti- more on the morning of the 18th, and arrived at Worcester, Massa- chusetts, on the 21st da}^ of July. A furlough was granted to the men until the 27th instant, when they were mustered out of service by Captain Lawrence of the Fourth Infantry, U. S. A., having served nearly ten months. The sick left at Newbern at the departure of the regiment under charge of Assistant-Surgeon Garvin arrived home before the regi- ment, and were mustered out with the rest at Worcester, Massa- chusetts. Company I of this regiment was composed largely of men from Douglas and the neighboring town of Upton. Its officers were William Hunt, captain ; Harrison F. Bradish, of Upton, first lieu- tenant ; Lucius M. Thayer second lieutenant, and Ezekiel Pack- ard first sergeant. Upon the resignation of Captain Hunt Feb. 7, 18G3, Lucius M. Thaj'er was promoted captain, and Ezekiel Packard second lieutenant. May 23, 1863, Lieutenant Bradish resigned and Ezekiel Packard succeeded him as first lieutenant ; Charles W. Moore was commissioned second lieutenant. The casualties to Douglas men were as follows : Marcus M. Mitchell (a Douglas man, enlisted in Milford,) died at Newbern, N. C, Jan. 28, 1863. Francis L. Moore also died in hospital at Newbern, and John N. Gaskell killed near Spottsylvania Court- house, Va. Philetus BuflTum was honorably discharged at the ex- piration of his term of service ; died July 3, 1867, and was buried in the East Douglas cemetery. The name of Dr. .J. Homer Dar- ling, assistant surgeon of the Fift3^-first regiment, was omitted from the list on page 117. He was enlisted at Douglas and returned home, at the expiration of his term of service, July 27, 1863. FIFTY-SEVENTH REGIMENT MASSACHUSETTS VOLUNTEERS. This regiment left the State April 18, 1864, and was mustered out July 30, 1865. During its term of service it took part in the following-named engagements : Wilderness, Spottsylvania, '350 HISTOEY OF DOUGLAS. North Anna, Cold Harbor, Petersburg, Weldon Railroad, Poplar Spring Church, and Hatcher's Run. Of the five who enlisted in the Fifty-seventh from the town of Douglas but one returned. Henry Glover was killed at Cold Harbor, John N. Gaskell at Spottsylvania, David B. Curtis and Abner A. Lealand in the battle before Petersburg. Lewis Moun- tain was mustered out at the expiration of his term of service, July 30, 1865. FIFTY-EIGHTH REGIMENT MASSACHUSETTS VOLUNTEERS. The organization of eight companies of this regiment was completed April 25, 186.4, and they left the State April 28. The remaining two companies were afterwards recruited and sent forward to join the regiment. It took part in the engagements at the Wilderness, Spotts3ivania, North Anna, Cold Harbor, Petersburg, Weldon Railroad, Poplar Spring Church, Fort Sedgwick, and Fort Mahone, and was mustered out July 14, 1865. FIRST REGIMENT MASSACHUSETTS CAVALRY. This regiment was mustered into the United States service Nov. 1, 1861. The First Battalion left the State Dec. 25, the Second Dec. 27, and the Third Dec. 29, 1861. The Third Bat- talion was detached from the regiment Aug. 4, 1863, and subse- quentl}' became a part of the Fourth Regiment of Cavaliy, and a new battalion was recruited to fill its place. The following are the battles this regiment were engaged in : Poolsville, South Mountain, Antietam, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, Brand^^ Sta- tion, Aldie, Upperville, Gettysburg, Williamsport, Culpepper, Auburn, Todd's Tavern, fortifications of Richmond, Vaughn Road, St. Mary's Church, Cold Harbor, and Bellefield. THIRD REGIMENT MASSACHUSETTS CAVALRY. This regiment was recruited and originally went into the service as the Forty-first regiment of infantiy. It was mustered into the service Nov. 1, 1862, and left the State November 15. In June, 1863, the regiment was changed to a cavalry organiza- tion, and the first, second and third unattached companies of cav- alry were consolidated with them, and became a part of the organ- ization. It was mustered out Sept. 28, 1865. APPENDIX. 