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BOSTON  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 


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BOSTON 
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City  Document — Wo.  5. 

'  THE 

FOURTEENTH 

ANNUAL  REPORT 

OF   THE 

Committee  011  %ttiiMU 

ON   THE 

RECEIPTS  AND  EXPENDITURES 


OF    THE 


CITY  OF  ROXBURY 


FOR   THE 


ROXBURY: 
JOHN     M.     HEWES,     PRINTER, 

1860. 


c;iti[  nf  EDiburti. 


In  Board  of  Aldekmen,  March  5,  1860. 

Ordered,  That  twenty-six  hundred  copies  of  the  Annual  Report  of 
the  Receipts  and  Expenditures  of  the  City,  made  by  the  Committee  on 
Accounts,  with  such  other  documents  as  may  be  appended  thereto,  be 
printed  under  the  direction  of  the  Committee  on  Printing,  and  distributed 
among  the  inhabitants  of  the  City. 

Passed  and  sent  down  for  concurrence. 

JOSEPH  W.  TUCKER,  City  Cleric. 

In  Common  Council,  March  5,  1860. 

Concurred. 

FRANKLIN  WILLIAMS,  Clerk. 


REPORT 


OF  The 


COMMITTEE  ON  ACCOUNTS. 


The  Joint  Standing  Committee  on  Accounts  respectfully  sub- 
mit their  Fourteenth  Annual 


REPORT. 

In  accordance  with  the  provisions  of  the  City  Charter,  the 
Committee  have  prepared  and  herewith  submit  a  particular  ac- 
count of  the  Receipts  and  Expenditures  for  the  year  ending  Jan- 
uary 31,  1860,  and  also  a  schedule  of  the  City  Property.  The 
details  of  the  Expenditures  will  be  found  under  their  separate 
heads. 

The  amount  of  accounts,  claims  and  demands  allowed  by  them 
during  the  year  is  p89,506  59. 

There  was  remaining  in  the  Treasury,  Feb.  1, 

1859,  a  balance  of $22,991  95 

And  the  amount  received  for  the  year,  from  all 

sources,  as  per  account  of  the  Treasuer,  is         .      395,388  76 

Making  a  total  of       .         .    $418,380  71 


Of  this  sum  there  was  received  : — 

From  Taxes  assessed  in  1859,         .  $188,369  04 
"     Town  of  West  Roxbury,  for 
its  proportion  of  State  and 
County  Taxes,  .         .  5,809  25 

"     Loans  authorized,  .         .      179,000  00 

"     Commonwealth     and      other 
sources,   for    Pauper   Ac- 
count, ...  827  46 
"     Income  from  City  Property, 
rents  of  wharf,  houses,  &c., 
"     Sales  of  Munroe  land, 
"     Sales  of  Stony  Brook  land,    . 
"     Sales  of  Brook  Farm  land,     . 
"     Sale  of  land  Marcella  Street, 
"     Joseph  W.  Tucker,  for  fees, 
"     Joseph  W.  Tucker,  for  Dog 

licenses, 
"     Benjamin   Meriam,   for  fines 

and  fees, 
"     Peter  S.  Wheelock,  for  fines 

and  witness  fees, 
"     Peter  S.  Wheelock,  for  Po- 
lice Court  fees, 
"     Watering  Streets, 
"     T.  L.  D.  Perkins,  for  stone,  . 
"     William  B.  May,  for  sale  of 

Engine-House,  .         .  128  00 

"  Commonwealth  of  Massachu- 
setts, for  City's  proportion 
of  School  Fund,        .         .  859  74 

"  Commonwealth  of  Massachu- 
setts, for  pay  of  Militia  and 
rent  of  Armory,        .         .  475  00 


917 

83 

1,200 

20 

3,868 

61 

1,953  40 

660 

50 

235 

25 

1,110 

00 

600 

00 

2,838 

88 

1,872 

15 

1,147 

00 

26 

15 

Amount  carried  forward,         $391,798  46 


Amount  brought  forward, 
From  Sundry   persons,    for    edge- 
stone  on  Tremont  Street,     . 
"     Wentworth  &  Pierce,  for  loam, 
"     John   C.    Seaver,   for   house 

Union  Street, 
"     Samuel  Cook,  for  house  offal, 
"     Balance  onhand,  Feb.  1,1859, 


$391,798 

46 

414 

75 

30 
00 

2,450 

651 

22,991 

00 
00 
95 

$418,380 

71 

The  amount  of  Expenditures,  for  which  bills,  accounts  and  de- 
mands have  been  allowed  and  ordered  to  be  paid,  including  the 
payment  of  the  City  Debt,  is  $389,506  59. 

And  these  Expenditures  were  chargeable  to  the  following  appro- 
priations or  accounts,'  viz.  : — 
To  Schools,  for  Teachers'  salaries, 

fuel  and  contingencies,  .     $40,936  44 

"   B-oxbury  Grammar  School,  (for 

High  School  for  Boys,)         .  2,450  00 

"    Alteration  in  the  Comins  School- 
House,       ....  9,060  02 
Dearborn 


"   Alteration     in    the 

School-House, 
"    Support  of  Poor, 
"   House  OflFal, 
"   Pay  of  Firemen, 
"    Contingent  Expenses  of  the  Fire 

Department, 
"   New  Engine-House, 
"    Beservoirs,     . 
"   Highways,  Bridges  and   Side 

.  walks, 
"    Widening  Tremont  Street, 
"    Widening  Washington  Street, 
"    Widening  Vernon  Street, 


10,287  29 
8,352  82 
2,281  14 
8,481  75 

5,291  03 
1,700  00 
2,758  00 

38,493  13 
57,148  64 

4,814  74 
1,968  19 


Amount  carried  forward,         $190,023  19 


Amount  hrou^t  forward,  $190,02S  19 
To  Widening  Plymouth  Street,  .  9,862  39 
"  Constructing  Short  Street,  .  11,964  12 
"  Lamps,  .  .  .  .  10,617  58 
"  Watch  and  PoHce,  .  -  16,502  55 
"  PoUce  Court,  .  .  .  2,095  81 
"  Grading  Aims-House  land,  .  1,894  27 
"  Salaries  of  Citj  Officers,  .  6,600  00 
"  City  Debt  and  Interest,  .  67,358  55 
"  Land  of  Charles  M.  Ellis,  .  12,120  39 
"  Sewer,  Fellowes  Street,  .  .  3,368  14 
"  Sewer,  Plymouth  Street,  .  6,651  51 
"  Sewer,  Davis  Street,  .  .  4,016  39 
"  Surveying  for  Sewers,  .  .  2,086  85 
"  Grading  and  fencing  Highland  Park,  1,152  00 
"  Militia,  .  .  .  .  "442  50 
"  County  Tax,  .  .  .  13,979  45 
"  State  Tax,  ....  6,609  00 
"  Discount  on  Taxes,  .  .  6,081  54 
"  Abatement  of  Taxes,  .  .  2,208  46 
"  Contingent  Expenses  and  Mis- 
cellaneous Claims,        .  .  9,971  90 


$389,506  59 
Showing  a  balance,  and  remaining  in  the  Trea- 
sury,    . 28,874  12 

Making,     .         .         .  $418,380  71 

The  City  Debt  on  the  first  day  of  February,  1859, 

as  per  account  of  last  year,  was        .         .         .  $280,240  95 

Of  this  sum  there  has  been  paid  during  the  year, 

when  falling  due, 48,265  95 


$231,975  00 


And  this  sum  has  been  increased  by  loans  author- 
ized, for  renewal  of  a  portion  of  the  debt  and 
other  purposes, 179  000  00 

Making  the  total  City  Debt  at  this  time,        .         .  $410,975  00 


The  times  when  this  sum  becomes  payable,  may  be  seen  by 
referring  to  the  schedule  of  the  City  Debt,  accompanying  this 
Report. 


The  increase  of  the  City  Debt  has  been  caused  by  Appropriations 

for  the  following  objects,  viz. : — 

For  Charles  M.  Ellis's  land,  Shawmut  Avenue, 

.     $12,000  00 

"   Widening  Streets,        .... 

87,000  00 

"    Sewers,      .         .         .         . 

17,000  00 

"   Payment  of  City  Debt,          .... 

22,500  00 

"   Enlargement  of  Comins  and  Dearborn  School- 

Houses,          

7,000  00 

"   Repairs  of  Highways,           .... 

17,000  00 

"    Contingent  Expenses  of  Fire  Department, 

3,000  00 

"   Police, 

2,000  00 

"   Lamps,       .         , 

1,500  00 

"    Grading  Aims-House  land. 

2,000  00 

"    Contingent  Expenses  of  Schools,    . 

4,000  00 

"    Support  of  Poor,          .         .         . 

2,000  00 

"    General  Contingent  Expenses, 

2,000  00 

$179,000  00 

There  has  been  received  from  the  sales  of  land,  the  sum  of 
$7,582  71,  and  this  has  been  appropriated  towards  the  reduc- 
tion of  the  City  Debt,  in  conformity  to  a  vote  of  the  City  Council. 

There  remain  in  the  Treasury  the  notes  of  sundry  individuals, 
secured  by  mortgage,  of  $35,866  62,  which,  as  they  become 
due,  will  be  appropriated  to  the  liquidation  of  the  City  Debt,  as 
directed. 


By  law,  the  proceeds  of  sales  of  lots  or  rights  of  burial  in  the 
Cemetery  at  Forest  Hills,  are  yearly  paid  into  the  City  Treasury, 
and  kept  separate  from  all  other  funds  of  the  City,  and  subject  to 
the  order  of  the  Commissioners,  to  be  applied  by  them  in  the 


manner  provided  by  law.  For  further  details  concerning  the 
aiFairs  of  the  Cemetery,  reference  may  be  made  to  the  Annual 
Report  of  the  Commissioners,  -which  is  appended. 

The  amount  received  into  the  Treasury  from  Feb- 
ruary 1, 1859,  to  February  1, 1860,  from  sundry 
persons,  for  sales  and  grading  lots,  including 
balance  on  hand,  was      .....     $22,317  70 

And  the  amount  paid  upon  the  drafts  or  orders  of 

Commissioners  for  the  same  period  was      .         .       21,079  29 

Leaving  a  balance  in  the  Treasury,  Feb.  1, 1860,  $1,238  41 
The  Cemetery  Debt,  Feb.  1,  1859,  was  .  .  $13,000  00 
Of  which  there  has  been  paid  during  the  year,       .  2,000  00 

Reducing  the  debt  to    .         .         .     $11,000  00 

Annexed  are  statements  of  the  unexpended  balances  of  the 
appropriations  of  the  previous  year,  and  the  appropriations  and 
transfers  of  1859  ; — the  details  of  the  expenditures  under  their 
appropriate  heads, — and  the  present  balances  of  each  appropri- 
ation,— a  schedule  of  the  City  Debt, — and  a  schedule  of  the  Real 
and  Personal  Property  of  the  City. 

There  will  be  found  appended : — 

Report  of  the  Overseers  of  the  Poor,  including  Reports  of  the 
Superintendent  and  Physician  to  the  Almshouse  ; 

Report  of  the  Commissioners  of  the  Cemetery  at  Forest  Hills ; 

Report  of  the  Commissioner  of  Streets  ; 

Report  of  the  City  Registrar, — Tabular  Statement  of  Births, 
Marriages  and  Deaths, — Mortuary  Statistics  ; 

Report  of  the  Chief  Engineer  of  the  Fire  Department. 

All  of  which  is  respectfully  submitted. 

JOHN  C.  CLAPP, 

ALONZO  W.  FOLSOM, 

B.  F.  CAMPBELL,  I  ^Xf 1. 

GEO.  B.  FAUNCE, 

CHARLES  D,  SWAIN,     . 

Hoxbury,  February  28,  18G0. 


APPROPRIATIONS  m  EXPENDITLiRES. 


The  Appropriations  made  by  the  City  Council  for  different  purposes  in 
1859,  with  the  unexpended  balances  of  the  previous  year,  the  transfers  from 
one  appropriation  to  another ;  together  with  the  Expenditures,  in  detail, 
under  each  appropriation,  and  the  unexpended  balances. 

The  Treasurer's  Account,  the  amount  of  the  City  Debt,  and  Forest  Hills 
Cemetery  Debt,  and  Schedules  of  Real  and  Personal  Property  belonging 
to  the  City. 


PUBLIC    SCHOOLS. 

Balance  undrawn,  Feb.  1,  1859, $8,677  85 

APPROPRIATIONS,    40,750  00 

for  fuel, 2,000  00 


)  1,42 7  85 


EXPENDITURES. 

HIGH   SCHOOL. 

(for  girls.) 
Paid  for  INSTRUCTION— 

To  Robert  Bickford,  Principal- 


Elizabeth  C.  Babcock,  Assistant 


.$1,600  00 
•  •     500  00 


$2,100  00 


Note.     The  contingent  expenses  of  this  school  appear 
in  the  account  of  the  Dudley  School. 

DUDLEY  SCHOOL. 

Paid  for  INSTRUCTION— 
To  Adeline  Seaver,  Principal 

"  Isabella  H.  Wilson,      Assistant 
"  Sarah  J.  Leavitt,  " 

"  Ellen  A.  Marean,  " 

"  Clara  B.  Tucker,  " 

"  Caroline  J.  Nash'  " 

"  Clementine  B.  Thompson  " 
"  Helen  J.  Otis,  " 

"  Mary  G.  Hewes  " 

"  Emmie  C.  Allen,  " 

"  Caroline  Alden,  " 

$3,074   76 

Amount  carried  forward,  $5,174   76 


$700 

00 

208 

66 

350 

00 

243 

75 

325 

00 

243 

75 

243 

75 

325 

00 

206 

01 

141 

34 

87 

50 

10 


Amount  hrougJit  forward,  S5,174  76 

Paid  for  fuel- 
To  Jonathan  I.  Caldwell,  coal ^253  70 

"  Daniel  Tiffany,  charcoal 1453 

"  Chaffee  &  Cummings, "      13  67 

281   90 

Paid  for  SUNDEIES— 
To  Jonas  Pierce,  Jr.,  fires  and  care  of 

buidings 218  00 

"Horatio    G.    Simpson,    carpenter's 

work 60  61 

"  Johnson  &  Leavitt,  carpenter's  -work  28  07 

"  I.  &  H.  M.  Harmon,  mason's       "  2  78 

"  Nelson  Curtis,                 "              "  12  00 

"  Thomas  Hislan,  whitewashing 18  53 

"  Pillebrown  &  Holbrook,  stove  work  19  92 

"  Michael  Wrin,                      "          "  3  80 
"  B.  F.  &  G.  H.  Wiggin,  painting  and 

glazing 22  62 

"   S.  G.  Brooks,  clocks-  •_ 54  00 

"  (Jeorge  Harlow,  repairing  clocks-  -  •  2  75 

"  W.  &  A.  Bacon,  cloth 4  04 

"  John  M.  Whittemore  &  Co.,  books  34  21 

"  Charles  M.  Worthen,  cleaning 2  00 

»  Bell  &  Bailey,  carting 1   25 

"  Nelson  Worthen,  rent  of  room 52  47 

"  Nelson  Curtis,  rent  of  Octagon  Hall  236  80 

773  85 


,230  51 


WASHINGTON  SCHOOL. 

Paid  for  INSTRUCTION— 

To  John  Kneeland,  Principal 1,400  00 

"  John  F.  Patten,         Assistant 223  91 

"  Harriet  E.  Burrell,          "        387  50 

«  Anna  M.  Williams,          "        343  75 

"  Alice  C.Pierce,               "        162  50 

"  Sarah  M.Vose,                "        162  50 

«  Caroline  C.  Drown,          "         325  00 

"  Esther  M.  Nickerson,      "         162  50 

"  Rebecca  A.  Jordan,        "        325  00 

"  Juliette  Dickerman,         "         162  50 

"  Martha  M.  Damon,          "        55  64 

«  Delia  Mansfield,               "        200  00 

"  Frances  Farnum,             "        25  00 

Paid  for  FUEL— 

To  Jonathan  I.  Caldwell,  coal 183  43 

"  Daniel  Tiffany,  charcoal 12   76 

«  Chaffee  &  Cummings  "    12  33 


Amount  carried  forward, 


3,935  80 


208  52 


l=,144  32        $6,230  51 


11 


Amount  irovght  forward, 
Paid  for  SUNDRIES— 
To  Jonas  Pierce,  Jr.,  fires  and  care  of 

building   

"  Horatio  Simpson,  carpenter's  wor 

"  John  M.  Marston,  " 

"  Alonzo  W.  Folsom,  " 

"  True  Russell,  " 

"  Richard  Garvey,  mason's  work 

"  Joseph  D.  Brown,  " 

"  I.  &  H.  M.  Harmon,       " 

"  Thomas  Parker,  " 

"  Nelson  Curtis,  " 

"  B.  F.  &  G.  H.  Wiggin,  glazing 

"  G.  H.  &  W.  J.  Keefe,  painting 

"  L.  Herman,  furnace  work 

"  Calvin  Bird  &  Co.,  "         

"  Fillebrown   &   Holbrook,    furnace 

work 

"  Reuben  Weeks,  blacksmith  work 
"  John  Bowdlear,  repairs  on  pump 

"  J.  S.  Waterman,  repairs 

"  William   G.   Shattuck,   desks   and 

seats 

"  David  P.  Davis,  clocks 

"  Juliette  Dickerman,  sweeping-  •  •  • 
"  Wentworth  &  Pierce,  carting  •  •  •  • 
"  Crosby  &  Nichols,  books 


$4,144  32 

173 

50 

31 

37 

7 

64 

549 

75 

23 

17 

4 

00 

4 

00 

21 

32 

163 

58 

24 

30 

6 

51 

23 

00 

38 

03 

26 

20 

31 

87 

4 

75 

10 

25 

2 

47 

829 

29 

48 

00 

7 

50 

8 

50 

25 

33 

2.064  33 

5,230  51 


5,208  65 


DEARBORN  SCHOOL. 


