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man Shaw. Sworn to before James Axey church, Roxbury, 1665; Mendon, 1672. commissioner of Lyn.

Mr. Christopher Batt of Boston, tanner, conveyed to Sam: ffellowes of Salisbury, weaver, six acres of meadow in Salisbury, bounded by Jno. Rolfe, Jn°. Dickison, great neck, william Allin and Joseph ffrench, 22 8: 1657. Wit: Christopher Batt, jun. Ack. by grantor and his wife Ann before Tho: Bradbury, commissioner of Salisbury, Oct. 22, 1657.

To be continued.

QUERIES.

Queries are inserted for one cent a word. Answers are solicited.

W. P.

124. Wanted, parentage of Sarah (?), wife of Caleb Lufkin of Gloucester, 1757. Wenham. 125. CORNING. Wanted, the lineage of Hannah Corning, wife of Benjamin Edwards, about 1785. COLE. Lineage of Jonathan Cole and wife, Miriam Hoskins, 1722; also of Samuel Cole of Beverly, who married Abigail Morgan. MORGAN. Lineage of Abigail, possibly daughter of Capt. William Morgan. EDWARDS. Lineage of Benjamin Edwards, probably of Salem, 1650. EATON. Ancestry of Hannah Eaton, who married Caleb Allen, son of Edward, of Ipswich. ELDREDGE. Name and lineage of wife of Elisha Eldred, Sr., who died in Wellfleet, 1739. HOPKINSON. Name and lineage of wife of Michael Hopkinson of Rowley, 1640. WISE. Lineage of Sarah Wise, wife of David Wheeler. WHEELER. Lineage of David Wheeler, Rowley or Newbury, about 1669. JOYCE. Lineage of Dorothy, wife of John Joyce, Yarmouth, 1666. WOOD. Lineage of Ann, widow of Theodore Price, Salem, who married Col. Dudley Bradstreet, 1702. MULFORD. Name of Hannah, wife of Thomas Mulford, Sr., Eastham, 1718. BLAKE. Lineage of George Blake and wife Dorothy of Gloucester, 1649. TYLER. Name and lineage of Mary, wife of Job Tyler, Andover; were members of Rev. John Elliot's

IRISH. Lineage of Perry Irish, enlisted in war of 1812 at Rensslaerville, N. Y.; married and died at Murray, Orleans county, N. Y., 1841. MRS. M. C. C.

276 Commonwealth ave., Boston.

126. Wanted, ancestry and place of birth of Henry Bodwell, Senior, who came to Newbury, Mass., previous to Aug. 5, 1675; married Bethia Emery of that town May 4, 1681; lived at the junction of the Merrimack and Spickett rivers (now in Lawrence, Mass.), 1693; and died June I, 1745, aet. 93. Lawrence.

A. E. B.

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8. Hephzibah Andrews, who married. Abraham How of Ipswich in 1712, and died there in 1753, was daughter of Joseph and Sarah (Perley) Andrews of Salem Village (Danvers), and was born in Rowley Village (Boxford). Joseph Andrews was son of Robert and Grace Andrews of Rowley Village, where Robert died May 29, 1668. His wife, Grace, died Dec. 25, 1702 (?). Joseph Andrews' wife, Sarah Perley, whom he married Feb. 1, 1681, was daughter of John Perley and Mary Howlett, his wife, of Rowley Village, and was born about 1662. John Perley was son of the immigrant Allan Perley and Susanna Bokenson, his wife, and was born in 1636, dying Dec. 15, 1729, aged ninety-three. His wife, Mary Howlett, was daughter of Thomas and Rebecca Howlett of Ipswich, and she died in Boxford Oct. 21, 1718.—Ed.

35.

The name of Pottle is found in the town records of Methuen, Mass.A. E. B.

89. Peter Garland', mariner, born in England, resided at Charlestown, Mass., where he was admitted an inhabitant in

1637, with seventeen others, including John Harvard, founder of Harvard college. He died in the South while on a voyage. By his wife Elizabeth (who died in 1687, aged eighty-eight), he had a son John2, born before 1622, who settled in Hampton before 1653, owning land in Exeter in 1650. He died Jan. 4, 1672. By his second wife, Elizabeth, widow of Thomas Chase, and daughter of Thomas and Ann (Knapp) Philbrick, whom he married in 1654, John Garland2 had a son John3, born March 11, 1655. John Garland3 lived in Hampton; was a representative to the General Assembly in 1693; and died after 1715. By his first wife, Elizabeth Robinson (born in 1653, and died April 15, 1715), whom he married Dec. 24, 1673, he had a daughter, Mary+, born March 14, 1683. She married Israel Clifford, and resided in Hampton.-Sarah L. Kimball, San Francisco, Cal.