351 It was in the following battles : Irish Bend, Henderson Hill, Cane River, Port Hudson, Sabine Cross-roads, Muddy liaj'ou, Piney Woods, Red River campaign, Opequan, Fisher's Hill, Snag Point, Winchester, and Cedar Creek. FOURTH KEGIMENT MASSACHUSETTS CAVALRY. This regiment was composed of the Independent Battalion, for- merly Third Battalion, First Regiment of Cavahy, and two new battalions recruited in Massachusetts. At the time the regiment was organized the First Battalion, Major Stephens, was stationed at ^outh Carolina. The Second Battalion left the State March 20, 1864, and the Third April 23, 1864. It took part in the battles of Gainesville, Florida, Drury's Bluff, and in several of the engage- jnents before Petersburg and Richmond. In the desperate engagement at High Bridge on Thursday', the 6th of April, 1865, this regiment, undercommand ofthe brave andgallant Frank Washburn of Worcester, bore anhouorable part, their bravery and daring challensino; the admiration of both armies. While en- deavoring to hold the High Bridge, over which it was feared Lee's army might escape, they were surrounded and overpowered by two divisions of Lee's cavalry. After having made two charges through the rebel lines the Colonel might at either of these times have passed on with his cavahy and escaped, but refusing to leave the infantr}' while there remained the slightest chance of rescuing them, and although the odds were eight men to one, he made his third charge, and in this, while crossing sabres with a rebel officer whom he had nearly disarmed, he was shot through the head by another, and after he had fallen received a sabre cut upon the skull which completely disabled him. He was two days a prisoner, during which time, notwithstanding the gallantry he had displayed, they did nothing for his wounds, and relieved him of his horse, his sword and his money. Upon being released he was brought home, and died the day following his arrival at Worcester, at the house of his brother, Mr. J. D. Washburn. The following testimonial from a rebel Colonel, Inspector-Gen- eral on General Lee's staff, corroborates what has been said of the Fourth and its brave commander. In speaking of the battle of High Bridge, he says: "So fierce were the charges of Colonel 352 HISTORY OP DOUGLAS. Washburn and his men, and so determined their fighting, that General Lee received the impression that they must be supported by a large part of the army, and that his retreat was cut off." General Grant, as soon as the intelligence of the death of Col- onel Washburn was received, paused amidst his vast labors to^ write with his own hands a letter to the family of the deceased, expressing his sympathy in their loss, and admiration for his gal- lant and heroic conduct. FIRST MASSACHUSETTS HEAVY ARTILLERY. This regiment was organized as the Fourteenth Regiment In- fantry, and was mustered into the service Julj- 5, 1861. The or- ganization was changed to a heavy artillery regiment Jan. 1, 1862. The three men who enlisted in this regiment on the Douglas quota were not from this town. SECOND REGIMENT MASSACHUSETTS HEAVY ARTILLERY. The companies composing this regiment were mustered into- service at different dates. Four companies left the State Nov. 4, 1863. Two companies left Nov. 6, 1863, and the balance (six companies) left Jan. 8, 1864. The regiment was stationed in North Carolina and Virginia during its full term of service. Companies G and H were cap- tured in April, 1864, at Plymouth. They were then 275 strong.. In the spring of 1865 the remnant of them rejoined the regiment, thirty-five in number, a sad commentary on the starving sj^stem of Andersonville. The principal part of the regiment were in few battles, but were detailed to garrison forts and to do skirmish duty. Companies B, C, F, I and M participated with honor in the battle of Kingston. SIXTEENTH (uNATTACHED) COMPANY HEAVY ARTILLERY. The Third Regiment Massachusetts Heavy Artillery' was com- posed of the Third, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth, Elev- enth, Twelfth, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Fifteenth and Sixteenth (unattached) companies of heavy artillery, and with the exception APPENDIX. 353 of one companj-, which was on detached duty, was employed in the coast defenses of the State and at Washington, D. C. FIRST REGIMENT RHODE ISLAND VOLUNTEERS. This three months' regiment left Providence for the seat of war in two detachments — the first on the •20th of April, under com- mand of Col. A. E. Burnside, and the second April 24th, under Lieut. Col. Joseph S. Pitman. The regiment was accompanied throughout the campaign by the Providence American Brass Band. It took part in the battle of Bull Pun with honor to itself, and re- turned to Providence July 28th, 1861, its time of service having expired. SECOND REGIMENT RHODE ISLAND VOLUNTEERS • was recruited at " Camp Burnside," on the Dexter Training Ground in Providence. Major John S. Slocum of the First Eegi- ment was appointed