Paid  for  INSTRUCTION— 


To  William  H.  Long,  Principal 
"  Louisa  E.  Harris,  Assistant  • 
"  Ruth  P.  Stockbridge, 
"  Plooma  A.  Savage, 
"  Henrietta  M.  Young, 
"  Louisa  J.  Fisher, 
"  J.  Ellen  Horton, 
"  Ellen  A.  Marean, 
"  Caroline  J.  Nash, 
"  Clementine  B.  Thompson,  Ass't 
"  Mary  G.  Hewes,  " 

Paid  for  fuel- 
To  Jonathan  L  Caldwell,  coal 

"  Daniel  Tiffany,  charcoal 

"  Chaffee  &  Cummings,  charcoal- 


Amount  carried  forward. 


1,400 

00 

375 

00 

350 

00 

325 

00 

325 

00 

325 

00 

325 

00 

87 

50 

81 

25 

81 

25 

81 

25 

202 

77 

16 

40 

4 

00 

3,756  25 


223  17 


},979  42      $12,439  16 


12 


Amount  hrouglit  forward, 
Paid  for  SUNDRIES— 
To  Jonas  Pierce,  Jr.,  fires  and  care  of 

building 

"  Jolin  Gilbert,  carpenter's  work-  •  • 
"  I.  &  H.  M.  Harmon,  mason's  "  •  •  • 
"  Solomon  Sanborn,  "       "... 

"  Jonas  Pierce,  Jr.,  paid  for  whitening 
"  Fillebrown    &   Holbrook,   furnace 

work 

"  John  Bowdlear,  repairs  on  pump 

"  William  G.  Shattuck,  seats 

"  Jonas  Pierce,  Jr.,  gravel 

"  Wentworth  &  Pierce,  gravel 

"  Thomas  Dolan,  grading  street-  -  •  • 

"  S.  (i.  Brooks,  clocks 

"  Hunneman  &  Co.,  bell 

"  Green  &  Tileston,  brooms,  mats,  &c. 
"  Charles  E.  Tileston, 


5,979  42     $12,439   16 


174  00 

111  56 

4  88 

6  00 

16  50 

10  31 

31  50 

100  15 

33  25 

14  20 

450  00 

14  25 

6  65 

5  50 

18  50 

997  25 

$4,976  67 

COMINS  SCHOOL. 


Paid  for  INSTRUCTION— 

To  Daniel  W.  Jones,  Principal,  four 

months, 

"  Sarah  A.  M.  Gushing,  Assistant 
"  Mary  C.  Eaton,  ' 

"  Elizabeth  W.  Young,  ' 

"  Almira  W.  Chamberline,     ' 
"  Elizabeth  A.  Morse,  ' 

"  Sarah  M.  Vose,  ' 

"  Alice  C.  Pierce,  ' 

"  Esther  M.  Nickerson,  ' 

"  Juliette  Dickerman,  ' 

"  Nancy  L.  Tucker,  ' 

"  Charlotte  P.  Williams,         ' 

Paid  for  FUEL— 

To  Jonathan  I.  Caldwell,  coal 

"  Daniel  Tiffany,  charcoal 

Paid  for  SUNDRIES—    " 
To  Jonas  Pierce,  Jr.,  fires  and  care  of 

building 

"  Horatio    G.    Simpson,    carpenter's 

work 

"  Johnson  &  Leavitt,  carpenter's  work 
"  John  W.  Marston,  "     -  • 

"  Otlio  K.  Reed,  "     -  - 

"  John  Y.  F.  Durgin,  "     •  • 

"  I.  &  H.  M.  Harmon,  "     -  - 

Amount  carried  forioard, 


400 

00 

700 

00 

350 

00 

325 

00 

325 

00 

325 

00 

162 

50 

175 

00 

162 

50 

162 

50 

162 

50 

81 

25 

Q  001   OK 

215 

56 

19 

00 

OQ/I  !^a 

216  50 


33 

00 

43 

58 

40 

96 

31 

35 

8 

02 

9 

55 

52  96     $3,565  81     $17,415  83 


13 

Amount  brought  forward,     S382  96      $3,565  81    $17,415  83 

To  Richard  Garvey,  blackboards 37  50 

"  John  A.  Scott,  blacksmith's  work  •  •  3  28 

"  Hanson  &  Hale,  furnace  work-  •  •  •  3  85 

"  T.  D.  Mulrey,                  "         •  •  •  •  40  00 

"  Calvin  Bird  &  Co.,          "         13  54 

"  Chaffee  &  Cummings,     "          3  33 

"  Fillebrown  &  Holbrook,  "          2  18 

"  B.  F.  &  G.  H.  Wiggin,  glazing-  •  •  8  25 

"  Henry  E.  Taylor,  curtains 32  00 

"  Charles  A.  Beal,  furniture 19  75 

"  U.  T.  Brownell,  painting 8  00 

"  William  G.  Shattuck,   desks  and 

seats • 144  96 

"  James  H.  Wood,  wardrobes, 48  00 

"  S.  G.  Brooks,  clocks 90  00 

"  A.  I.  Cummings,  maps 5  00 

"  William  Seaver,  brooms  and  mats  47  43 

"  Wm.  H.  H.  Young,  cleaning  vault  8  00 

898  03        $4,463  84 

GRAMMAR  SCHOOL.    Francis  Street. 

Paid  for  INSTRUCTION— 

To  Sophronia  F.  Wright,  Principal $400  OP 

Note.     The  contingent  expenses  of  this   school 
appear  in  account  of  Primary  School,  No.  22. 

Paid  for  MUSIC  AND  DRAWING— 

Paid  for  INSTRUCTION— 

To  Charles  Butler,  teaching  music-  •  •         375  00 
"  Wm.  N.  Bartholomew,  drawing-  •         200  00 

$575  00 


Total  amount  of  expenses  for  High  and  Grammar 

Schools •  r  $22,854  67 


PRIMARY     SCHOOLS 

NUMBERS  1,  2,  3  and  4. 

Paid  to  Sarah  T.Jennison,  instruction,         300  00 
"     Eliza  Brown,  " 

"     Sarah  O.  Babcock,  " 

"     Sarah  H.  Hosmer,  " 

Paid  for  SUNDRIES— 

To  Jonathan  I.  Caldwell,  coal ■ 

"  Daniel  Tiffany,  charcoal 


300  00 
300  00 
300  00 

1,200  00 

99  93 
18  00 

Amount  carried  forward,        117  93         $1,200      $22,854  67 


14 


Amount  hrovgJit  forward, 
To  Ann  Collovan,  fires  and  sweeping 
"  Julia  Hurley,      "      "  "       -  • 

"  Wm.  Morse,  carpenter's  work 

"  John  Gilbert,  "  

"  Nelson  Curtis,  mason's  -work 

"  Fillebrown  &  Holbrook,  stove  work 
"  Calvin  Bird  &  Co.,  "     •  • 

"  B.  F.  &  G.  H.  Wiggin,  glazing-  •  • 

"  S.  G.  Brooks,  repairing  clock 

"  Balch  &  Son,  "         


Paid  to  Margaret  E.  Davis,  instruction 

"     Emma  C.  Wales,  " 

"     Maria  S.  Young,  " 

"     Mary  F.  Neal,  " 

"     Mary  L.  Walker,  " 

Paid  for  SUNDRIES— 

To  Jonathan  I.  Caldwell,  coal 

"  Daniel  Tiffany,  charcoal 

"  Lorenzo  Dow,  "         

"  Mrs.  Lang,  fires  and  sweeping-  •  •  • 

"  Wm.  Morse,  carpenter's  work 

"  John  Gilbert,  "        

"  Nelson  Curtis,  mason's  work 

"  Solomon  Sanborn,        "  

"  Fillebrown  &  Holbrook,  stove  work 
«  Calvin  Bird  &  Co.,  "     •  • 

"  B.  F.  &  G.  H.  Wiggin,  glazing-  •  • 

"  Ivory  Skillin,  painting 

"  Jonas  Pierce,  Jr.,  cleaning 

"  John  Bowdlear,  repairing  pump-  - 
"  William  G.  Shattuck,  seats 


117  93 

15  00 

43   70 

9  37 

7  28 
13  25 
5 
4 
1 


$1,200     $22,854  67 


37 
50 


75 

00 


INTERMEDIATE  and  NUMBERS  9,  10,  37  and  38 

Paid  to  Delia  Mansfield,  instruction  • 

"  Nancy  L.  Tucker,        " 

"  Harriet  H.  Fay,  " 

"  S.  L.  Durant, 

"  Anna  M.  Backup,         " 

"  Kate  F.  Mayall, 

"  Eliza  D.  Cole, 


Paid  for  SUNDRIES— 

To  Jonathan  I.  Caldwell,  coal- 

«'  Daniel  Tiffany,  charcoal  - 


7  and  8 

300 

00 

300 

00 

210 

58 

300 

00 

89 

42 

61 

85 

6 

33 

2 

00 

57 

99 

5 

00 

2 

00 

10 

25 

4 

00 

28 

69 

8 

57 

3 

00 

81 

00 

5 

00 

11 

58 

3 

75 

ERS 

9, 

200 

00 

162 

50 

75 

00 

300 

00 

225 

00 

103 

85 

103 

85 

92 

01 

11 

90 

221   03        $1,421  03 


1,200  00 


291  01        $1,491  01 


1,170  20 


Amount  carried  forward,     $103  91    $1,170  20     $25,766  71 


15 


Amount  brought  forward,  $103  91 

To  Chaffee  &  Cumminors,. charcoal-  •  •  •  3  34 
"  Jonas  Pierce,  Jr.,  fires  and  care  of 

building •  122  25 

"  Horatio    G.    Simpson,    carpenter's 

work 15  64 

"  William  Morse,  carpenter's  work- •  115  05 

"  John  M.  MarstOK,                 "         -  -  14  79 

"  I.  &  H.  M.  Harmon,   mason's  work  3  09 

"  B.  F.  &  G.  H.  Wiggin,  glazing 10  13 

"  James  McMann,  repairing  slates- •  9   70 

"  William.  G.  Shattuck,  seats 148  14 

"   S.  L.  Durant,  sweeping 10  00 

"  John  Murphy,  cleaning 1  00 

"  Eugene  Timmons,     "       100 

"  Kate  F.  Mayall,  sweeping •  187 

"  Eliza  D.  Cole,           "        1  87 


NUMBERS  11,  12, 
Paid  to  Sophia  L.  Stone,  instruction  •  • 
"     Sarah  C.  Field,  " 

"     Cornelia  J.  Bills,  " 

"  Charlotte  P.  Williams,  " 
"  Carrie  Y.  Jennison,  " 
"     Mary  C.  Williams,         " 

Paid  for  SUNDRIES— 

To  Jonathan  I.  Caldwell,  coal- • 

"  Daniel  Tiffany,  charcoal  ......... 

"  Jonas  Pierce,  Jr.,  fires  and  care  of 
building 

"  S.  L.  Stone,  paid  for  sweeping-  -  -  • 
"  John  M.  Marston,  carpenter's  work 
"  Horatio  G.  Simpson,  " 

"  Nelson  Curtis,  mason's  work 

"  Gardner  Chilson,  furnace  work  -  •  • 

"  Fillebrown  &  Holbrook,    " 

"  Fulton  Iron   Foundry,    conductor 

P'pe 

"  G.  H.  &  W.  J.  Keefe,  painting  -  -  • 
"  William  Seaver,  brooms  and  mats 
"  B.  F.  &  G.  H.  Wiggin,  glazing-  -  • 
"  S.  G.  Brooks,  repairing  clocks-  -  •  • 


Paid  to  Anne  M.  Backup,  instruction 
"     Clara  M.  Adams,  " 

"     Sarah  J.  Davis,  '' 

"     Anna  E.  Boynton,  " 


Si, 170  20     $25,766   71 


13  and  14. 

271 

16 

300 

00 

363 

36 

225 

00 

28 

84 

75 

00 

1 

69 

77 

3 

60 

135 

50 

20 

00 

8 

80 

2 

62 

5 

00 

16 

58 

3 

37 

18 

00 

229 

75 

17 

21 

2 

25 

2 

25 

and 

16. 

75 

00 

300 

00 

225 

00 

17 

25 

561   78        $1,731  93 


1,263  3it 


534  ^        Sl,?98  06 


617  25 


Amount  carried  forward^ 


$617   25      $29,296   75 


18 

94 

9 

00 

7 

00 

12 

50 

8 

58 

8 

10 

3 

29 

1 

25 

2 

66 

2 

75 

1 

00 

3 

68 

52 

02 

16 

Amount  broug Jit  fo7-wa7-d,  $617  25      $29,296   75 

Pciid  for  SUNDRIES—  '     . 

To  Jonathan  I.  Caldwell,  coal 

"  Daniel  Tiffany,  charcoal 

"  Jonas  Pierce,  Jr.,  paid  for  cleaning 
"  Anne   M.    Backup,  paid  for  fires 

and  sweeping 

"  Mrs.  Colton,  for  cleaning 

"  Mrs.  Kilroy,  for  fires  and  sweeping 
"  John  M.  Marston,  carpenter's  work 
"  Horatio  G.  Simpson,  " 

"  Otho  K.  Reed,  "     •  • 

"  Uriah  T.  Brownell,  glazing 

"  B.  F.  &  G.  H.  Wiggin,  "     

"  William  Seaver,  brooms  and  mats 

"  Wentworth  &  Pierce,  gravel 

130  77  $748  02 

NUMBER  17. 
Paid  to  Sarah  W.  Holbrook,  instruction  300  00 

Paid  for  SUNDRIES— 

To  Jonathan  I.  Caldwell,  coal 21  81 

"  Ann  Moore,  sweeping  and  making 

fires ^ 23  50 

"  John  M.  Marston,  carpenter's  work  12  85 

"  B.  F.  &  G.   H.  Wiggin,  painting 

house 73  00 

"  William  Seaver,  brooms-  •  • 1  89 

133  05  $433  05 

NUMBERS  18,  19,  31  and  33. 

Paid  to  Almira  B.  Russell,  instruction         225  00 
"     Caroline  Y.  Rice,  "  300  00 

"     Sarah  C.  Duncklee,         "  300  00 

"     Aseneth  Nichols,  "  300  00 

"     Mary  H.  Hicks,  "  75  00 

1,200  00 

Paid  for  SUNDRIES— 

To  Jonathan  I.  Caldwell,  coal 82  97 

"  Daniel  Tiffany,  charcoal 7  20 

"   Chaffee  &  Cummings,  charcoal  •  •  •  6  00 
"  Jonas  Pierce,  Jr.,  paid  for  cleaning 

and  fires  ■'■ 30  00 

"  Mrs.  Leonard,  sweeping 23  00 

"  Horatio    G.    Simpson,    carpenter's 

work 6  59 

"  John  M.  Marston,  carpenter's  work  5   13 

"  I.  &  H.  M.  Harmon,  mason's  Avork  1   84 
"  Fulton   Iron    Foundry,   conductor 

pipes 1 S  00 

Amount  carried  forward,      $180  73    $1,200  00     $30,477  82 


17 

Amount  brought  fononnl,  $180  73   $1,200  00     $30,477  82 

To  Flllebrown  &  Holbrook,  stove  work  51  28 

"  R.  G.  Gladston,                       "     ••  1   12 

"  B.  F.  &  G.  H.  Wiggin,  glazing-  •  •  7  50 
"  J.  I.  Caldwell,  paid  for  repairing 

pump •  •  •  150 

"  E.  Howard  &  Co.,  paid  for  repair- 
ing clocks 32  00 

"  William  Seaver,  brooms •  1  00 

275  13        $1,475  13 


NUMBERS  20  and  21. 

