Beals -- Chloe, daughter of Jeremiah and Mary, Feb. 2, 1739-40.
~ Vital Records, Abington, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, Vol. 1 - Births, 1912
Wednesday, August 7, 2019
Beals, Jeremiah - 1739
Beals -- Chloe, daughter of Jeremiah and Mary, Feb. 2, 1739-40.
~ Vital Records, Abington, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, Vol. 1 - Births, 1912
~ Vital Records, Abington, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, Vol. 1 - Births, 1912
Beals, Chloe - 1739
Beals -- Chloe, daughter of Jeremiah and Mary, Feb. 2, 1739-40.
~ Vital Records, Abington, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, Vol. 1 - Births, 1912
~ Vital Records, Abington, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, Vol. 1 - Births, 1912
Beals, Hannah - 1810
Beals -- Betsey Pratt, daughter of David and Hannah, Jan. 27, 1810.
~ Vital Records, Abington, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, Vol. 1 - Births, 1912
~ Vital Records, Abington, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, Vol. 1 - Births, 1912
Beals, David - 1810
Beals -- Betsey Pratt, daughter of David and Hannah, Jan. 27, 1810.
~ Vital Records, Abington, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, Vol. 1 - Births, 1912
~ Vital Records, Abington, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, Vol. 1 - Births, 1912
Beals, Betsey Pratt - 1810
Beals -- Betsey Pratt, daughter of David and Hannah, Jan. 27, 1810.
~ Vital Records, Abington, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, Vol. 1 - Births, 1912
~ Vital Records, Abington, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, Vol. 1 - Births, 1912
Hazen, W. E. - 1889
J. B. Watkins, C. A. Hill,
President
Vice Pres.
Paul R. Brooks, W. E. Hazen,
Cashier Ass’t
Cashier
Watkins National Bank
-----
Capital - - - - - - - - - - - - $150,000.
Surplus - - - - - - - - - - - - $7,000.
The best equipped and finest Banking House in the State.
We do a general Banking business.
We solicit your business and assure you fair and honorable treatment.
Savings Department.
“A thousand men win competence by quietly saving their spare money, where one gets rich by crazy speculation.”Deposits received in this department Thursdays and Fridays.
For the accommodation of our customers in the north part of the city, we have opened a branch at
729 Mass. St.
Next door to Jacob House’s clothing store.~ The Daily Record, 12-Sept-1889, Page 2, Column 6
Brooks, Paul - 1889
J. B. Watkins, C. A. Hill,
President
Vice Pres.
Paul R. Brooks, W. E. Hazen,
Cashier Ass’t
Cashier
Watkins National Bank
-----
Capital - - - - - - - - - - - - $150,000.
Surplus - - - - - - - - - - - - $7,000.
The best equipped and finest Banking House in the State.
We do a general Banking business.
We solicit your business and assure you fair and honorable treatment.
Savings Department.
“A thousand men win competence by quietly saving their spare money, where one gets rich by crazy speculation.”Deposits received in this department Thursdays and Fridays.
For the accommodation of our customers in the north part of the city, we have opened a branch at
729 Mass. St.
Next door to Jacob House’s clothing store.~ The Daily Record, 12-Sept-1889, Page 2, Column 6
Hill, C. A. - 1889
J. B. Watkins, C. A. Hill,
President
Vice Pres.
Paul R. Brooks, W. E. Hazen,
Cashier Ass’t
Cashier
Watkins National Bank
-----
Capital - - - - - - - - - - - - $150,000.
Surplus - - - - - - - - - - - - $7,000.
The best equipped and finest Banking House in the State.
We do a general Banking business.
We solicit your business and assure you fair and honorable treatment.
Savings Department.
“A thousand men win competence by quietly saving their spare money, where one gets rich by crazy speculation.”Deposits received in this department Thursdays and Fridays.
For the accommodation of our customers in the north part of the city, we have opened a branch at
729 Mass. St.
Next door to Jacob House’s clothing store.~ The Daily Record, 12-Sept-1889, Page 2, Column 6
Brown, S. A. - 1889
S. A. Brown & Co.
LUMBER.
Lawrence, - Kansas
~ The Daily Record, 12-Sept-1889, Page 2, Column 6
Charlton, John - 1889
John Charlton,
INSURANCE
Fire - Wind - Life.
718 Massachusetts St.
~ The Daily Record, 12-Sept-1889, Page 2, Column 6
Orr, William - 1889
Wm. Orr,
Real Estate, Loan and Renting
Correspondence solicited.
Office over Leis’ Drug Store.
Lawrence, - - - Kansas
~ The Daily Record, 12-Sept-1889, Page 2, Column 6
Leonard, O. P. - 1889
O. P. Leonard,
Fashionable Merchant Tailor
No. 733
Massachusetts Street.