Colonel. While making preparation to leave for Washington the regiment received many tokens of interest and regard from friends. The firm of A. & W. Sprague presented them with one thousand rubber blankets. The citizens of Lons- dale made a generous donation to the hospital department, and man}' of the officers received for themselves and for their compa- nies several expressions of interest and good-will in the form of useful articles designed for their comfort and convenience. The regiment was also presented with an elegant stand of colors by the ladies of Providence, through Col. Jabez C. Knight, Pay- master-General. June 19, the regiment embarked on board the steamer "State of Maine" for AVashington, and entered upon active service. During the war the Second took part in the following engage- ments : Bull Eun, Williamsburg, White House, Mechanicsville, Seven Pines, Fredericksburg, Gettysburg, and Chancellorsville. At the battle of Bull Run the regiment suffered severely. Its loss was twenty-eight killed, fifty-six wounded, and thirty missing. It was in this disastrous battle that Colonel Slocum, Major Ballou, Captain Tower, and Captain Smith were killed. The colors of the regiment were completely riddled by balls, but the standard- bearer. Sergeant John M. Durfee, stood b}- them and brought them from the field. 23 354 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. It was a remarkable fact in the history' of this regiment that from the first battle of Bull Run to that of Chancellorsville it met the same rebel regiments in the field and on picket. So familiar were the relations established between the men on both sides that on the appearance of the Second Rhode Island at their post the rebel pickets would leave their rifle-pits, stack arms and enter into friendh' conversation, often inquiring with apparent interest for members of the regiment who were absent. Throughout their term of service the regiment bore a uniform character for bravery and eflSciency. FOURTH REGIMENT RHODE ISLAND VOLUNTEERS. This regiment left "Camp Greene," in Providence, for Wash- ington Oct. 2, 1861. Like the regiments preceding it, the mem- bers of the Fourth were made the recipients of many useful gifts, including a stand of colors presented by the ladies of Provi- dence. This regiment was identified with the army of North Carolina, under General Burnside, and took part in the battles of Roanoke Island, Newbern, and Fort Macon, after which they joined McClellan's forces, and were engaged in the battles of South Moun- tain, Antietam, Fredericksburg, and two skirmishes on the Nanse- mond river, and two at Suflfolk. SEVENTH REGIMENT RHODE ISLAND VOLUNTEERS was organized May 22, 1862, at " Camp Bliss," South Providence, and left for Washington September 10, under command of Col. Zenas R. Bliss. Joining the anny of the Potomac in November, it took part in the battle of Fredericksburg ; was afterwards as- signed to the Department of the Ohio, where they did valuable skirmish service, in which several of its officers and soldiers were killed. Its losses during the campaign were thirt3'-five b}- death. FIRST REGIMENT RHODE ISLAND CAVALRT was organized as the First New England Cavalry, in the autumn of 1861, and passed the winter in camp at Pawtucket, R. I. On the 12th of March, 1862, a battalion under Major Sanford left the State for Washington, and in a few days the rest of the regiment followed. Uniting there, the regiment proceeded to "Camp APPENDIX. 355 Mud," Warrenton Junction. Shortly after a battalion of one hundred men from this regiment was sent forward to Port Royal to save brid2;es and do any other necessary work. They entered Port Ro^-al just as the enemy was setting fire to the bridge from the opposite side. Putting spurs to their horses, the cayalry dashed across the bridge and upon the enem}- with irresistible force, cap- turing one hundred and seventeen prisoners, and rescuing twent}' men and two oflieers of the First Vermont Cavahy, who were being held as prisoners b}' the rebels. The loss in this brief but decisive action was seven killed and seven wounded, including Capt. Wil- liam P. Ainsworth, a brave and dashing officer, who was highly esteemed by his men. The other battles in which the First was engaged were : Cedar Mountain, Groveton, Bull Run, Chantill}-, Leesburg, Beverly Ford, Kell3''s Ford, Middleburg, and Deep Bottom. It also took part in General Sheridan's last raid, which forced Lee's surrender at Appomattox Court-house. Sylvester Chase, a