Paid  to  Mary  A.  Waldock,  instruction  300  00 

"     Anna  M.  Eaton,              "  300  00 

Paid  for  SUNDRIES— 

To  Jonathan  I.  Caldwell,  coal-  .•-.••  50  20 

"  Daniel  Tiffany,  charcoal 10  20 

"  Patrick  H.  Rogers,  carpenter's  work  98  46 

"  John  Y.  F.  Durgin,                "  17  27 

"  Joseph  Lewis,                           "  12  91 

"  J.  T.  Ellis  &  Co.,  lumber 60  70 

"  Fillebrown  &  Holbrook,  stove  work  4  25 

"  B.  F.  &  G.  H.  Wiggin,  glazing-  -  •  1  50 
"  Mary  A.  Waldock,  paid  for  fires 

and  sweeping 20  50 

"  Anna  M.  Eaton,  paid  for  fires  and 

sweeping  •  -  -  • 5  00 


600  09 


280  99  S880  99 


NUMBER  22. 
Paid  to  Elizabeth  Waldock,  instruction  300  00 

Paid  for  SUNDRIES— 

To  Jonathan  I.  Caldwell,  coal 13  57 

"  Daniel  Tiffany,  charcoal 7  70 

"  Jonas  Pierce,  Jr.,  paid  for  cleaning  5  00 

"  Sophronia  Wright,       "           "  5  00 
"  Elizabeth     Waldock,     fires     and 

sweeping  •  • 20  50 

"  Horatio   G.    Simpson,    carpenter's 

work 5  75 

"  John   Y.   F.   Durgin,    carpenter's 

work 3  15 

"  Otho  K.  Reed,  carpenter's  work-  •  7  69 

"  John  M.  Marston,                "  9  04 

"  Nelson  Curtis,  mason  work 3  00 

"  Richard  Garvey,  whitening 12  00 

"  Fillebrown  &  Holbrook,  stove  work  12  8.7 

"  B.  F.  &  G.  H.  Wiggin,  glazing  •  •  -  8  63 

"  Henry  R.  Taylor,  curtains :  2  13 


1^6  00  $416  00 


Amounl  carriptl  forirarrl^  $33,249  94 


600  00 


18 

Amount  hrouglit  forward,  S33,249  94 

NUMBERS  23  and  24. 
PaidtoHenriettaM.  Wood,  instruction        300  00 
"     Mary  A.  Morse,  "  300  00 

Paid  for  SUNDRIES— 

To  Jonathan  I.  Caldwell,  coal 38  12 

"  Daniel  Tiffany,  charcoal 12  53 

"  Jonas  Pierce,  Jr.,  paid  for  making 

fires  and  sweeping    28  00 

"  Horatio    G.    Simpson,    carpenter's 

work 3  50 

"  Joseph  D.  Brown,  -whitening 7  00 

"  Francis  Freeman,  brooms,  &c.-  •  ■  •  2  63 

91   78  S691   78 

NUMBER  25. 
Paid  to  Caroline  N.  Heath,  instruc- 
tion    300  00 

Paid  for  SUNDRIES— 

To  Jonathan  I.  Caldwell,  coal 44  30 

"  Caroline  N.  Heath,  paid  for  fires 

and  sweeping 13  83 

"  B.  F.  &  G.  H.  Wiggin,  glazing-  •  •  2  00 

"  John  Bowdlear,  repairing  pump>  •  17  80 

"  S.  G.  Brooks,  repairing  clock 1  25 

"  Jonas  Pierce,  Jr.,  setting  trees 2  50 


81  68  $381  68 


NUMBERS  26  and  27. 
Paid    to    M.    L.     Josephine     Perry, 

instruction 300  00 

"    Matilda  M.  Huchins,  instruc- 
tion    265  39 

"     Mary  G.  Hewes,  instruction  •  •  34  61 

Paid  for  SUNDRIES— 

To  Jonathan  I.  Caldwell,  coal 12  06 

"  Daniel  Tifiany,  charcoal 9  66 

"  David     Huntington,     carpenter's 

work 23  00 

<'  Daniel    W.    Glidden,    carpenter's 

work 35  83 

''  Horatio    G.    Simpson,   carpenter's 

work 3  12 

«'  John  M.  Marston,  carpenter's  work  6   25 

'*  Bridget  Cunniff,  fires  and  sweeping  25  00 

'*  Joseph  D.  Brown,  whitening 7  00 

»  B.  F.  &  G.  H.  Wiggin,  glazing-  •  •  4  04 

*'  G.  H.  &  W.  J.  Keefe,          "      •  •  •  2  64 

'^  Thonaas   Gannon,  removing  trees  19  38 


600  00 


147  98  S747  98 


Amount  carried  fonvard,  S35,071  38 


19 

Amount  hrougJit  forward,  S35,071  38 

NUMBER  28. 

Paid  to  Margaret  G.  Chenery,  instruc- 
tion           184  61 

"     Mary  H.  Hicks, instruction- ••  40  39 

"     Almira  B.  Russell,      "        •  •  •  75  00 

300  00 

Paid  for  SUNDRIES— 

To  Daniel  Tiffany,  charcoal 7  30 

"  Margaret    G.    Chenery,   paid    for 

fires  and  sweeping 613 

"  Mrs.  Caswell,  fires  and  sweeping  17  03 

"  Jonas  Pierce,  Jr.,  cleaning 2  00 

"  Horatio    G.    Simpson,   carpenter's 

work 10  50 

"  William  Morse,  carpenter's  work  5  00 
"  B.  F.  &  G.  H.   Wiggin,  painting 

and  glazing 11  50 

"  John  Bowdlear,  repairing  pump-  •  3  50 


62  96  $302  96 


NUMBERS  29  and  30. 

Paid  to  Sarah  A.  Dudley,  instruction  225  00 

"     H.  B.  Scammell,              "  300  00 

"     Anna  E.  Boynton,           »  75  00 

Paid  for  SUNDRIES— 

To  Jonathan  I.  Caldwell,  coal  •  - 20  60 

"  Daniel  Tiflfany,  charcoal 10  50 

"  H.  B.  Scammell,  paid  for  fires  and 

sweeping 17  29 

"  Mrs.  Mulvey,  fires  and  cleaning-  •  11   75 

"  John  Gilbert,  carpenter's  work-  -  •  3  67 

"  OthoK.  Reed,                   "         •-•  13  28 

"  George  Curtis,  lumber 30  94 

"  Richard  Garvey,  whitening 8  00 

"  B.  F.  &  G.  H.  Wiggin,   painting 

and  glazing •  11  63 

"  Calvin  Bird  &  Co.,  stove  work-  •  •  •  4  45 

"  Fillebrown  &Holbrook,  stove  work  32  35 


600  00 


NUMBERS  32  and  36. 

Paid  to  Frances  N.  Brooks,  instruction        300  00 
"     Maria  L.  Young,  "  89  42 


164  46  $764  46 


389  42 


Paid  for  SUNDRIES— 

To  Jonathan  I.  Caldwell,  coal 63  52 

"  Daniel  Tifiany,  charcoal 1060 


Amount  carried  forward,  74   12      $389  42      $3J,198  80 


20 

Amount  irmtgU  forward,  $7412        $-38942     $36,19880 

To  Chaffee  &  Cummings,  charcoal-  '  •  6   67 
"  Frances  N.  Brooks,  paid  for  sWeep- 

inw 8  25 

I  "  C.  B.  Thompson,  paid  for  sweeping  3   75 

"  Mrs.  Murray,  sweeping 2  50 

"  Jonas   Pierce,   paid   for   fires  and 

cleaning  '■■••■-. 61   08 

"  Otho  K.  Reed,  carpenter's  work-  -  36  08 
"  B.  r.  &   G.   H.  Wiggin,  painting 

and  glazing 11   63 

"  Calvin  Bird  &  Co.,  furnace  work-  •  8  75 

"  William  G.  Shattuck,  seats 63  66 


NUMBERS  34  and  35. 

Paid  to  Emily  W.  FillebrowHy  instruc- 
tion    250  00 

"     Martha  H.  Horn,  instruction- -  125  00 

Paid  for  SUNDRIES— 

To  Jonathan  I.  Caldwell,  coal •■  33  66 

"  Daniel  Tiffany,  charcoal 10  20 

"  Chaffee  &  Cummings,  charsoal-  -  ■  -  S  33 

"  Mrs.  Leonard,  fires  and  sweeping  12  00 
"  Emily    W.   Fiilebrown,    paid    for 

sv/eeping • 3  67 

"  Horatio    G.    Simpson,   carpenter's 

work 10  9G 

"  John  M.  Marston,  carpenter's  work  27  65 

"  Nelson  Curtis,  mason's  work 5  50 

"  Richard  Garvey,           "         10  75 

"  Jonas  Pierce,  Jr.,  gravel •  21  50 

"  Fillebrown  &  Holbrook,  stove  work  29  09 

"  William  Seaver,  brooms,  mats,  &c.  4  98 

"  S.  G.  Brooks,  clocks-  -.-■-. 10  00 


276  49  $665  91 


375  00 


183  29  $558  '2.9 


Total  amount  of  expenses  for  ^   <fti4  fjfs  V^ 
Primary  Schools.  ^  ' 


CONTINGENCIES. 

Paid  for  PRINTING,  STATIONERY  AND  BOOKS— 

To  Norfolk    County  Journal    Office, 

printing 530  71 

"  Worthington,     Flanders     &     Co., 

printing 75 


i7,423  00 


Amount  currkd  forward,      $531  46  $37,423  00 


21 


Amount  brought  forward,  $531  46 

To  .John  Backup,  books  and  stationery  948  18 

"  Dan  S.  Smalley,  books 3  50 

Paid  for   SERVICES    OF  SCHOOL  COM- 
MITTEE— 

To  Horatio  G.  Morse,  services 100  00 

"  George  Putnam,              "      50  00 

"  William  A.  Crafts,          "      65  00 

"  Ariel  I.  Cummings,         "     75  00 

"  Franklin  Williams,          "      50  00 

"  Joshua  Seaver,                "  and  Sec.  ]  75  00 

"  Ira  Allen,                         "      75  00 

"  Richard  Garvey,              "      50  00 

"  Timothy  R.  Nute,            "      75  00 

"  John  W.  Olmstead,         "      60  00 

"  Joseph  N.  Brewer,          "      50  00 

"  Robert  P.  Anderson,       "      75  00 

"  Edwin  Ray,                     "     75  00 


$37,423  00 


1,483  14 


Paid  for  SUNDRIES  not  otherwise  enumerated- 
To  Jonas  Pierce,  Jr.,  paid  for  clearing 

snow 108   75 

"  S.  B.  Pierce,  carting 22  25 

"  Arthur  Sumner,    "     4  50 

"   H.  H.  Miller,         "     2  00 

"  James  H.  Pratt,    "     2  62 

"  William  J.  Mathes,  horse  hire-  •  •  •  50 

"  John  J.  Merrill,                 "        10  00 

"  E.  T.  Northend,                 "        2  50 

"  Samuel  Walker  &  Co.,  trees 102  00 

"  James  Ruth,  setting  trees 9  00 

"  Thomas  Norton,        "         4  50 

"  Thomas  Harney,      "         4  50 

"  Jonas  Pierce,  Jr.,  loam  round  trees  31   87 

"  Chickering  &  Sons,  for  use  of  piano  6  00 

"  Oliver  DItson,              "               "  8  00 
•'  Joseph  Alford,  for  tuning           "        '        11  45 

"  Alexander  Stewart,  use  of  hall-  •  •  7  87 

"  Mechanics  Institute,  rent  of  hall-  •  30  00 

"  E.  W.  Noyes,  brooms,  mats,  &c.-  •  90  23 

"  Swain  &  Craft,       "           "      70  84 

"  William  Seaver,     "           "      20  34 

"  William  G.  Shattuck,  seats 23  7  14 

"  William  O.  Haskell,       "   52  50 

"  James  Staniels,                "   10  00 

"  Henry  Pratt,  repairing  locks 22  00 

"  F.  AV.  Fuller,  hardware 40  04 

"  S.  G.  Brooks,  clock  in  Committee 

room 23  25 

'•  Charles  A.  Beal,  furniture 10  42 

Amount  carried  forward,     $945  07 


975  00 


&2,45S   14      $37,423  00 


22 

Amount  brought  forward,     $945  07    $2,458  14     $37,423  00 

To  Robert  Ramsdell,  cloth 21  86 

"  William  M.  Maxwell,  skins 2  25 

"  George  B.  Cordwell,  alcohol 112 

"  Ebenezer    Chamberlin,   wheelbar- 
row   6  00 

"  T.  D.  Mulrey,  lining  stove 64  00 

"  M.  P.  Berry,  distributing  Reports  15  00 

1,055  30        $3,513  44 

Total  amount  of  expenses   for   High,   Grammar 

and  Primary  Schools,  with  contingencies $40,936  44 

Transferred  to  Contingent  Expenses,  1859-60-  •  •  1,453  69 


$42,390  13 


Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1860,  $9,037  72. 


ENLARGEMENT  OF  THE  COMINS  AND  DEAR- 
BORN SCHOOL-HOUSES. 


APPROPRIATION $12,000  00 

Additional 7,000  00 

Transferred  from  Contingent  Fund,  1859-60 347  31 


L9,347  31 


EXPENDITURES. 

DEARBORN   SCHOOL-HOUSE. 

To  Johnson  &  Leavitt,  (contract,) 6,704  17 

"  Lemuel  E.  Griffin,  driving  piles 399  23 

"  Daniel  Harrington,  stone 140  62 

"  James  Watson,  stone  work 145  00 

"  William  Morse,  preparing  foundation 194  65 

"  Henry  W.  Howard,  mason's  work 214  12 

"  Thomas  Dolan,  stone  work-  -  - 9  62 

"  Thomas  Gannon,  grading 433  11 

"  Ham  &  Leighton,  paving  stone 10  32 

"  Thomas  Parker,  plastering 26  25 

"  Uriah  T.  Brownell,  painting 45  25 

"  John  A.  Scott,  blacksmith's  work 21  90 

"  Swain  &  Craft,  drain  pipe • 19  04 

"  Gera  Farnum,  measuring  work •  -  • 1  50 

"  John  R.  Hall,  plan 35  00 

"  James  Carpenter  &  Co.,  furnace 250  00 

"  William  G.  Shattuck,  desks  and  seats-  -  • 793  51 

"  Lewis  F.  Whiting,  land 744  00 

"  Albert  Batchelder,  superintending 100  00 


10,287  29 


Amount  carried  forward,  $10,287  29 


23 

Amount  hrought  forivard,  $10,287  29 

COMINS   SCHOOL-HOUSE. 

To  Samuel  Felton,  contract,  &c. 7,425  24 

"  W.  &  W.  K.  White,  furnace 360  75 

"  Thomas  Hislan,  gradino; 68  44 

"  John  M.  Marston,  carpenter's  work 224  09 

"  Uriah  T.  Brownell,  painting 20  18 

"  Richard  Bond,  plan 35  00 

"  William  G.  Shattuck,  desks  and  seats 826  32 

"  Hartley  E.  Woodbridge,  superintending 100  00 

S9,060  02 


Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1860,  nothing. 


),347  31 


ROXBURY    GRAMMAR    SCHOOL 


FOR   HIGH   SCHOOL   FOK   BOYS. 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1859 500  00 

APPROPRIATION 2,600  00 

$3,100  00 

EXPENDITURES. 

To  James  Guild,  Treasurer $2,450  00 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1860,  $650  00. 


SUPPORT    OF   POOR. 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1859 1,650  17 

Received  of  Commonwealth,  for  Pauper  Account  120  00 
"        from  cities   and  towns,   for  support  of 

Paupers 657  46 

"        from  Ezra  Young,    Superintendent  of 

Alms-house 50  00 

APPROPRIATION 6,000  00 

Additional  Appropriation 2,000  00 

EXPENDITURES. 
Paid  for  SUPPLIES  FOR  THE  ALMS-HOUSE— 

To  Nelson  Worthen,  groceries 335  56 

"  Meserve  &  Faunce,       "       341  18 

"  Merwin  &  Co.,             "       •  • 65  57 

Amount  carried  forward,  $742  21 


$10,477  63 


24 


Amount  Irouglit  forward,  S742  21 

To  William  Hunter,  groceries 25  07 

"  G.  W.  &  H.  W.  Pierce,  meat 458  87 

"  Joseph  N.  Brewer,  flour 146  25 

"  Henry  Dudley,  srain 93  60 

"  Aaron  D.  Weld,''hay •_ 54  43 

"  Ezra  Young,  cash  paid  for  supplies 1,209  90 

"  W.  &  A.  Bacon,  dry  goods 226   71 

"  H.  S.  Lawrence,      clolhing 42   79 

"  Robert  W.  Molineux,    "       8  39 

"  Joseph  B.  Young,  shoes 119  58 

"  Phineas  Coburn,        "      2  50 

"  Allen  Putnam  &  Co.,  wood 107  88 

*'  Roxbury  Gas  Light  Co.,  gas 37  45 

"  J.  C.  Buchanan,  iron  bedsteads 30  00 

"  Reuben  Weeks,  blacksmith's  work 61   69 

"  Hiram  Carlton,  harness  work 27  62 

"  Ezra  Young,  Superintendent 500  00 

''  Mary  McCarty,  labor 104  00 

"  Joseph  H.  Streeter,  Physician 169  00 

"  Ira  Allen,  medicine 49  14 

"  Joshua  Scaver,  Secretary ■•  50  00 

"  Stillman  E.  Chubbuck  &  Son,  steam  heating 

apparatus 887  00 

«  E.  B.  Scott,  force  pump,  &c. 103  06 

"  Samuel  Felton,  mason's  work 26  37 

"  L  &  H.  M.  Harmon,      "          • 4  87 

"  George  Curtis,  lumber 119  ^1 

"  Thomas  S.  Hodge,  painting 38  41 

"  Ham  &  Leighton,  cement 19  60 

"  Pond  &  Duncklee,  stove  work 15  00 

"  A.  B.  Wilton,  cows 55  00 

"  W.  J.  Mathes,  horse  hire 1  50 


),527  60 


Paid   for   SUPPLIES    FOR    POOR   OUT   OF    THE 
ALMS-HOUSE  AND  FUEL— 

To  Jonathan  I.  Caldwell,  coal,  &c. 544  54 

»  Allen  Putnam  &  Co.,       "         353  24 

"  James  B.  Page,                 "         89  22 

"  James  E.  Adams  &  Co.,   "         43  00 

"  Edward  Preston  &  Co.,    "        16  00 

"  Joshua  Seaver,  supplies-  •  • 265  46 

'•           "         Agent 300  00 

"  Charles  W.  Newell,  groceries 21  00 

"  William  Seaver,              "         58  43 

<'  McElroy  &  Co.,               "          30  35 

"  Nelson  Worthen,             "         • 12  05 

"  George  F.  Joyce,            "         1  07 

"  John  C.  Seaver,  burials 56  50 

"  Nathaniel  Adams,  coffins 5  00 

<'  Joseph  S.  Waterman,  "    65  00 


Amount  carried  forward, 


$1,860  86        S5,527  60 


25 

Amount  hrougJit  forward,  $1,860  86       $5,527  60 

To  Norfolk  County  Journal,  printing 6   75 

"  William  N.  Felton,  making  fires 10  00 


Paid  to  other  Cities  and  Towns  for  SUPPORT  OF  POOR, 
AND  THE  STATE  LUNATIC  HOSPITAL— 

To  City  of  Boston 46  38 

"  City  of  Charlestown 55  25 

"  Town  of  Fitchburg 9  69 

"  John  W.  Thomas 8  71 

"  State  Lunatic  Hospital 816  75 

"  Morrill  P.  Berry,  conveyance  to    do.     10  83 


Balance  undrawn  February  1, 1860,  $1,361  21. 