~ The Daily Record, 12-Sept-1889, Page 2, Column 6
Hayne, H. W. - 1889
H. W. Hayne,
Watchmaker - and - Engraver
Strictly first class work.
823 - Massachusetts - Street.
~ The Daily Record, 12-Sept-1889, Page 2, Column 6
Gray, J. H. (Mrs.) - 1889
Mrs. J. H. Gray’s
Celebrated Yeast,
At the Ohio Grocery.
621 Mass. St., - - Lawrence, Kan.
~ The Daily Record, 12-Sept-1889, Page 2, Column 6
Phillips, E. D. F. - 1889
E. D. F. Phillips,
Physician & Surgeon
Office at
733 Massachusetts Street.
~ The Daily Record, 12-Sept-1889, Page 2, Column 6
May, V. W. - 1899
V. W. May,
Physician and Surgeon
Secretary of the Pension Board of Examiners.Office 723 Massachusetts Street.
~ The Daily Record, 12-Sept-1889, Page 2, Column 6
Cutcheon, Byron M. 1836-1908
Cutcheon, Byron M. (1836-1908)
Not joining the Union army as a subaltern until the summer of 1862, New Hamshire-born Byron M. Cutcheon rose to a brevet brigadier generalship and earned the Congressional Medal of Honor before resigning a month before Appomattox.
Graduating from college in 1861 he entered the army the next year, where his assignments included; second lieutenant, 20th Michigan (July 15, 1862); captain, 20th Michigan (August 16, 1862); major, 20th Michigan (October 14, 1862); lieutenant colonel, 20th Michigan (November 19, 1863); colonel, 20th Michigan (January 8, 1864); commanding 2nd Brigade, 1st Division 9th Corps, Army of the Potomac (October 16, 1864-March 10, 1865); and colonel, 27th Michigan (December 19, 1864).
Joining the Army of the Potomac a few days after the battle of Antietam, he fought at fredericksburg before going to Kentucky with the 9th Corps. There, on May 10, 1863, he led his regiment in a charge on an occupied house at Horseshoe Bend, and in 1891 he was awarded the medal for his gallantry. He took part in the fighting at Knoxville before returning to Virginia where he led his regiment through the Wilderness, Spotsylvania, and Petersburg, earning a brevet brigadier generalship.
During the siege winter he directed a brigade. Resigning on March 6, 1865, he was a lawyer, congressman, writer, and educator after the war.
~ Who Was Who in the Civil War, 1988
You can visit the memorial page for Byron Mac Cutcheon.
Not joining the Union army as a subaltern until the summer of 1862, New Hamshire-born Byron M. Cutcheon rose to a brevet brigadier generalship and earned the Congressional Medal of Honor before resigning a month before Appomattox.
Graduating from college in 1861 he entered the army the next year, where his assignments included; second lieutenant, 20th Michigan (July 15, 1862); captain, 20th Michigan (August 16, 1862); major, 20th Michigan (October 14, 1862); lieutenant colonel, 20th Michigan (November 19, 1863); colonel, 20th Michigan (January 8, 1864); commanding 2nd Brigade, 1st Division 9th Corps, Army of the Potomac (October 16, 1864-March 10, 1865); and colonel, 27th Michigan (December 19, 1864).
Joining the Army of the Potomac a few days after the battle of Antietam, he fought at fredericksburg before going to Kentucky with the 9th Corps. There, on May 10, 1863, he led his regiment in a charge on an occupied house at Horseshoe Bend, and in 1891 he was awarded the medal for his gallantry. He took part in the fighting at Knoxville before returning to Virginia where he led his regiment through the Wilderness, Spotsylvania, and Petersburg, earning a brevet brigadier generalship.
During the siege winter he directed a brigade. Resigning on March 6, 1865, he was a lawyer, congressman, writer, and educator after the war.
~ Who Was Who in the Civil War, 1988
You can visit the memorial page for Byron Mac Cutcheon.
Simmons, C. J. - 1889
N. & C. J. Simmons,
Physicians and Surgeons.
Office hours from 9 A. M. to 12 M. <sic>, and 1 to 5 P. M. Office 721 Massachusetts St. Residence 641 Ohio Street. Telephone 95.~ The Daily Record, 12-Sept-1889, Page 2, Column 6
Simmons, N. - 1889
N. & C. J. Simmons,
Physicians and Surgeons.
Office hours from 9 A. M. to 12 M. <sic>, and 1 to 5 P. M. Office 721 Massachusetts St. Residence 641 Ohio Street. Telephone 95.~ The Daily Record, 12-Sept-1889, Page 2, Column 6
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