musician in the First, from this town, relates that he saw the last rebel cannon fired at Generals Sheridan and Wright and their bodj^-guards and staffs. The casualties to Douglas men were as follows : George Snow, severely wounded in the leg at Kelly's Ford March 17, 1863, afterwards discharged and re-enlisted. In a severe engagement at Middelburg, Va., June 17, 1863, Lieut. Simeon Brown was wounded ; Charles E. Gould, M. Leach, and Albert A. Greene were captured by the enem}', and William L3'on not accounted for, supposed to have been captured. Alfred P. Palmer, wounded and missing at the battle of Middleburg, paroled and enlisted as veteran volunteer. Isaac King, Quartermaster-Sergeant, was seriously' injured by a fall from his horse while practicing a cavalry charge. Mr. King was active in securing the enlistment of Douglas men in his regiment, but through an unintentional oversight his name was omitted from the list on page 118, as also the names of Joseph and Josiah Hough and Alfred Snow, who were enlisted at the same time. SECOND REGIMENT RHODE ISLAND CAVALRY was a three years' regiment. It was enlisted in Providence, and was ordered to join the forces of General Banks at New Orleans, S56 HISTORY OF" DOITGLAS. arriving in season to take part in the first advance on Port Hud- son, March 14, 1863. It was also a part of the force engaged in the Teche expedition, taking an active part in the engagements at Bisland and FrankUn. The expedition proceeded to Alexandria, La., and then to Port Hudson, where it was actively emploj'ed in scouting and foraging. On the 20th of June it was sent with other regiments to protect a forage train between Clinton and Jackson, La. The}' were attacked by a large force, composed of infantry, cavalry and artiller}'. Colonel Corliss of the Second was in advance, and held the enemy in check while he sent three times for the artillery to come up. He then went and brought it up himself, and used it with such effect as to result in killing one and wounding seven. Four prisoners were also captured. At Springfield Landing the regiment lost one man killed, four wounded, and thirteen prisoners taken. At Brashear City the rebels captured Major Anthony of the Second, and twenty of his men. The regiment became reduced in numbers by hardm arches and skirmishes, so that in July, 1863, it was consolidated into one battalionof four companies, and united with the First Louisiana Cavalry. The officers retained were Cap- tains WilUam J. McCall, Henry C. Fitts, George W. Beach, E. A. Hardy ; First Lieutenants J. N. Whitney, Charles W. Turner, John D. Hanning, Walter M. Jackson, and Second Lieutenant Frank Hays. This battalion was afterwards united with the Third Rhode Island Cavalry at New Orleans, the names of its members from this town appearing in the Third Rhode Island Cavalry list, page 118. Nearly all the Douglas men in this regiment were enlisted by Captain Henry C. Fitts, who was also a resident of Douglas. Captain Fitts was a thorough soldier, early evincing a fondness for military pursuits, entering the service when quite young. After one term of service as a musician he was commissioned a Captain in the Second Rhode Island Cavalry, remaining in that position until his death, which occurred Dec. 19, 1864, at Donaldsonville, La. Through all the excitement and danger incident to the cavalry service, he showed his efficiency as a commander, was ever ready to lead and prompt to act, yet cared for the interests of his men, and never exposed them to needless danger. He had, to a re- APPENDIX. 357 markable degree, the respect and good wishes of both officers and men. His fine social qualities and generous nature made him exceedingly popular with all who knew him, and his unexpected decease, after a brief illness, carried sadness to many hearts. No officer in the regiment could have been more sincerel}- mourned or more affectionatel}- remembered. The following were the casualties to Douglas men : Joseph Hough, captured while bearing dispatches, afterwards paroled and returned home. Daniel E. Gould, captured while on a scout- ing expedition, and died from exposure. David L. Thomas was captured while on a skirmishing expedition ; after five months in rebel prisons was exchanged and returned home. His name should appear in the list on page 118. William H. Wilcox, Thomas Magee, and Eugene H. Gould served until the expiration of their term of enlistments, were discharged, and while returning home were lost on the steamer "North America," which