HOUSE    OFFAL. 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1859 453  64 

TransferredfromContingent  Appropriation,  1858-59  274  14 

"  "  "  "  1859-60  1,000  00 

Received  of  Samuel  Cook,  for  offal 651  00 

EXPENDITURES. 

To  Miles  Sweeney,  collecting  offal 390  00 

"  Stephen  Edwards,              "        390  00 

"  John  Navin,                         "        342  00 

"  John  Carey,                         "        342  00 

"  Ezra  Young,  Superintendent 75  00 

"  Henry  Dudley,  grain 169  69 

"  Ezra  Young;,  cash  paid  for  hay 148  26 

"  Aaron  D.  Weld,  hay 16  38 

"  William  Banford,  horse 200  00 

"  Reuben  Weeks,  blacksmith's  work 90  53 

"  John  D.  Pierce,  wheelwright's  work 81   25 

"  Hiram  Carleton,  harness  work 5  50 

"  E.  A.  Hovey,                   "            1   95 

"  Thomas  Dolan,  paving  stone 15  60 

"  Gore,  Rose  &  Co.,  paving 12  98 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1860,  $97  64. 


L,877  61 


$947  61 


Total  Expenditure • $8,352  82 

Transferred  to  Contingent  Appropriation,  1859-60  763  60 


),116  42 


2,378   78 


$2,281   14 


26 

HIGHWAYS,    BRIDGES   AND  SIDEWALKS. 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1859 ^n?  nn 

Received  of  Edward  Bartlett 100  00 

"            Robert  W.  Molineux IdO  00 

"             Charles  D.  Swain 66  50 

"            James  W.  Gushing 75  00 

"            John  F.  Newton 77  00 

"            H.  S.  Lawrence 28  50 

"            Theodore  Otis 250  00 

"            Metropolitan  Railroad  Co. 400  00 

"            T.  L.  D.  Perkins,  stone 26   15 

Appropriation,  March,  1859 ;  ■  •  3,000  00 

Transferred     from     Contingent      Appropriation, 

1858—9 '^'"* 

APPROPRIATION 20,000  00 

Additional  appropriation ^^fi^^  00      ^^^  ^^^  ^^ 

EXPENDITURES. 

Paid  for  LABOR— 

To  Moses  H.  Libbey,  Commissioner 1,000  00 

"  Silman  Smith,                     labor          ^^l  Z. 

"  Charles  W.  Wood,                  "              420  00 

"  John  H.  Randall,                     "             S9b  66 

"  AVilliam  F.  Stevens,                "             ^tl  aa 

"   Samuel  A.  Howard,                "              383  00 

"  Patrick  Surplus,                      "             400  00 

"  Andrew  McGettrick,              "             ^^^  ^? 

"  Patrick  Dillon,                         ' 312  00 

"  Michael  McWeeney,              "             312  00 

"Robert  Bell,                             "              30825 

«  Thomas  M.  Cotton,                 "             300  00 

«  Francis  GiUagin,                      "             3  00 

"  Omar  Boynton,                        "              ;  • '  ^  J^t  ^^ 

"  Pay  Roll  of  labor  to  sundry  persons  for  services  8,8 JO  7^     ^,  „  ..„  .  q 

Paid  for  CARTING  GRAVEL  AND  STONE— 

To  Michael  Gately,        carting ^lHa 

"  Lawrence  Carnes,         "       38  bO 

"JohnCurley,                  "        18  40 

"  Thomas  Glennon,         "       2o7   /O 

»  James  Gray,                   "        17  80 

"  James  Graham,             "       „.„  ^a 

"   William  Burns,              "       252  50 

"JamesCarey,                 "       ^f  f 

"  Thomas  Dolan,              "       3,941   14 

"  James  Cusick,               " 12  33 

"  David  Cleary,                "       10  JO 

"   Aaron  D.  Williams,       "        26  00 

»  Lawrence  Watson,        "        :   .t 

»  James  Killian,                "        4  40 


Amount  carried  forward,  $5,666  95     S13,779  13 


27 


Amount  Irought  forward, 

To  Patrick  Cain,  carting 

"  Thomas  Gannon, 

"  Martin  Griffin, 

"  Thomas  Gallery, 

"  John  Good, 

"  Patrick  McGirl, 

"   Owen  Nawn, 

"  Patrick  Lynch, 

"  Michael  Fitzmorris, 

"  Ware,  Wentworth  &  Co.,  carting- 

"  Timothy  Murphy,  " 

"  Michael  Lalley,  " 

"  Wentworth  &  Pierce,  " 

"  George  Ramsay,  " 

"  Michael  Dolan,  " 

"  Phineas  B.  Smith,  " 

"  Malachi  Kelley,  " 

"  Peter  Dolan,  " 

"   William  Clark, 

"  Patrick  Fineran,  " 

"  Moses  Pike,  " 

"  William  Fineran,  " 

"  Jetl'rey  Holland,  " 

"   Charles  D.  Bickford,  " 

"  George  Coyle,  " 

"  Thomas  Grinham,  " 


Paid  for  GRAVEL  AND  STONE  CHIPS- 

To  Mrs.  C.  D.  Hancock,      gravel 

"  William  R.  Huston,  "       

"  Magnus  Lefstrum,  "       

"  Stephen  Baker,  "       

"  Thomas  Good,  "       

"  Edward  Crane,  "       

"  Samuel  G.  Reed,  "       

"  Metropolitan  Railroad,      "       

"  Daniel  Harrington,  stone  chips 

"  John  R.  Howard,  "  • 

"  George  Leonard  Jr.,         "  

"  Patrick  Kelley,  "  

"  Timothy  Gately,  "         


3,666  95 

3  17 
297  00 

8  20 

4  00 
27  60 

3  80 
214  00 
206  40 
776  83 
39  01 
324  00 
1   50 

83  30 
128  25 

17  00 

84  00 
3  00 

15  25 
27  75 
10  25 
10  25 
315  30 
102  00 
80  00 
26  33 
14  00 


492  30 

135  00 
8  48 

169  37 
22  00 
13  45 
39  40 
39  50 

222  65 
8  50 

389  63 
69  00 
■  9  90 


$13,779  13 


Paid  for  STONE,   PAVING,    SETTING  EDGE  AND 
CROSSING  STONES— 

To  Gore,  Rose  &  Co.,  paving  and  stone 7,433  71 

"  Ham  &  Leighton,  paving  and  block  stone-  •  •  •  824  14 

"  Dana  &  Carter,  stone  cutting 4  50 

"  James  A.  White,  stone  blocks 18  76 

"  I.  &  H.  M.  Harmon,  bricks  and  labor 507  46 

"  Nelson  Curtis,  bricks 80  00 


^,489  14 


$1,619   18 


$8,868  57 


Amount  carried  fonoard. 


$32,756  02 


28 


>1,017  13 


Ainount  hroiight  forward,  $32,756  02 

Paid   for    BLACKSMITH,    WHEELWRIGHT,    CAR* 
PENTER'S  WORK  AND  LUMBER— 

To  Richard  Weeks,  blacksmith's  work 290  29 

"  Andrew  W.  Newman,              "          10  05 

"  John  A.  Scott,                           "          2  01 

"  James  Aker,                               "         219  61 

«  Reuben  Weeks,                        "         218  71 

"  George  Mennig,                         "         37  79 

"  William  Brock,                         "         115 

"  Jefferson  W.  Chenery,            "         12  97 

"  Gideon  B.  Richmond,               "          1152 

"  Jacob  L.  Nash,  wheelwright's  work 5  25 

"  Ebenezer  Chamberlin,             "         6  75 

"  Freeman  Simpson,                    "         50  70 

"  John  D.  Pierce,                        "         45  25 

"  Leonard  Hall,                           "         16  00 

"  William  Jones,  carpenter's  work 6  00 

"  John  M.  Marston,                "         15  27 

"  Samuel  S.  Chase,                "         2  04 

"  George  Curtis,  lumber 36  97 

"  Daniel  Jackson,  building  fence 28  80 

Paid  for  HAY  AND  GRAIN— 

To  Ezra  Young,            bay 48  95 

"  Henry  Dudley,          "    61   29 

"   Augustus  Rollins,     "    386  54 

"  Aaron  D.  Weld,       "    88  69 

»  Josiah  S.Trefathen,  "    76  36 

"  Joseph  Houghton,  grain 543  53 

"  John  McElroy,          "     520  15 

Paid  for  SUNDRIES  not  otherwise  enumerated — 

To  William  Banford,  horse 250  00 

"  Hiram  Carleton,  harness  work 60  00 

"  Edward  Dana,  horse  blankets 12  00 

"  Francis  W.  Fuller,  hardware 73  64 

"  John  H.  Hawes,             "         4  37 

"  Meserve  &  Faunce,  shovels 15  75 

"  William  Goodnow,  pick  handles, 7  50 

"  Stephen  Faunce,  baskets,  &c. 36  24 

"  Swain  &  Craft,  fluid-  •  •  •  • 3  00 

«  William  Seaver,  "  &c. 29  44 

"  Fillebrown  &  Holbrook,  lanterns 9  75 

"  G.  H.  &  W.  J.  Keefe,  glazing 1  50 

"  Thomas  S.  Hodge,            "       5  85 

"  John  Dove,  painting 39  99 

«  Calvin  Bird  &  Co.,  stove  work 11  42 

"  J.  I.  Caldwell,  coal 5  00 

"  Nourse,  Mason  &  Co.,  repairs 75 

«  II.  AV.  &  G.  W.  Pierce,  lard 8  7o 

Amount  carried  forward,  $574  90      $35,498  66 


$1,725  51 


29 


Amount  hrouglit  fonvard,  $574  90     $35,498  66 

To  J.  T.  Ellis  &  Co.,  powder 199  09 

"  Norfolk  County  Journal,  printing 712 

"  Samuel  Little  and  others,  damages 383  00 

"  Thomas  Dolan,  watering  streets 1,830  36 

$2,994  47 

Total  Expenditure $38,493  13 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1860,  $554  45. 


WIDENING  TREMONT,  WASHINGTON,  VERNON, 

PLYMOUTH,  AND  CONSTRUCTING  SHORT  STREETS. 

Balance  undrawn,  widening  Tremont  Street,  Feb- 
ruary 1,  1859 65  00 

«               «                "       Washington  Street,  do.  193  30 

"               "                "       Water  Street,          do.  682  55 

Received  of  Stephen  P.  Fuller,  edge  stone 184  66 

"             Henry  S.  Blaney,            "          49  33 

"            Edward  Me Guckian,       "         25  13 

"             George  Morrill,                "          30   10 

"             Hugh  McNulty,                "          20  00 

"            Benjamin  Wallace,          "         28  40 

"             James  Murray,                  "          20  40 

"             Adin  Partridge,                "         32  34 

"             James  Clark,                     "          23  94 

"            Wentworth  &  Pierce,  loam 75  Oo 

"             John  C.  Seaver,  house 2,450  00 

«            from  LOANS  authorized 87,000  00 

$90,880  15 

EXPENDITURES. 

TREMONT   STREET. 

To  James  Davenport,                 land---- 1,944  70 

"  Adin  Partridge,                         "    • 630  00 

"  James  Clark,                              "    • 400  00 

"  Stephen  P.  Fuller  and  others,  "    2,761   71 

"  Benjamin  Burlingame,             "    2,220  00 

"  Jeremiah  Wetherbee,              "    •  •  1,175  00 

"  John  McGuckian,                     "    310  00 

".  Gideon  B.  Richmond,              "    746  87 

"  Edward  McGuckian,               "    1,050  00 

"  Samuel  Train,                           "    450  00 

"  Benjamin  B.  Tilt  and  others,  "    885  00 

"  E.  &  G.  G.  Hook,                    "    2,498  75 

"  Chester  Guild,                          "    2,788  34 

"  John  M.  Mayo,                          "    438  60 

"  William  Pope,                          "    376  06 

Amount  carried  forward,  $18,675  03 


30 


Aynount  brought  forward,  $18,675  03 

To  Francis  Ward,                       land 1,600  00 

"  Calvin  B.  Faiince,                    "    1,500  00 

"  Michael  Hayden,                      "    1,733  10 

"  Isaac  H.  Carey,                         "    683  00 

"  Samuel  A.  Way,                       "    3,038  50 

"  James  Card,                               "• 1,906  52 

"  Samuel  Little  and  others,  Trustees,  land--"  2,000  00 

"  Tremont  Improvement  Co.,  "   ....  562  69 

"  Amos  J.  Dean,                                           "   2,094  42 

"  Boston  Belting  Company,  "   ••••  1,803  60 

"  William  Gaston  and  others,                     "   1,410  84 

"  Benjamin  Wallace,  *' 705  00 

"  James  Murray,                                            "   540  00 

"  Joshua  Benson,                                            " 1,754  00 

"  James  Mellen,  removing  buildings 3,180  00 

"  Brown  &  Blair,                "                  1,075  00 

"  S.  &  D.  Richards,            "                  285  00 

"  Francis  Debrie,                damage 50  00 

"  Laban  S.  Beecher,                "        900  00 

"  J.  1.  Caldwell,                        "        275  00 

"  Thomas  Riley,                       "        151   00 

"  Frederick  Carl,                     "        175  00 

"  Hugh  McNulty,                     "        155  00 

"  Joseph  Houghton,                  "        25  00 

"  AVilliam  Seaver,                    "        321   12 

«'  William  H.  Starr,                  " 27  50 

"  Thomas  Callery,                    "        20  00 

"  Elijah  Thayer,                       "        400  00 

"  Abraham  S.  Parker,             "        65  00 

"  Benjamin  B.  Frederick,       "        20  00 

"  John  Scollay,                        "       10  00 

"  Amos  R.  Ingham,                 "       12  00 

"  James  AVatt,                          "        150  00 

"  Ira  Allen,                                "        15  00 

"  Patrick  Garrety,                   "        15   00 

"  Martin  O'Conner,                 "        25  00 

"  William  Lennon,                   "        25  00 

"  Thomas  Grinham,                 "        26  00 

"  Robert  L.  Flanders,             "       10  00 

»  John  N.  Horn,                       "        10  33 

"  Patrick  Lynch,               carting  gravel 123  50 

"  Thomas  Dolan,                           "             608  36 

"  Timothy  Murphy,                       «              187   30 

"  Michael  Gately,                          "             350  55 

"  Michael  Fitzmorris,                   "             289  20 

"  Patrick  Mc Girl,                          "             5  80 

"  James  Carey,                              "             160  00 

"  Thomas  Gannon,                        "             66  00 

»  William  Clark,                            "             . . .' 307  06 

"  Owen  Nawn,                               "             19  50 

"  Malachi  Kelley,                          "             17   75 

Arnounl  carried  funcurd,  $49,004  6  7 


31 


Amount  brought  forward,  $49,064  67 

To  James  Scanlan,               carting  gravel 18  75 

"  Peter  Crowley,                             "              75 

"  William  Burns,                           "             33  00 

"  Thomas  Glennon,                       "             26  00 

"  Charles  D.  Bickford,                  "             19  00 

"  George  Ramsav,                         "             78  00 

«  Phineas  B.  Smith,                       "             28  00 

"  Jeffrey  Holland,                         "             ...  86  00 

"  Thomas  Grinham,                      "             123  25 

"  James  Hanegan,                         "             19  20 

"  Daniel  Harrinorton,                    "             21   30 

"  AVilliam  R  Huston,                    "             31  00 

«  Pay  Roll  of  labor, 2,765  96 

«  John  Good,                     labor 12  00 

«  Patrick  Cahill,                   "      1 6  50 

«  Michael  Glvnn,                 "      12  00 

«  Edward  McDonough,       "      23  00 

«  Patrick  Murray,                "      18  12 

"  Michael  Donovan,             "      4  50 

"  John  O'Brien,                   "      4  00 

"  Thomas  Hamer,                 "      7  00 

"  Patrick  Mason,                  "      4  00 

"  Daniel  Green,                    "      5  00 

"  Thomas  Horton,                "      4  00 

"  Edward  Hardy,                 "      2  00 

"  Michael  Follaii,                 "      6  00 

"  Samuel  Felton,  mason's  work 16  80 

"  J.  T.  Ellis  &  Co.,  lumber 122  93 

"  Patrick  H.  Rogers,  carpenter's  woik 275  51 

"  Thomas  P.  Sweat,                      "         123  03 

"  John  M.  Marston,                      "          223  13 

"  Holman  Page,  bridge  work 1,751  09 

"  Ham  &  Leighton,  edge  stone 1,153   15 

"  George  Morrill,  examining  title 15  00 

"  Laban  S.  Beecher, ,  services 20  00 

"  Calvin  B.  Faunce,         "         10  00 

"  Nelson  Worthen,            "         5  00 

"  Gideon  B.  Richmond,    " 1,000  00 

Total  expended  on  Tremont  Street, 857,148  64 

WASHINGTON   STKEET. 