93. See answer to 8 above.

106. Lydia Webster5, wife of Samuel Haseltine of Haverhill, was born Nov. 4, 1727, and married Mr. Haseltine in April, 1749. She was daughter of Samuel Webster4 and Abigail Marsh, who were married Nov. 14, 1726. Samuel Webster4, born Dec. 15, 1701, was son of Stephen Webster3 and Mary (Goodwin) Cook, who were married Oct. 23, 1700. Stephen Webster3, born Jan. 1, 1672, and died March 8, 1748-9, was son of Stephen Webster and Hannah Ayer, who were married March 24, 1662-3. Stephen Webster, born in 1637, was son of John1 and Mary (Shatswell) Webster.-Charles F. Haseltine, Philadelphia, Pa.

109. Rachel Mitchell, who married William Whittier, was a daughter of An

drew Mitchell of Haverhill. Wyman's Charlestown says that Andrew Mitchell married Abigail Atwood Nov. 12, 1686, and was probably a son of Thomas Mitchell and Mary Moulton, who were married in October, 1655. Abigail Atwood, born in December, 1662, was a daughter of Philip Atwood (born in 1620, and came to Charlestown in 1635) and Rachel Bachelder. Rachel (born about 1639, and died Feb. 5, 1673-4) was a daughter of William (born 1597; came to Charlestown in 1634; and died Feb. 20, 1669) and Rachel (born in 1603; came to Charlestown in 1634; and died May 28, 1676) Bachelder, who were married in 1633. Thomas Mitchell was born in 1628; came to Malden in 1635; was at Pemaquid in 1675; and died Sept. 1, 1709. Mary Moulton, born in 1636, and died Jan. 7, 1711-2, was daughter of Thomas Moulton (who came to Charlestown in 1631, and died Oct. 24, 1657) and Jane, his wife, who came to Charlestown in 1631, and was alive in 1682, being bedridden.—Mrs. E. G. Rice, Brookline.

122. Edward A. Hammond left no living children.-Myra L. White, Haverhill.

descendants are the family of Mrs. Fair123. Nathaniel O. Hammond's only bairn of East Cambridge.-M. L. White,

Haverhill.

NEW PUBLICATIONS.

THE "OLD NORTHWEST " GENEALOGICAL QUARTERLY is the title of a magazine. to be published at Columbus, O., commencing January 1st, by the "Old Northwest" Genealogical Society.

THE BEGINNING, PROGRESS AND CONCLUSION OF BACON'S REBELLION IN VIRGINIA, IN THE YEARS 1675 AND 1676. This is the title of the tract issued in reprint by George P. Humphrey, Rochester, N. Y., as the December number of the American Colonial Tracts.

GENEALOGICAL

MADE BY FRANK A. HUTCHINSON,

Roger's Building, Room 3,

209 WASHINGTON STREET, BOSTON, MASS.

RESEARCHES

LUCY HALL GREENLAW, Genealogist.

Gordon Place, Cambridgeport, Mass.

The Family of Zaccheus Gould. By Dr. B. Preserve Your Ancient Records. A. Gould. 2 plates and map; large 8vo; cloth; 354 pages. Lynn, 1895. Price, $5. This gives the ancestry of Zaccheus Gould, who came to New England about 1638, and eight generations of his descendants of the name.

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Have you seen the Emery silk tissue process? Read what Hon. Robert T. Swan, Commissioner of Records, State of Mass., says of it in his 8th and 9th reports.

SPECIMENS OF MY WORK AT
City Hall.
State House.

Boston, Boston,

Newbury, Beverly,

Springfield, Reg. of Deeds.

Harwich,

Groton,

Town Clerk.

Taunton,

Town Clerk. City Hall.

Town Clerk.

Newport, R. I., Hist. Society.

City Hall. Cambridge, Clerk of Courts. And many other cities and towns.

Family papers and rare books repaired and carefully bound. Write for samples and information. F. W. R. EMERY, TAUNTON, MASS.

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The "Old Northwest " Genealogical Quarterly.

On January 1, 1898, The "Old Northwest " Genealogical Society will commence the publication of a magazine bearing the above name. Its field is vast, as there is no magazine devoted to Genealogy now published west of the Atlantic States.

Two Dollars a year. Single numbers, 50 cents.

Advertisements, pertaining to Genealogy, will be inserted at reasonable rates.
Address,

Dr. L. C. HERRICK, Secretary,

1447 Highland St., Columbus, Ohio.

The New England

Historical and Genealogical Register

contains a variety of valuable and interesting matter concerning the History, Antiquities, Genealogy and Biography of America. It was commenced in 1847 (vol. 51 begins January, 1897), and it is the oldest historical periodical now published in this country. It is issued quarterly (each number containing at least 96 octavo pages, with a portrait on steel) by the New England Historic Genealogical Society.

$3.00 PER ANNUM IN ADVANCE. SINGLE NUMBERS, 75 CENTS.

No library can afford to be without it, and every genealogist finds matter of interest

in each number.

Address,

B. B. TORREY, Treas., 18 Somerset St., Boston, Mass. Please mention The Antiquarian when writing to advertisers.

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