was wrecked off the coast of Cape Hatteras, and all on board perished. THIRD REGIMENT RHODE ISLAND CAVALRY was recruited at Providence. Enlistments commenced as early as July, 1863. A camp was first established at Mashapaug, but in August the recruits were transferred to "Camp Meade," on Conanicut Island. On the 24th of December 376 men had been enlisted. In the latter part of December embarked for New Or- leans to join the forces of General Banks. SEVENTH SQUADRON RHODE ISLAND CAVALRY was composed of 165 men, enlisted for three months' service in the early part of the war. It was composed of a companj^ re- cruited from Dartmouth College and Norwich University, and one company enlisted in Providence and left the State June 28, 1862. Its principal sei'vice was reconnoitering and scout duty in the vicinity of Winchester and Harper's Feny. It was mustered out of the service Sept. 28, 1862, at Providence. The names of George Packard and Charles A. Phillips should appear in the list of Seventh Rhode Island Cavalrymen from Doug- las, page 118. 358 HISTORY OF DOUGLAS. THIRD REGIMENT RHODE ISLAND HEAVY ARTILLERY. Four Douglas men served in this regiment, enlisting in Septem- ber, 1861. The last three in the list — Cyrus, George and James Jepherson — were brothers. George Jepherson died at McDougal Hospital in New York, and Corporal Peter Balcome was wounded at the battle of James Island June 16, 1862. THIRTEENTH, EIGHTEENTH, AND TWENTY-SIXTH CONNECTICUT VOL- UNTEERS. Newell J. Lee was a Sergeant in the Thirteenth Connecticut, enlisting from the town of Putnam. He served four years, pro- cured an honorable discharge, and returned home ; afterwards died at the residence of Mr. Andrew Wallis, in East Douglas, and was buried in Evergreen Cemeteiy. Walter Ward enlisted from Thompson, Conn., in the Eighteenth Regiment Connecticut Volunteers ; at the expiration of his term of service was honorably discharged, returned home, and is still living. Myron Starrett, son of Mrs. Adaline Starrett, enlisted in the Twent3'-sixth Connecticut regiment from the city of Norwich. On the first day's battle at Port Hudson, Ma}" 27, 1863, he was re- ported missing, and nothing further was learned b}' his friends regarding his fate until the return of his regiment at the close of the war. The Captain of his company and the Colonel of the regiment both witnessed his braveiy during the action, and made the following statement, which establishes beyond doubt the fact of his death at that time : Before going into the fight a call was made for volunteer sharp-shooters, and MjTon Starrett was of the number who responded, and at the close of the unsuccessful charge on the enemy's works was the only man in the regiment not ac- counted for. Upon the surrender of Port Hudson, a few da3's after, it was ascertained from rebel officers that on the evening of the 27th, after the engagement was ended, they took several wounded men into the fort, and among the number was one of the Twenty-sixth Connecticut men, who was wounded above the hip, died before morning, and was buried inside the fort. APPENDIX. 359 ENGINEER, SIGNAL AND VETERAN RESERVE CORPS. The men whose names are recorded in these branches of the service were nearl}' all non-residents, who enlisted upon the quota of Douglas. UNITED STATES NAVY, ETC. James Wilson, the first man to enlist in the United States Navy on the quota of Douglas, was mustered into the service June 19, 1864, Edgar P. Barton Jul}' 16, 1864, and John Norton Sept. 2, 1864. James L. Mannahan, a native of Douglas, also enlisted in the navy, but was not credited on the Douglas quota. Henry Hutchins served in the Fifth Maine regiment, afterwards in the Fourteenth Maine. Charles A. Andrews, Sergeant in the Eleventh Massachusetts Volunteers, was a resident of Douglas, although credited to the city of Boston. Capt. George H. Amidon, of the Fourth Vermont Volunteers, was a son of William B. Amidon of Douglas. Captain Amidon was a promising young officer, a true patriot and brave soldier. At the battle of the Wilderness, while leading his men, he was severely wounded in the thigh, and was obliged to return home. On partially recovering he returned to his regiment, and at Cedar Creek, Oct. 17, 1864, was again severely' wounded in the thigh, and died. His sufferings, although very great, were borne with remarkable firmness and fortitude. It was pureh* for the love of his countiy that he had enlisted in its service, and his life was oflfered a willing sacrifice in its defense.