To  Elijah  R.  Wood,                        land 226  00 

"  Jane  S.  Haines,                             "    835  00 

"  Lucius  M.  Sargent,                       "    745  10 

"  Rebecca  Parmenter,                     "    183  60 

"  Frances  S.  Sumner,                      "    329  60 

"  Helen  P.  Sumner,                         "    400  80 

"  William  H.  Sumner,                     "    275  20 

"  Valeria  S.  Williams,                     "    474  51 

"  Timothy  Hunt  and  others,           "    182  37 

"  John  J.  Merrill,                              "    326   24 


Amotinf  carrifiiJ  fonrard. 


$3,978  42        ?p57,148  64 


,978  42 

$57,148  64 

96  75 

100  10 

23  00 

12  50 

24  37 

7  50 

9  37 

7  50 

22  23 

13  00 

520  00 

32 

Amount  Irouglit  forward, 
To  Thomas  Dolan,  carting  gravel 

"  James  Carey,  "  

"  David  Green,  labor 

"  Brien  Fitzmorris,       "     

"  Michael  Sweeney,      "     

"  Michael  Dufly,  "     

"  Patrick  Murray,         "     

"  Patrick  Harvey,  

"  David  McClaren,  carpenter's  work 

"  James  H.  Wood,  damage 

"  James  Mellen,  removing  building 

Total  expended  on  Washington  Street, $4,814  74 

VEKNON  STREET. 

To  John  J.  Merrill,                    land 975  00 

"  Nathaniel  Adams,                    "    170  50 

"  Samuel  Wiswall,                       "    15137 

"  Thomas  S.  Monaban,               "    150  00 

"  Elizabeth  C.  Haynes,               "    137  37 

"  Francis  Brown  and  others,  damage 125  00 

"  Stephen  Faunce,                        "       41   50 

"  T.  L.  D.  Perkins,                        "       150  00 

"  Patrick  H.  Rogers,  fence 67  45 

Total  expended  on  Vernon  Street, $1,968  19 

PLYMOUTH   STREET. 

To  Thomas  Good,              land  and  damage 1,285  00 

Timothy  Good,                 "       "         "       1,205   75 

Owen  Nawn,                    "       "         "       498  00 

Thomas  C.  Norton,         "       "         "      959  00 

Dennis  Mulane,                "       "         "       2,160  00 

Felix  Gahery  &  others,  "       "         "       460  00 

Joseph  Griffin,                  "       "         "       726  00 

Canterbury  Litchfield,    "       »         "       295   70 

John  Norton,                    "       "         "       1,045  00 

Oliver  Tenney,                "       "         "      332  72 

Jeremiah  McCarty,          "       "         "       700  50 

Charles  Cunningham,      "       "         "       132   72 

S.  &  D.  Richards,  removing  building 25  00 

John  McDermott,  labor 3  00 

Bernard  Higgins,      "     ^ 4  00 

Laban  S.  Beecher  &  others,  referees 30  00 

Total  Expenditure  on  Plymouth  Street, $9,862  39 

CONSTRUCTIXG   SHORT   STREET. 

To  Henry  S.  Blaney,  land 2,105  41 

"  Abial  May,  guardian,  house,  &c 3,535  00 

"  William  Fellowes,               "            2,800  00 

"  Sarah  &  Mary  Cummings,  land 806  52 

f  Lydia  B.  Stearns,                    "  438  80 


J^mount  carried  forioard,  $9,685  73     $73,793  96 


Amount  brow/Jdfoncard,  $9,G85   73      $73,793  96 

To  John  C.  Seaver,  land ,  134  14 

"  Edmund  MeElroy,  removing  building 100  00 

"  James  Mellen,                          "                115  00 

"  Brown  &  Blair,                        "                1 2  75  . 

"  I.  &  H.  M.  Harmon,  piason's  work 544  91 

"  John  (iilbert,  carpenter's  work 332  4  7 

"  Daniel  W.  Glidden,         "           122  32 

"  J.  M.  Marston,                 "          109  67 

"  Patrick  H.  Rogers,          "           44  81 

"  Ham  &  Leighton,  stone 163  03 

"  Chester  M.  Gay,  copper  work 33  47 

"  Charles  Erskine,  painting. 9  50 

"  Thomas  Gannon,  removing  trees. •  •  9  00 

"  Daniel  Jackson,  removing  fence 40  00 

"  James  Carey,  damage , 60  00 

"  Pay  Roll  of  labor 235  00 

"  Thomas  Dolan,  carting  gravel 71  40 

"  Thomas  Norton,          labor. 8  00 

"  James  Kenney,               "    13   75 

"  Edward  McDonough,     "    12  00 

"  John  McGinness,            "    10  00 

»  Michael  Duffley,             "    *.  .  15  62 

"  Timothy  Murphy,           "    30  00 

"   Owen  Nawn,                   "    33  00 

"  Michael  Fitzmorris,         "    12  00 

"  John  Dove,  hammer 6  55 

Total  Expenditure  for  Short  Street, $11,964  12 


Total  Expenditure $85,758  08 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1860,  $5,122  07. 


GRADINGr   ALMS-HOUSE    LAND. 

APPROPRIATION 2,000  00 

EXPENDITURES. 

To  Nelson  Worthen,        paid  for  labor 685  31 

"  Francis  Freeman,          "               "      288  45 

"  Benjamin  B.  Howe,       "              "     180  79 

"  Charles  W.  Newell,       "              "     77  60 

"  Joseph  B.  Young,          "               "     26   75 

"  Swain  &  Crafts,              "              "     9   12 

"  John  F.  Newton,            "              "     12  00 

"  H.  S.  Lawrence,             "               ''      5  00 

"  James  B.  Page,              "              "      7  00 

"  J.  I.  Caldwell,                 "              "     19  87 

"  Allen  Putnam  &  Co.,     "              "     7   75 

Amount  carried  forward,  $1,319  64 


34 


Amount  hrouglit  forward,  $1,319  64 

To  J.  T.  Ellis  &  Co.,  powder 133  15 

"  Richard  Weeks,  blacksmith's  work 154  87 

"  James  Aker,                           "         88  85 

"  William  Adams  &  Co.,  hammers 78  27 

"  Daniel  Cummings  &  Co.,  pick  handles -  11   25 

"  Pay  Roll  of  labor 59  37 

"  Michael  Costello,  labor 8  00 

"  Patrick  Havey,         "     29  00 

"  Hugh  Gunn,             "    4  87 

"  Patrick  Murray,        "    7  00 

Total  Expenditure 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1860,  $105  73. 


$1,894  27 


FIRE    DEPARTMENT. 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1859 2,501  54 

Appropriation,  March,  1859  1,000  00 

APPROPRIATION • 13,510  00 


EXPENDITURES. 
Paid  to  ENGINEERS— 
To  James  Munroe,  Chief  Engineer,  1  year-  •  •  • 

"       "  "         Secretary,  3  months 

"  Gilbert  S.  May,  Assistant  Engineer 

"  Jonas  Fillebrown,  "  3  months 

"  John  Withers,  "  " 

"  Reuben  Withers,  "  " 

"  Amory  F.  Sherman,  "  9  months 

"         "        _        "         Secretary,  " 

"  Robert  Simpson,  Assistant  Engineer,     " 
"  John  CuUigin, 

Paid  to  FIREMEN- 


281  25 
3  75 

80  00 
20  00 
20  00 
20  00 
60  00 
11  25 
60  00 
60  00 


of  Engine,  No.  1 

1,617  50 

"       No.  2 

1,609  00 

"       No.  6 

1,618  00 

"       No.  7 

1,618  00 

of  Hook  and  Ladder  Co. 

858  00 

of  Hose  Co.  No.  1 

545  00 

Paid  for  SUNDRIES  for  the  several  Companies — 
ENGINE  No.  1. 


To  J.  I.  Caldwell,  coal  and  wood 

"  Fillebrown  &  Holbrook,  stove  wprk- 

Amount  carried  forimrd, 


33  87 

15   74 


L  7,011   54 


16   25 


$7,865  50 


$49  61        $8,481    75 


35 

Amount  brought  forward,  $49  61        $8,481  75 

To  John  A.  Scott,  blacksmith's  work 45  24 

"  Hunneman  &  Co.,  repairs 25  00 

"  John  A.  Foley,            "      7  00 

"  Michael  Wrin,             "      2  04 

"  William  Morse,  carpenter's  work 5  00 

"  James  Johnson,                    "            22  00 

"  Isaac  F.  Richardson,  gas  fixtures 140 

"  Roxbury  Gas  Light  Co.,  gas 52  51 

"  I.  &  H.  M.  Harmon,  mason's  work 461 

"  Francis  Freeman,  oil 13  17 

"  Davis,  Polsey  &  Co.,  repairs 22  50 

"  Joseph  W.  Winslow,  oil 8   72 

"  Theodore  S.  Robinson,  ringing  bell 14  50 

"  John  A.  Scott,                            ''          12  50 

"  E.  A.  Hovey,  repairs 3  04 

"  James  H.  Pratt,  carting  hose 32  24 

"  John  Dove,  repairs 6  00 


ENGINE  No.  2. 

To  J.  I.  Caldwell,  coal 24  30 

"  J.  E.  Adams  &  Co.,  coal 8  00 

"  Reuben  Weeks,  blacksmith's  work 2  50 

"  John  A.  Scott,                         "          7  25 

"  Benjamin  M.  Williams,          "         6  50 

"  Hunneman  &  Co.,  repairs 398  50 

"  Michael  Wrin,              ''     99 

"  Samuel  Felton,             "     6  00 

"  William  Brock,            "     3  00 

"  Franics  W^.  Fuller,  lock 67 

"  Roxbury  Gas  Light  Co.,  gas 37  45 

"  Calvin  W.  Bates,  ringing  bell 50  00 

"  Joseph  W.  Winslow,  oil 4  00 

"  Francis  Freeman,  sundries 8  90 

"  B,  F.  &  G.  H.  Wiggin,  glazing 3  75 


ENGINE  No.  6. 

To  J.  I.  Caldwell,  coal 39  85 

"  John  W.  Lord,                  stove 28  29 

"  Fillebrown  &  Holbrook,     "     12  06 

"  Reuben  Weeks,  blacksmith's  work 13  00 

"  Engine  Co.  No.  6,  springs   95  00 

"  Hunneman  &  Co.,  repairs 105  75 

"  John  M.  Marston,  carpenter's  work 67  24 

"  William  Morse,                         "           36  6  7 

"  Benjamin  M.  Williams,  blacksmith's  work 8  61 

"  Solomon  Sanborn,  mason's  work 4  00 

"  A.  G.  Chamberlain,  repairs 14   75 

"  James  Nason,  brooms,  &c. 3  40 

"  Charles  W.  Newell,  fluid,  &c. 23  69 


527  68 


$561  81 


Amount  carried  fora-ard,  $452  31         $9,371    24 


36 

Amount  brougU  forward^  $462  31        $9,371   24 

To  William  Parkinson,  carting  hose 

"  Jamaica  Fond  Aqueduct  Co.,  water 

"  Joseph  W.  Winslow,  oil 

"  Francis  Freeman,  sundries 

"  E.  W.  Noyes,  skins 

"  P.  D.  Allen,  repairs 

"  Roxbury  Gas  Light  Co.,  gas  •  •  •  • •  •  • 

"  James  J.  Farrell,  ringing  bell 

"  John  Dove,  glazing • 

"  Owen  Nawn,  gravel 

"  Stephen  Smith,  table,  &c. '  •  • 

"  Smith  &  TarbfU,  chandeliers 

"  H.  R.  Taylor,  shades 


;462 

31 

1 

75 

3 

75 

14 

51 

1 

80 

1 

00 

1 

25 

23 

45 

53 

50 

10 

62 

1 

08 

29 

00 

36 

00 

9 

60 

20 

61 

4 

25 

3 

75 

3 

63 

6 

00 

18 

52 

161 

42 

10 

24 

26 

16 

27 

50 

11 

12 

1 

50 

46 

84 

21 

10 

51 

50 

ENGINE  No.  7. 

To  J.  I.  Caldwell,  coal 

"  Allen  Putnam  &  Co,,  wood 

"  Fillebrown  &  Holbrook,  stoye  work 

"  Robert  G.  Gladstone,  "  

"  John  Brooks,  mason's  work •  •  • 

"  John  M.  Marston,  carpenter's  work 

"  Hunneman  &  Co.,  repairs 

"  Joseph  W.  Sweat,      "        

"  Chester  M.  Gay,        "        

"  William  Clark,  carting 

"  U.  T.  Brownell,  painting,  &c. 

"  B.  F.  &  G.  H.  Wiggin,  glazing 

"  William  Seaver,  sundries 

"  Jamaica  Poud  Aqueduct  Co.,  water 

"  Phineas  Colburn,  ringing  bell-  •  • 


HOOK  AND  LADDER  COMPANY. 

To  J.  L  Caldwell,  coal 11  15 

"  J.  E.  Adams  &  Co.,  fuel 5  50 

"  Fillebrown  &  Holbrook,  stove  work 18  29 

"  John  A.  Scott,  blacksmith's  work 10  50 

"  Benjamin  M.  Williams,        "         4  50 

"  John  H.  Hawes,  hardware 2  50 

"  George  H.  Williams,  strainer 50 

"  Z.  C.  &  M.  G.  Field,  oil,  &c. 4  43 

"  C.  M.  Gay,          repairs 4  25 

"  Hunneman  &  Co.,    "      855  79 

"  Hiram  Carleton,  harness 61  00 

"  E.  T.  Northend,  horse  hire ■ 209  75 

"  James  Welch,  cleaning  harness 3  00 

"  Roxbury  Gas  Light  Co.,  gas 35  35 


$639  62 


$413  64 


$726  51 


Aiiiounl  carried  forward,  $11,151  01 


3T 

Atnount  hrouglit  forioard,  $11,151  01 

HOSE  COMPANY  No.  1. 

To  J.  I.  Caldwell,  coal 1160 

"  Allen  Putnam  &  Co.,  fuel 11   00 

"  Fillebrown  &  Holbrook,  stove  Avork 1  50 

"  Michael  AVrin,                            "          4   75 

"  Hunneman  &  Co.,  repairs 95  40 

"  John  H.  Moses,  carting 1   00 

"  F.  F.  Morey,            "        3  38 

"  AVilliam  H.  Ford,  horse  hire 3  00 

"   Charles  G.  Green,  repairs 5  00 

"  Joseph  W.  Winslow,  oil, 17  60 

"  Francis  Freeman,  oil,  &c. 32  60 

"  B.  F.  &  G.  H.  Wiggin,  glazing 75 


Paid  for  SUNDRIES  not  otherwise  enumerated — 

To  eTames  Boyd  &  Sons,  hose 

"  Edward  A.  G.  Roulstone,  caps 

"  Hunneman  &  Co.,  repairs,  No.  3 

"  Charles  G.  Green,  filling  reservoirs 

"  James  H.  Roach,  "  

"  Engine  Co.  No.  6,  "  

"  George  S.  Head,  "  

"  Thomas  Gavin,  "  

"  Cochituate  Hose  Co.,       "  

"  James  T.  Cole,  "  

"  Joseph  W.  Sweat,  "  

"  Phineas  Colburn,  care  of  reservoirs 

"  Joseph  W.  Sweat,    "  "         

"  Charles  H.  Morse,  reservoir  covers 

"  William  Morse,  "  

"  John  M.  Marston,  repairs 

"  Johnson  &  Leavitt,     "     • 

"  Leonard  Hall,  "     

"  James  G.  Miller,         "     

"  A.  G.  Chamberlain,  hose  straps 

"  T.  D.  Mulrey,  brackets 

"  Hook  &  Ladder,  Co.,  refreshments  for  out  of 

town  Companies 

"  D.  A.  Brown,  for  do. 

"  Benjamin  Franklin,  horse  hire 

"  John  Mahoney,  care  of  No.  3 

"  Norfolk  County  Journal,  printing 

"  Blodget  &  Sutherland,  carpenter's  work 

"  Pratt  &  Smith,  spanners 

"  W.  &  A.  Bacon,  cloth 

"  James  H.  Pratt,  carting 

"  H.  S.  Lawrence,  rubber  coats 

"  Boston  Belting  Co.,  hose 

"  John  Tirrell,  carting 

"  Bell  &  Bailey,    "       

Amount  carried  forward,  $1,822  65      $11,338  59 


830  69 

120  15 

2G8  83 

28  00 

5  00 

15  00 

4  00 

69  00 

15  00 

15  50 

5  25 

62  00 

34  25 

6  00 

» 

4  25 

35  11 

12  33 

13  50 

10  32 

23  25 

2  50 

10  00 

9  90 

8  25 

12  50 

22  62 

31  14 

18  84 

2  00 

15  36 

45  06 

56  80 

7  00 

3  25 

38 

Amount  brought  forward,  $1,822  65     Sll,338  59 

To  Joseph  Hastings,  ringing  bell 25  00 

"  Francis  Freeman,             "        •  •  50  00 

"  William  E.  Hicks,           "        25  00 

"  Swain  &  Craft,  wash  leather 3  98 

"  Williams  &  Everett,  frames-  •• 8  17 

"  J.  D.  F.  Wilcox  horse  hire 5  50 

"  E.  T.  Northend,            "        7  00 

"  John  Backup,  stationery 8  35 

"  Phineas  D.  Allen,  repairs 8  50 

"  W.  A..  M.  Fillebrown,  painting  signs 8  00 

"  A.  D.  Williams,  rent  of  Engine-house 62  50 

"  Ebenezer  Chamberlain,  wheelwright's  work-  •  20  45 

"  Henry  Pratt,  repairing  locks 26  02 

"  George  Onion,  sponge 5  40 

"  Solomon  Sanborn,  mason's  work 20  50 

"  John  D.  Pierce,   wheelwright's  work 4  00 

"  Joseph  J.  Allison,  iron  work 23  27 

"  Owen  Nawn,  filling 42  95 

"  Jamaica  Pond  Aqueduct  Co.,  hydrants 127  16 

"  Charles  Stanwood,                             "        90  75 

"  Fillebrown  &  Holbrook,  repairs 2  00 

"  George  Leonard,  Jr.,            "        1 1   35 

"  Townsend  &  Stone,  fluid 1   73 

"  Simeon  Stubbs,  iron  work ' 2  50 

"  William  N.  Felton,  services   21  46 

. $2,434  19 


Total  Expenditure $13,772  78 

Transferred  to  Contingent  Appropriation,  1859-60  713  ('9 


$14,485  87 


Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1860,  $2,525  67. 


NEW    ENGINE-HOUSE. 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1859 19  40 

APPROPRIATION  •  -  •  ■ 2,000  00 

Received  of  W.  B.  May,  for  old  Engine-hoiise  •  •  •  128  00 
Transferred     from     Contingent      Appropriation, 

1859-60 630  00 

EXPENDITURES. 

To  Amos  Quimby,  driving  piles 141   95 

"  A.  C.  Sanborn,  capping 51   75 

"  Caleb  Stowell,  contract,  &c. 2,196  62 

"  Jewell  &  Shaw,  carpenter's  work 1G3   79 

"  Chester  M.  Gay,  copper  work 4147 

Amount  carried  forward,  $2,595  58 


2,777  40 


39 

Amount  hr  ought  forward,  $2,595  58 

To  H.  &  C.  Stowell,  mason's  work 3  70 

"  William  M.  Daniel,  stone  work 2  25 

"  I.  F.  Richardson,  piping 35  47 

"  John  R.  Hall,  plan 65  00 

"  Jamaica  Pond  Aqueduct  Co.,  pipe 6  00         < 

"  Alonzo  W.  Folsom,  superintending 50  00 

Total  Expenditure $2,758  00 

Transferred  to  Contingent  Appropriation,  1859-60  19  40 


Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1860,  nothing. 


2,777  40 


RESERVOIRS   AND    HYDRANTS. 

APPROPRIATION $2,000  00 

EXPENDITURES. 

To  Solomon  Sanborn,  constructing  reservoirs $1,700  00 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1860,  $300  00. 


WATCH   AND    POLICE. 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1859 983  44 

Appropriation,  April,  1859 2,000  00 

Transferred    from     Contingent     Appropriation, 

1858-9 296  45 

Received  of  P.  S.  Wheelock,  Standing  Justice  of 

the  Police  Court,  officers' fees 2,838  88 

"              Benjamin  Meriam,  fines  and  fees- •  •  600  00 

APPROPRIATION • 12,000  00 


EXPENDITURES. 

To  Benjamin  Meriam,  City  Marshal 821  25 

"  Joseph  Hubbard,               police  and  watchman  795  50 

"  William  D.  Cook,                   "                     "  77512 

"  Hawley  Folsom,                    "                    "  787  00 

"   Samuel  Mcintosh,                "                    "  786  33 

"  Matthew  Clark,                      "                     "  789  65 

"  Jeremiah  M.  Swett,               "                     "  790  00 

"  Hiram  A.  Campbell,             "                     "  783  25 

"  Zebedee  C.  Perry,                 "                     "  468  62 

"  Henry  L.  Ford,                      "                     «  720  37 

Amount  carried  forward,  $7,517  09 


3,718  77 


40 


Amount  irought  forward, 
To  Edward  F.  Mecuen,        police  and  ■watchman, 
"  Elbridge  G.  Cobb, 

"  Joseph  Parker,  "  " 

"  William  E.  Hicks,  "  " 

"  Francis  D.  Brown,  "  " 

"  Joseph  Hastings,  "  " 

"  Thomas  Culligin,  "  " 

"  James  Staniels,  "  ' 

"  Ezekiel  Merrill,  "  " 

"  John  I.  Hastings,  "  " 

"  George  R.  Matthews,  "  ' 

"  Sylvester  E.  Partridge,         "  ' 

"  Morrill  P.  Berry,  "  ' 

"  William  D.  Cook,  2d,  "  " 

"  Luke  Jewett,  "  '* 

"  John  H.  Holden,  "  ' 

"  William  N.  Hastings,  "  " 

•'  Moses  N.  Hubbard,  "  ' 

"  Joseph  Hubbard,  2d,  "  " 

"  James  D.  Loker,  "  ' 

"  N.  Y.  Culbertson,  "  " 

"  William  Clark,  "  " 

"  Mason  G.  Field,  "  " 

"  William  F.  Tillson,  "  " 

"  Elkanah  S.  Atwood,  "  " 

"  Augustus  L.  Litchfield,        "  " 

"  Silas  Dole,  "  " 

"  Joshua  Anderson,  "  " 

"  William  Farrington,  "  " 

"  James  Munroe,  "  " 

"  Benjamin  Meriam,  railroad  fares  and  carriage 

hire 

"  Peter  S.  Wheelock,  witness  fees 

*'  Hiram  A.  Campbell,  supplies 

"  Thomas  Carroll,  burying  offal 

"  George  Jones,  "  

"  Francis  W.  Fuller,  hardware 

"  N.  B.  &  N.  A.  Doggett,  rattles 

"  Augustus  Bopp,  buckets 

"  William  Weymouth,  carpenter's  work-  •  • 
"  William  Morse,  " 

"  Charles  A.  Beal,  bedding 

"  John  J.  Merrill,  horse  hire 

"  Benjamin  Franklin,    "         

"  E.  t.  Northend,  "         

"  William  J.  Mathes,      "  

"  J]benezer  Jeffers,  beds 

"  W.  &  A.  Bacon,  blankets • 

"  Calvin  Bird  &  Co.,   stove  work 

"  Fillebrown  &  Holbrook,  "  

"  Joseph  J.  Allison,  iron  work 

"  Henry  R.  Taylor,  curtains 

Amount  carried  forward, 


$7,517 

09 

717 

77 

720 

87 

749 

87 

735 

27 

156 

87 

714 

87 

719 

87 

730 

37 

736 

87 

557 

50 

354 

50 

187 

62 

58 

00 

50 

25 

63 

00 

33 

37 

18 

50 

65 

50 

2 

00 

9 

50 

8 

00 

3 

50 

5 

50 

5 

50 

5 

50 

3 

50 

45 

50 

1 

50 

2 

00 

55 

00 

405 

34 

110 

37 

51 

37 

207 

35 

79 

62 

10 

81 

19 

00 

6 

20 

10 

00 

9 

62 

37 

48 

10 

75 

10 

25 

18 

75 

131 

00 

11 

00 

3 

00 

75 

40 

1 

75 

6 

97 

26 

84 

$16,277 

83 

41 

Amount  hrouglit  forioard,  $16,277  83 

To  B.  F.  &  G.  H.  Wiggln,  glazing 3  75 

"  Swain  &  Craft,  brooms,  &c. 5  68 

"  Francis  Freeman,     "             2  15  * 

"  George  E.  Harrington,  hanging  bell 2  25 

"  Nelson  Worthen,  sundries 96 

"  William  N.  Felton,  cleaning 8  00 

"  William  E.  Hicks,  posting  notices 29  00 

"  Henry  Pratt,  keys 65 

«  J.  I.  Caldwell,  coal 2  50 

"  John  Backup,  stationery 45  55 

"  Norfolk  County  Journal,  printing 124  23 

Total  Expenditure $16,502  55 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1860,  $2,216  22. 


POLICE    COUET. 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1859 313  07 

Received  from  Peter  S.  Wheelock,  Standing  Jus- 
tice of  the  Police  Court 1,872  15 


,185  22 


EXPENDITURES. 

To  Peter  S.  Wheelock,  Standing  Justice 1,000  00 

"      "  "  printing,    stationery    and 

witness  fees 888  68 

"  Norfolk  County  Journal,  printing 163  00 

"  Samuel  Mcintosh,  clock • 18  00 

"  Calvin  Bird  &  Co.,  stove  work 1 7  40 

"  John  Backup,  stationery 8   73 

Total  Expenditure $2,095  81 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1860,  $89  41. 


LAMPS. 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1859 1,341   50 

Appropriation,  April,  1859 1,500  00 

APPROPRIATION 11,000  00 


$13,841  50 


EXPENDITURES. 

To  Roxbury  Gas  Light  Co.,  gas 5,040  64 

"         "                "             "    lighting 1,965  00 

"         "                "             "    repairs 433  04 

«  Thomas  Simmons,  fluid 1,172  82 


Amount  carried  forward^  $8,611  50 

6 


42 


Amount  hrougTit  forward,  $8,611  50 

To  Daniel  T.  Pond,  lighting 265   79 

"  Joseph  Tarker,           "       182  29 

"  Josiaht).  Jenness,     "       11   25 

"  Henry  L.  Ford,          "       86   17 

"  Edward  Ross,             "       15  00 

"  John  W.  Hall,            "       ••••• 72  45 

"  James  D.  Loker,        "       12  50 

"  Joseph  Beagly,           "       51   51 

"  James  Hanson,           "       103  32 

"  David  Howe,             "       117  92 

"  Thomas  S.  Hodge,  repairs 34  11 

"  Nathan  Stone,  Jr.,       "       41   66 

"  Ivory  Skillin,                "       38  80 

"  Michael  Wrin,              "       1 7  88 

"  Johnson  &  Leavitt,      "       • 5  00 

"  B.  F.  &  G.  H.  Wiggin,  "       7  75 

"  Granville  W  Wilson,  "       9  90 

"  William  J.  Dolan,         "       5  50 

"  Owen  Nawn,                 "      2  83 

"  Robert  G.  Gladstone,  "       4  84 

"  Patrick  H.  Rogers,      "       2  00 

"  Wilham  Brock,             "       10  90 

"  John  A.  Scott,              "       10  00 

"  Simeon  Stubbs,            "       20  12 

"  William  Weymouth,    "         22  95 

"  George  H.  Williams,  lamp  posts 317  14 

"  F.  J.  Davis,                        "           •  ■    10  00 

"  John  W.  Lord,  lanterns 349  75 

"  John  Backup,                   printing 3  25 

"  Norfolk  County  Journal,       "       23  50 

"  William  N.  Felton,  measuring  fluid 50  00 

Total  Expenditure 

Transferred  to  Contingent  Appropriation,  1859-60 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1860,  $2,823  88. 


$10,517  58 
500  04 

$11,017  62 


SEWERS   AND    SURVEYING   FOR   SEWERS. 

APPROPRIATION  by  Loans  authorized $17,000  00 

EXPENDITURES. 

FELLOWES   STREET    SEWER. 

To  John  T.  Ellis  &  Co.,  lumber 713  96 

"  William  Morse,  labor 2,596  50 

"  Simeon  Stubbs,  blacksmith's  work 22  68 

"  Michael  W.  Dolan,  carting 27  00 

"  George  Coyle,              "        8  00 

Total  of  Fellowes  Street  Sewer  Expenditure $3,368  14 

Amount  carried  forioard,  $3,368  14 


43 

Amount  hrougJit  forward,  $3,368  14 

PLYMOUTH   STREET    SEWER. 

To  Nelson  Curtis,  building  sewer 3,435  10 

"  Owen  Nawn,  raising  grade 2,990  66 

"  Solomon  Sanborn,  superintending 116  00 

"  William  A.  Garbett,  surveying  •  •  • 79   75 

"  John  M.  Marston,  labor 30  00 

Total  Expenditure  for  Plymouth  Street  Sewer-  •  •         $6,651  51 

DAVIS    STREET    SEWER. 

To  Nelson  Curtis,  building  sewer 1,135  17 

"  Pierce  &  Tarbell,          "          -•  •  •  1,133  00 

"  C.  C.  Barney,                "          414  00 

"  Ham  &  Leigh  ton,  brick  and  cement 432  26 

"  George  Curtis,  lumber 782  72 

"  J.  E.  Adams  &  Co.,  spikes 34  24 

"  Owen  Nawn,        labor 74  00 

"  Lawrence  Watson,  "     11  00 

Total  Expenditure  on  Davis  Street  Sewer •       $4,016  39 

SURVEYING   FOR   SEWERS. 

To  William  L.  Dearborn,  superintending 750  00 

"  Shed  &  Edson,      surveying 435  50 

"  AVilliam  H.  Bradley,     "        324   75 

"  Theodore  B.  Moses,      "       331  00 

"  F.  A.  Pelby,  drawing  plans 210  00 

"  M.  J.  Whipple,  drawing  paper,  &c. 35  60 

Total  for  Surveying,  &c. ■        $2,086  85 

Total  Expenditure $16,122  89 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1860,  $877  11. 


LAND,    SHAWMUT    AVENUE. 

LOAN  authorized 12,000  00 

Transferred     from     Contingent     Appropriation, 

1859-60 120  39 

$12,120  39 

EXPENDITURE. 
To  Charles  M.  Ellis,  for  land $12,120  39 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1860,  nothing. 


44 


HIGHLAND    PAEK. 

Transferred  from  Contingent  Expenses,  1859-60  Sl,152  00 

EXPENDITURES. 

To  Chase  Brothers  &  Co.,  iron  fence 300  00 

"  Ham  &  Leighton,  edge  stone 114  38 

"  Patrick  H.  Rogers,  carpenter's  work 5  00 

"  John  Fay,            labor 26  50 

"  Michael  Carnes,       "     3150 

"  Patrick  Gurry,         «     20  50 

"  Michael  Finerty,     "     21  50 

"  Patrick  FoUan,        "     •  •  •' 6  00 

"  Peter  Brannon,        "      5  00 

"  John  Fay,  2d,          "     6  00 

"  Thomas  Glennon,    "     18  00 

"  Thomas  Gannon,     "     597  62 

Total  Expenditure $1,152  00 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1860,  nothing. 


STATE    TAX. 

APPROPRIATION •  ■      4,744  20 

Received  from  the  Town  of  West  Roxbury  its 

proportion  of  the  State  Tax 1,864  80 

EXPENDITURES. 

To  Moses  Tenney,  Jr.,  Treasurer  of  the  Common- 
wealth of  Massachusetts 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1860,  nothing. 


5,609  00 


$6,609  00 


COUNTY   TAX. 

APPROPRIATION •  •    10,035  00 

Received  from  the  Town  of  West  Roxbury  its 

proportion  of  the  County  Tax 3,944  45 

EXPENDITURES. 

To  C.  C.  Churchill,  Treasurer  of  the  County  of 
Norfolk 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1860,  nothing. 


$13,979  45 


$13,979  45 


45 


MILITAEY    SERVICES. 

Transferred     from      Contingent    Appropriation, 

1859-60  •  •  • S442  50 

EXPENDITURES. 
To  Roxbury  City  Guard • ^442  50 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1860,  nothing. 


DISCOUNT    ON   TAXES. 

APPROPRIATION '•'■••      5,600  00 

Transferred     from     Contingent     Appropriation, 

1859-60 ■•■  481   54 

$6,081  54 

EXPENDITURES. 

To  Discount  on  Taxes  paid  prior  to  Oct.  1,  1859  $6,081  54 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1860,  nothing. 


ABATEMENT    OF   TAXES. 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1859 » .  . .  .  12 

APPROPRIATION • •  •  •  •  •      2,000  00 

Transferred    from     Contingent     Appropriation, 

1859-60 •  208  46 

$2,208  58 

EXPENDITURES. 

To  Abatements  allowed  by  Assessors 2,208  46 

Transferred  to  Contingent  Appropriation,  1859-60  1 2 

Total  Expenditure • $2,208  58 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1860,  nothing. 


CITY   DEBT   AND    INTEREST. 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1859 2,618  82 

Received  from  sales  of  Brook  Farm 1,953  40 

"               "               Munroe  Land 1,200  20 

"               "               Stony  Brook  Land 3,868  61 

"              "              Land  Marcella  Street 560  00 

APPROPRIATION 35,500  00 

LOAN  authorized 22,500  00 

$68,201  53 


46 


EXPENDITURES. 

To  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury,  principal  and 

interest 

"  Town  of  West  Roxbury,  principal  and  interest' 
"  City  Treasurer,  or  order,         "  " 

"  Benjamin  A.  Smith,  Trustee,  "  " 

"  Cynthia  Stillings,  "      _  " 

"  Commonwealth  of  Massachusetts,  interest 
"  James  Parker,  Trustee,  " 

"  Abigail  Seaver,  " 

"  George  W.  Seaver,  " 

"  George  Seaver,  " 

"  Mary  Jones,  " 

"  Sarah  Jones,  " 

"  Charles  Humphrey,  " 

"  Samuel  Kendall,  " 

"  David  A.  Simmons,  " 

"  Elijah  Lewis,  " 

"  Joseph  W.  Dudley,  " 

"  Elizabeth  D.  Brigham,  " 

"  Boston  Provident  Institution^  " 

"  Nelson  Curtis,  " 

"  Catherine  Crane,  " 

"  James  H.  Wilkins,  " 

"  Suffolk  Savings  Bank,  " 

"  Rockland  Bank,  " 

"  Charles  M.  Ellis, 

"  David   W.   Williams,    thirtieth   payment 
Alms-house  land 

Total  Expenditure 


34,324 

16 

12,471 

8,9 

5,422 

50 

5,150 

00 

2,180 

00 

1,680 

00 

1,080 

00 

462 

00 

66 

00 

132 

00 

120 

00 

120 

00 

120 

00 

240 

00 

660 

GO 

240 

00 

60 

00 

120 

00 

540 

00 

60 

00 

60 

00 

60 

00 

1,430 

00 

50 

00 

360 

00 

150 

00 

57,358  55 


Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1860,  $842  98. 


SALAKIES    OF    CITY    OFFICEKS. 


Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1859 1,287  50 

Transfer  from  Contingent  Appropriation,   1858-9  50  00 

APPROPRIATION  •  • 6,600  00 

EXPENDITURES. 

To  Theodore  Otis,  Mayor 1,250  00 

"  Joseph  W.  Tucker,  City  Clerk 1,150  00 

"  Franklin  Williams,  Clerk  of  Common  Council  200  00 

"  Joseph  W.  Dudley,  Treasurer  and  Collector-  •  1,400  00 

"  William  Gaston,  City  Solicitor 800  00 

"  Ariel  I.  Ciimmings,  City  Physician  •  •  •  •  ■ 150  00 

*'  Laban  S.  Beecher,  Assessor 300  00 

AmuLiiU  carried  furward,  $5,250  00 


$7,937  50 


47 

Amount  hrougJit  forward^  $5,250  00 

To  Joshua  Seaver,  Assessor  and  Secretary 400  00 

"  William  Rumrill,  Assessor 300  00 

"  Joseph  Bugbee,  Assistant  Asssessor  •  •  • 20  00 

"  Gera  Farnum,                   "                   20  Oo 

"  Sylvester  Ward,                "                   20  00 

"  Daniel  W.  Glidden,         "                  20  00 

"  William  Barton,               »                   20  00 

"  William  Felton,  City  Messenger 550  00 

Total  Expenditure S6,600  00 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1860,  Sl,337  50. 


GENERAL  CONTINGENT  EXPENSES  AND  MIS- 
CELLANEOUS  CLAIMS. 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1859 756  35 

APPROPRIATION 7,000  00 

Sundry  transfers 3,541   56 

Overplus  in  casting  taxes 1,029  84 

Received  of  George  B.  Davis,      rent  of  house  •  •  •  200  00 

"            Mrs.  Mercy  Newell,     "            "...  222  33 

"             George  Curtis,  rent  of  wharf 330  00 

"            Calvin  C.  Dunbar,  rent  of  land,  1858  20  00 
"            Andrew  W.  Newman,  income  of  hay 

scales 145  50 

«            Joseph  W.  Tucker,  office  fees 235  25 

«                "         "          "       dog  licenses 1,110  00 

"  Commonwealth     of     Massachusetts, 

City's  share  of  School  Fund-  •  • 859  74 

«            Same,  for  pay  of  Militia 300  00 

"                "       "    rent  of  Armory 175  00 

— —     $15,925  57 
EXPENDITURES. 

Paid  for  PRINTING,  ADVERTISING,  STATIO:t?ERY 
AND  BOOKS— 

To  Norfolk  County  Journal,  printing •  •  578  44 

"  John  M.  Hewes,                       "       714  62 

"  Charles  O.  Rogers,  advertising  13  00 

"  Atlas  and  Daily  Bee,         "        4  37 

"  Boston  Daily  Advertiser,  "        •  3  06 

"  John  Backup,  stationery 32  40 

"  A.  F.  Graves,         "          2  75 

"  Aaron  R.  Gay,       "         ■  160  06 

"  John  H.  BufFord,  lithographing 64  50 

"  Benjamin  Bradley,  binding •  •  59   23 

"  Phineas  Libbey,             "       •  74  93 

"  W.  S.  Stodder,               "       9  00 

$1,716  36 

Amount  carried  forward,  $1,716  36 


48 


Amount  hrought  forward, 

Paid  for  NOTIFYING  AND  ATTENDING  MEET- 
INGS, USE  OF  ROOMS,  DISTRIBUTING  EN- 
VELOPES, AND  PAY  OF  WARD  OFFICERS— 

To  pay  of  Ward  Officers • •  •  •  •  190  50 

"  E.G.Cobb,     notifying  and  attending  meetings  25  50 

"  Henry  L.  Ford,     '"                   "               "     ••  S3  50 

"  Joseph  Parker,         "                   "               "      ■  •  22  GO 

"  E.  F.  Mecuen,          "                   "               "     •  •  23  50 

«  Morrill  P.  Berry,     »                   "               "     ••  19  50 

"  Ezekiel  Merrill,       "                   "               "     •  •  6  00 

"  N.  Y.  Culbertson,    "                   "               "     •  •  6  00 

"  Sylvester  E.  Partridge,              "              "     •  •  35  00 

"  E.  W.  Farr,                                 "              "     •  •  1  50 

"  William  E.  Hicks,  posting  notices 24  00 

"  Henry  Basford,  envelope  distribution 1  50 

"  Phineas  Colburn,       "               "           3  50 

"  Tremont  Baptist  Society,  rent 50  00 


1,716  86 


^442  00 


Paid  for  SUNDRIES   NOT    OTHERWISE   ENUME- 
RATED— 


To  Theodore  B.  Moses,  surveying 

«  William  A.  Garbett,        _  "        

"  Roxbury  City  Guard,  firing  salute  •  •  • 
"         "  "  rent  of  armory  • 

"  Thomas  Culligin,  ringing  bell 

"  Joseph  Hastings, 

"  Ephraim  S.  Mullikin, 

"  Thomas  Powell, 

"  Thomas  Coan, 

"  N.  D.  Rich, 

"  T.  S.  Robinson, 

"  J.  W.  Anderson,  repairing  flagstaff 

^'  T.  D.  Mulrey,  bust  of  Warren 

"  Phineas  Drew,  refreshments,  1858 

"  Dunn  &  Jones,  "  1859 

"  Parker  &  Mills,  "  "   

"  I.  F.  Richardson,  gas  fixtures 

"  William  Morse,  repairs 

"  A.  W.  Folsom,  "     • .  • 

"  David  H.  Joyce,        "     

"  Samuel  S.  Chase,      "     

"  True  Russell,  "     

"  John  M.  Marston,      "     

"  Patrick  H.  Rogers,  labor,  truant  children 

"  William  Pope  &  Son,  lumber 

"  J.  T.  Ellis  &  Co.,  " . 

"  I.  &  H.  M.  Harmon,  mason's  work 

"  Gore,  Rose  &  Co.,  paving 

"  Michael  Murray,  labor 

*'  Daniel  Green,         "     


720  80 


11 

25 

200 

00 

300 

00 

16 

00 

8 

00 

2 

00 

2 

00 

4 

00 

2 

00 

2 

00 

12 

50 

300 

00 

200 

00 

263 

50 

144 

50 

54 

13 

224 

00 

2 

00 

4 

00 

6 

96 

8 

00 

39 

75 

240 

57 

11 

25 

152 

96 

592 

94 

4 

83 

4 

00 

4 

00 

4?7JOMn<  carried  forward., 


J,537  94       $2,158  36 


49 

Amount  brought  forward,  $3,537  94        $2,158  36 

To  James  Carey,  gravel 20  00 

"  Thomas  S.  Hodge,  painting 32  10 

"  Roxbury  Gas  Light  Co.,  gas 296   10 

"  E.  T.  Northend,  carriage  hire 66   75 

"  Benjamin  Franklin,          "        5  50 

"  William  J.  Mathes,           "       70  00 

"  Luke  Jewett,                     "       16  75 

"  J.J.Merrill,                      "        H    75 

"L.A.Hitchcock,      _        "       10  50 

"  A.  W.  Newman,  weighing • 37  07 

"  Henrv  A.  Davis,  repairing  scales 66  50 

"  Fairbanks  &  Brown,            "           15  00 

"  Reuben  Weeks,  iron  work 19  23 

"  Smith,  Felton  &  Co.,  iron  doors 80  00 

"  William  Brock,  iron  work 5  00 

"  James  Aker,              "         15  36 

"  John  A.  Scott,           "         10  00 

"  J.  C.  Buchanan,        "          30  00 

"  Johnson  &  Eaton,  lightning  rods 38  56 

"  E.  Howard  &  Co.,  clocks  ■  •" 32  00 

"  Parker  Fowle  &  Sons,  carpets 26   23 

"  Nelson  Worthen,  rent 50  00 

"  Enos  Foord,  recording 7  00 

"  W.  N.  Felton,  cleaning  room 24  32 

"  Joseph  W.  Dudley,       "          17  50 

"  J.  I.  Caldwell,  coal 278  57 

"  Alvah  Dunakia,  charcoal 3  00 

"  Daniel  Tiffany,         "       9  33 

"  Rebecca  Harrington,  damages 30  00 

"  Daniel  McClusky,            "        10  00 

"  George  Leonard,              "        25  00 

"  William  H.  Mcintosh,      "        •  •  •  •  • 40  00 

"  William  E.  Woodward,  land 325  00 

"  Simon  Green,  right  of  drain 50  00 

<'  Arthur  W.  Austin  and  others,  referees 125  00 

"  Holman  Page,                                    "       2  00 

"  Ivory  Harmon,                                    "       2  00 

"  TiUson  Williams,                                "       2  00 

"  Sylvester  E.  Partridge,  paid  witness  fees 58  00 

"  Willian  Gaston,  paid  for  copies 38  62  • 

"  Joshua  Seaver,       "              "     29  00 

"  Joseph  Higgins,  copies 5  00 

"  Joseph  W.  Dudley,  clerk  hire 50  00 

"  George  Lewis,  fares 1  81 

"  (ieorge  Frost,  paid  for  reward 200  00 

"  I.  S.  Burrell,  postage 82  04 

"  E.  B.  Scott,  repairs  on  pump 35  25 

"  John  W.  Lord,  ventilators   26  47 

"  Swain  &  Craft,  brooms,  &c. 13   98 

"  George  L.  Richardson,  labor 24  27 

"  Abraham  F.  Howe,  commissions 5  00 

Amount  carried  forward,  $6,012  50        $2,158  36 

7 


50 

Amount  brought  forward,  S6,012  50       $2,158  36 

To  Stephen  Smith,  desk 30  00 

"  Moses  Gragg,  taking  census 195  00 

"  B.  F.  &  G.  H.  Wiggin,  glazing 26  34 

"  Henry  Pratt,  repairing  locks 12  47 

"  Jonas  Pierce,  Jr.,  cleaning 2   75 

"  John  Dove,  painting 22  91 

"  Colburn's  Express,  carting 50 

"  T.  D.  Mulrey.  cutting  letfers 7  00 

"  J.  M.  Swett,  killing  dogs 40  50 

"  Joseph  Hubbard,     "         1150 

"  Matthew  Clark,       "         35  00 

"  Cook  &  Perry,         "         68  00 

"  Hawley  Folsom,       "         3  00 

"  Ezekiel  Merrill,       "  _        3  00 

"  J.  S.  Waterman,  repairs 3  36 

"  Ham  &  Leighton,  lime,  &c. 20  00 

"  George  Onion,  sundries 2  00 

"  Rufus  Wyman,  examining  titles 160  00 

»  William  S.  Leland,             "        40  65 

"  James  Ritchie,  evening  school 300  00 

"  Arial  I.  Cummings,  extra  services 100  00 

"  Joseph  W.  Winslow,  rent 12  00 

"  Balch  &  Son,   cleaning  clock 1  50 

"  Edward  Holden,  indexing 4  00 

"  J.  C.  Seaver,  return  of  deaths 26  64 

"  E.  M.  Stoddard  &  Co.,  ice 14  00 

"  White  &  King,  mounting  plans 10  00 

"  James  H.  Wood,  mats,  &c. 3  75 

"  Fillebrown  &  Holbrook,  stove  work 23  25 

"  Owen  Nawn,  labor  on  drain 55  00 

"  R.  H.  Wiswall,  varnishing 8   75 

"  Jonas  Pierce,  Jr.,  labor 16  00 

"  City  Mutual  Insurance  Co.,  insurance 120  00 

"  Norfolk  Mutual  Insurance  Co.,     "        74  00 

"  Caleb  Stowell,  stone  work 127  49 

"  James  Hall,  lettering  lamps 31  42 

"  H.  E.  Woodbridge,  services 15  25 

"  Storey  &  May,  professional  services 50  00 

"  Franklin  Winchester,  Harbor  Master 37  50 

"  Patrick  D.  Kenney,  labor  •  •  •  • 37  50 

"  Ezra  Young,  paid  for   "     4  50 

"  William  Hewitt,  paper  hanging 9  95 

"  George  Newton,  carting-  •  • 1   00 

"  Charles  A.  Beal,  furniture 19  50 

"  F.  W.  Fuller,  hardware 2  06 

"  Melzar  Waterman,  rent 12  00 

$7,813  54 

Total  Expenditure $9,971  90 


51 


TRANSFERS— 

To  repairs  of  Highways 18  35 

"  House  Ofial 274  14 

"  Watch  and  Police • 296  45 

"  Salaries  of  City  Officers 50  00 

«  Land  of  C.  M.  Ellis 120  39 

"  New  Engine-house 630  00 

"  Militia 442  50 

"  Discount  on  Taxes 481  54 

"  Abatement  of  Taxes 208  46 

"  New  School-houses 347  31 

"  House  Offal 1,000  00 

"  Highland  Park 1,152  00 


),021  14 


$14,993  04 


Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1860,  $932  53, 


52 


TABLE 

OF  APPROPKIATIONS,   EXPENDITURES,   TRANSFERS   AND   BALANCES. 

1859-60. 


Appropriations. 


Appropriated. 


Expended. 


Transfers. 


Balances. 


For  Public  Schools,  including 
salaries  of  Teachers,  Fuel, 
and  Contingent  Expenses  . 

Enlargement  of  the  Dearborn 
School  House 

Enlargement  of  the  Comins 
School  House 

Eoxbury  Grammar  School     . 

Support  of  Poor 

House  Offal 

Highways,  Bridges  and  Side- 
walks   

Widening  Tremont  Street .  . 
"  Washington  Street 
"  Vernon  Street  .  . 
"        Plymouth  Street    . 

Constructing  Short  Street .     . 

Eire  Department 

New  Engine  House  .... 

Reservoirs 

Grading  Alms  House  Land    . 

Watch  and  Police     .... 

Police  Court 

Lamps 

State  Tax 

County  Tax 

Military  Services 

Discount  on  Taxes  .... 

Abatement  of  Taxes     .     .     . 

Eellowes  Street  Sewer  .     .     . 

Plymouth  Street  Sewer      .     . 

Davis  Street  Sewer  .... 

Surveying  for  Sewers    .     .     . 

Land  of  C.  M.  Ellis       .     .     . 

Highland  Psirk 

Salaries  of  City  Officers     .     . 

City  Debt  and  Interest       .     . 

Contingent  Expenses    .     .     . 


$51,427  85 


I   le. 


347  31 


3,100  00 

10,477  63 

2,378  78 

39,047  58 


-    90,880  15 


17,011 

2,777 
2,000 
2,000 

18,718 
2,185 

13,841 
6,609 

13,979 

442 

6,081 

2,208 


17,000  00 


12,120 

1,152 

7,937 

68,201 

15,925 


$40,936  44 

(  10,287  29 

(     9,060  02 

2,450  00 

8,352  82 

2,281  14 


$1,453  69 


763  60 


38,493 

57,148 
4,814 
1,968 
9,862 

11,964 

13,772 
2,758 
1,700 
1,894 

16,502 
2,095 

10,517 
6,609 

13,979 
442 
6,081 
2,208 
3,368 
6,651 
4,016 
2,086 

12,120 
1,152 
6,600 

67,358 
9,971 


713  09 
19  40 


500  04 


12 


5,021  14 


,037  72 


650  00 

1,361  21 

97  64 

554  45 


5,122  07 


2,525  67 

300  00 
105  73 

2,216  22 
89  41 

2,823  88 


877  11 


1,337  50 
842  98 
932  53 


$416,851  79' $389,506  59 


i,471  08,  $28,874  12 


53 


AMOUNT    OF    CITY    DEBT. 


Dates  of  Notes. 


Oct. 

Jan. 

Feb. 

Feb. 

JNov. 

June 

July 

March 

JMov. 

Nov. 

March 

Aug. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

Feb. 

Oct. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

Feb, 

Feb. 

Feb. 

April 

Sept. 

Nov. 

Dec. 

Jan. 

Sept. 

JNov. 

Jan. 

Aug. 

Nov. 

Nov. 

Nov. 

Jan. 

Oct. 

Dec. 

Nov. 

Nov. 

Nov. 

Nov. 

Nov. 

May 

Jan. 

June 

July 

Jan. 

Jan. 


To  whom  Payable. 


Interest. 


12,  1859  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 

11,  I860  Iiisiiluiion  for  Savings,  Hoxbury 
1,  1860  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 
7,  1860  Institution  for  Savings,  Koxbiiry 
1,  1834  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 

30,  1853  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 

17,  1855  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 
1,  1855  Commonwealth  of   Massachu- 
setts,       

n,  1851  David  A.  Simmons      .... 

24,  1851  Nelson  Curtis 

15,  1854  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 
26,  1854  Charles  Humphrey     .... 

1,  1853  Sarah  Jones 

1,  1835  Mary  Jones, 

23,  1835  City  Treasurer,  or  order  .  . 
22,  1855  City  Treasurer,  or  order      .     . 

12,  1855  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 
1,  1856  James  Parker,  Trustee    .     .     . 
1,  1852  Jeremiah  H.  Wilkins      .     .     . 
1,  1852  City  Treasurer,  or  order     .     . 
1,  1832  James  Parker,  Trustee   .    .     . 

20,  1852  Abigail  Seaver 

20,  1852  George  Seaver 

20,  1852  George  W.  Seaver     .... 

30,  1852  Samuel  Kendall 

1,  1852  City  Treasurer,  or  order,     .     . 
1,  1852  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 
1,  1857  Provident  Institution  Tor  Savings, 
Boston, 

18,  1833  Suffolk  Savings  Bank     .     .     . 
1,  1853  City  Treasurer,  or  order      .     . 
1,  1836  Commonwealth   of   Massachu- 
setts,      

1,  1838  City  Treasurer,  or  order,     .     . 

11,  1858  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 
1,  1834  City  Treasurer,  or  order      .     . 

17,  1854  Cynthia  Stillings    .     .     .     .     . 
1,    1856  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 

25,  1855  City  Treasurer,  or  order  .     .     . 

12,  1833  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 
1,  1855  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 

1,  1856  Elijah  Lewis 

1,  1856  Joseph  W.  Dudley      .... 

18,  1856  Catherine  Crane 

18,  1856  City  Treasurer,  or  order  .     .     . 

25,  1856  City  Treasurer,  or  order      .     , 
4,  1857  Elizabeth  D.  Brigham,     .     .     . 

28,  1856JInstitulion  for  Savings,  Roxbury" 
1,  1858  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 

26,  1858  Suffolk  Savings  Bank      .     .     . 
1,  1859  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 

29,  I839i Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 


per  cent 
Si 

H 
^h 

I' 

6 
6 

6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 


6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
() 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 

§* 


When  Payable. 


Oct. 
Nov. 
Nov. 
JNov. 
Nov. 
June 
July 

March 

Nov. 

Nov. 

March 

Sept. 

Ian. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

Feb. 

Oct. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

May 

Sept. 

Nov. 

Dec. 
Jan. 
Sept. 

Nov. 

Jan. 

Aug. 

Nov. 

Nov. 

JNov. 

Jan. 

Oct. 

Dec. 

Nov. 

Nov. 

Nov. 

Nov. 

Nov. 

May 

Jan. 

June 

July 

Jan. 

Jan. 


Amount. 


1860 
1860 
1860 
1860 
1860 
1860 
J  860 

1860 
1861 
1861 
1861 
1861 
1861 
1861 
1861 
1861 
1861 
1861 
1862 
1862 
1862 
1862 
1862 
1862 
1862 
1862 

i; 

1862 
1863 
1863 


1 

1863 
1863 
1864 
1 

1864 
1863 
1865 
1863 
1865 
1865 
1865 
1865 
1863 
1865 
1866 
1866 
1866 
1869 
29  1869 


Amount  carried  forward, 


,g  12,000  00 
4,000  00 
4,000  00 
3,000  00 
6,000  00 
2,000  00 
6,000  00 

8,000  00 
11,000  00 
1,000  00 
6,000  00 
2.000  CO 
2,000  00 
2,000  00 
1,000  00 
1,000  00 
6,000  00 
8,000  00 
1,000  00 
6,000  00 
10,000  00 
7,700  00 
2,200  00 
1,100  00 
4,000  00 
3,000  00 
3,000  00 

9,000  00 

13,000  00 

6,000  00 

20,000  00 

3,000  00 

5,300  00 

9,000  00 

1,000  00 

12,000  00 

1,000  00 

11,000  00 

6,000  00 

4,000  00 

1,000  00 

1,000  00 

1,000  00 

2,000  00 

2,000  00 

4,000  00 

10,000  00 

13,000  00 

11,000  00 

4,000  00 

5266,600  00 


54 


CITY   DEBT  — Continued, 


Date  of  Notes. 


Dec. 

1 

1859 

April 

15, 

1859 

April 

14, 

i8oy 

May 

5, 

185'J 

JVlay 

16, 

1859 

July 

15, 

1859 

July 

26, 

1859 

Oct. 

27, 

1859 

JNov. 

1 

1839 

Dec. 

1, 

1859 

Dec. 

21, 

1859 

Dec. 

30, 

1869 

Jan. 

14, 

1860 

JMay 

9, 

1859 

May 

h 

1839 

To  whom  Payable. 


Amount  brought  forward, 
InsliUition  for  Savings,  Koxbury 
Mary  and  Sarah  Jones   . 
City  Treasurer,  or  order 
City  Treasurer,  or  order 
City  Treasurer,  or  order 
(Jily  Treasurer,  or  order 
Ciiy  Treasurer,  or  order 
City  Treasurer,  or  order 
Cily  Treasurer,  or  order 
Institution  lor  Savings,  Roxbury 
Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 
Cily  Treasurer,  or  order,    .     . 
Institution  lor  Savings,  Roxbury 
Trustees  of  Comins  Fund    .     . 
Commissioners   of  Forest   Hills 
Cemetery        


Interest. 

When  Payable. 

Amount. 

percent. 

^266,500  00 

bh 

Dec. 

1,1861 

7,0U0  00 

H 

April 

15, 1869 

2,000  00 

Si 

April 

14,  1869 

10,000  00 

3i 

May 

6,  1869 

20,000  00 

5h 

May 

16, 1869 

12,000  00 

H 

July 

15,  1869 

10,000  00 

bh 

July 

26,  1869 

7,000  00 

bh 

Oct. 

27,  1869 

10,000  00 

bh 

Nov. 

1,  1869 

20,000  00 

bh 

Dec. 

1, 1869 

18,000  00 

^h 

Dec. 

21,  1869 

12,000  00 

H 

Jan. 

1,  1870 

10,000  00 

bh 

Jan. 

14,  1870 

5,000  00 

6 

May 

9,  1869 

500  00 

6 

On  Demand. 

975  00 

5410,975  00 


55 


AMOUNT     OF     DEBT 


FOR  FOREST  HILLS  CEMETERY. 


Date  of  Notes. 

To  whom  Payable. 

Interest. 

When  Payable. 

Amount. 

Au?.     12,  1848 
Aug.     15,  1831 
Oct.        1,  1352 
Oct.        1,  1852 
Oct.        1,  1852 
Oct.        1,  1852 
Nov.       1,  1852 

John  Parkinson 

Joel  Seaverns 

Joel  Seaverns 

Joel  Seaverns 

Joel  Seaverns 

Joel  Seaverns 

Institution   for   Savings,    Rox- 
bury 

per  cent. 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 

6  , 

On  Demand 
On  Demand 
On    Demand 
Oct.        1,   1859 
Oct.        1,  1860 
Oct.        1,  18G1 

x^ov.       1,  1862 

,g  1,000  00 
1,000  00 
1 ,000  00 
2,000  00 
2,000  00 
2,000  00 

2,000  00 

^1 1,000  00 

*The  Debt  of  the  Cemetery  is  kept  separately  from  the  ordinary  City  Debt,  and 
provision  is  made  for  the  payment  of  the  same  by  the  proceeds  of  the  sale  of  lots  in  the 
grounds,  as  will  be  seen  by  the  following  section  from  the  Act  obtained  from  the  Leg- 
islature : — 

Section  4.  "The  proceeds  of  sales  of  lots  or  rights  of  burial  in  said  Cemetery 
shall  be  paid  into  the  City  Treasury,  to  be  kept  separate  from  any  other  funds  of  the 
City,  and  subject  to  the  order  of  said  Commissioners,  and  such  proceeds  shall  be  de- 
voted to  the  liquidation  of  the  debt  incurred  in  the  purchase  of  the  land  for  said  Ceme- 
tery, and  to  the  improvement  and  embellishment  thereof,  as  aforesaid,  under  the  direc- 
tion of  said  board  of  Commissioners.  And  no  other  moneys  shall  be  appropriated  from 
the  City  Treasury  by  the  City  Council  for  such  improvement  and  embellishment." 


56 


Dr.        Joseph  W.  Dudley,  City  Treasurer,  in  Account  Current,  from 


1860. 
Feb.  1 


To  balance  in  the  Treasury,  at  last  audit 

Cash  received  of  the  Commonwealth,  for  Pauper  Account.. 

"        "         of  Ezra  Young,  for  sales  of  produce,  &c 

"        "         of  West  Roxbury,  for  board  of  Paupers 

"        "         of  Cities  and  Towns,  for  support  of  Paupers.. 

Amount  raised  by  Tax 

Cash  received  of  West  Roxbury,  for  their  proportion  of  State 
and  County  Tax 

"     ■"         of  George  B.  Davis,  for  rent  of  house 

"        "         of  Mrs.  Mercy  Newell,  for  rent  of  house 

"        "         of  George  Curtis,  for  rent  of  wharf 

"        "  of  Calvin  C.  Dunbar,  for  rent  of  land,  1858... 

"        "  of  Andrew  W.  Newman,  for  income  of  hay- 

scal  es 


$120  00 

50  00 

579  86 

77  60 


188,369  04 
5,809  95 


aoo  00 

222  33 

330  00 

20  00 

145  50 


of  Joseph  W.  Tucker,  for  fees 235  25 

of  Joseph  W.Tucker,  for  dog  licenses 1,11U  00 

of  Benjamin  Meriam,  for  fines  and  fees 600  00 

of  Peter  S.  Wheelock,  for  fines  and  witness 

fees 2,838  88 

of  Peter  S.  Wheelock,  for  Police  Court  fees...  1,872  15 


for  sales  of  Munroe  land 1 ,220  00 

for  sales  of  Stony  Brook  land 3,868  61 

for  sale  of  Brook  Farm 1,953  40 

for  sale  of  land,  Marcella  Street 560  50 

for  watering  streets 1,147  00 

from  T.  L.  D.  Perkins,  for  stone 26  15 

from  W.  B.  May,  for  sale  of  Engine-house 128  00 

of    Ciimmonwealth    of   Massachusetts,   from 

School  Fund 859  74 

of  Commonwealth  of  Masssachuselts,  fur  pay 

of  militia  and  rent  of  armory 475  00 

of  sundry  persons,  for  edge  stone  on  Trcmont 

Street 414  30 

of  Wentworth  &  Pierce,  for  loam 75  00 

of  John  C.  Seaver,  for  house,   Union  Street...  2,451)  00 

of  Samuel  Cook,  for  house  offal 651  00 

by  Loans  authorized , 


$22,991  95 


827  46 


194,178  29 


917  83 


6,656  28 


7,582  71 


6,226  19 
179,000  00 


$418,380  71 


57 


February  1,  1859,  to  February  1,  1860,  with  tie  City  of  Roxbury.       Cr. 


By  cash  paid  Salaries  of  School  Teachers $28,188  29 

"  "        Contingent  Expenses  of  Schools 10,917  30 

"  "        Fuel  for  Schools 1,830  85 

"  "        Roxbury  Grammar  School 2,450  00 

"  "        Alteration  on  the  Comins  School-house 9,060  1-2 

"  "        Alteration  on  the  Dearborn  School-house 10,287  29 

«  "        PayofFiremen 8,48175 

"  "        Contingent  Expenses  of  Fire  Department 5,29103 

''  "        Reservoirs 1,700  00 

"  "        New  Engine-house 2,758  00 

"  "        Lamps 

"  "        Support  of  Poor 

"  "        House  Offal 

"  "        Repairs  of  Highways 

"  "        Widening  Tremont  Street 57,148  64 

"  "        Widening  Washington  Street 4,814  74 

"  "        Widening  Vernon  Street 1,968  19 

"  "        Widening  Plymouth  Street , 9,862  39 

"  "        Constructing  Short  Street 11,964  12 

«  "        Watch  and  Police 16,502  55 

"  "        Police  Court 2,095  81 

"  "        Grading  Alms-house  land 

"  "        Salaries  of  City  Officers 

"  "        City  Debt  and  Interest 

"  "        Land  of  C.  M.  Ellis 

"  "        Sewer,  Fellowes  Street 3,368  14 

"  "        Sewer,  Plymouth  Street 6,65151 

"  "        Sewer,  Davis  Street 4,016  39 

"  "        Surveying  for  Sewers 2,086  85 

"  "        Grading  Highland  Park  and  fence  round  the  same 

"  "        Militia 

"  "        County  Tax 13,979  45 

"  "        State  Tax 6,609  00 

"  "        Discount  on  Taxes 6,08154 

"  "        Abatement  of  Taxes 2,208  46 

"  "        Contingent  Expenses 

By  Balance  in  the  Treasury 


18,230  78 
10,517  58 
8,352  82 
2,2»1  14 
38,493  13 


85,758  08 


18,598  36 

1,894  27 

6,600  00 

67.358  55 

12,120  39 

16,122  89 

1,152  00 

442  50 

20,588  45 


8,290  00 
9,971  90 


$389,506  59 
28,874  12 


$418,380  71 


JOSEPH  W.  DUDLEY,  City  Treasurer. 


Roxiury,  February  28,  1860. 


City  op  Eoxbukt,  FEBHtrAEY  28,  1860. 

The  undersigned,  Joint  Standing  Committee  on  Accounts,  in  pursuance  of 
the  provisions  of  the  eighth  section  of  the  Ordinance  entitled  "  An  Ordinance 
establishing  a  system  of  Accountability  in  the  Expenditures  of  the  City,"  requiring 
them  to  audit  the  Account  of  the  City  Treasurer  at  the  close  of  each  municipal 
year,  and  as  much  oftener  as  they  may  deem  expedient,  hereby  certify  that  we 
have  examined  and  audited  the  within  Account  of  Joseph  W.  Dudley,  City 
Treasurer,  and  find  the  same  coiTCctly  cast,  and  all  payments  and  expenditures 
therein  charged  against  the  City,  are  sustained  by  the  necessary  vouchers. 

We  find  that  there  has  been  received  into  the  Treasury,  at  sundry  times  within 
the  year  ending  January  31,  1860,  the  sum  of  three  hundred  ninety-five  thousand 
three  hundred  eighty-eight  and  76-100  dollars,  which,  with  the  balance  on  hand  Jan- 
uary 31,  1859,  of  twenty-two  thousand  nine  hundred  ninety-one  and  95-100  dollars, 
makes  a  total  receipt  of  the  year  of  fiiur  hundred  eighteen  thousand  three  hundred 
eighty  and  71-100  dollars ;  and  that  there  has  been  paid  out  from  the  Treasury  dur- 
ing the  same  period,  the  sum  of  three  hundred  eighty-nine  thousand  five  hundred  six 
and  59-100  dollars,  leaving  in  the  Treasury  January  31,  1860,  a  balance  oi  twenty- 
eight  thousand  eight  hundred  seventy-four  and  12-100  dollars. 


JOHN  C.  CLAPP, 
ALONZO  W.  rOLSOM, 
B.  F.  CAMPBELL, 
GEORGE  B.  FAUNCE, 
CHARLES  D.  SWAIN, 


Committee 

on 
Accounts. 


In  Common  Council,  March  5,  1860. 
Report  accepted,  and  sent  up  for  concurrence. 

FRANKLIN  WILLIAMS,  Clerk. 

In  Boakd  of  Aldermen,  March  5,  1860. 
Concurred. 

JOSEPH  W.  TUCKER,  City  Clerk. 


59 


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City  op  Roxbury,  Februaky  28,  1860. 

The  undersigned,  Joint  Standing  Committee  on  Accounts,  in  pursuance  of 
the  provisions  of  the  eighth  section  of  the  Ordinance  entitled  "  An  Ordinance 
establishing  a  system  of  accountability  in  the  Expenditures  of  the  City,"  requir- 
ing them  to  audit  the  account  of  the  City  Treasurer  at  the  close  of  each  municipal 
year,  and  as  much  oftener  as  they  may  deem  expedient,  hereby  certify  that  we  have 
examined  and  audited  the  within  account  of  Joseph  W.  Dudley,  City  Treasu- 
rei*,  in  account  with  the  Commissioners  of  Forest  Hills  Cemetery,  and  find  the 
same  correctly  cast,  and  all  payments  and  expenditures  therein  charged  against 
the  Commissioners,  are  sustained  by  the  necessary  vouchers. 

We  find  that  there  has  been  received  into  the  Treasury  on  account  of  the  Ceme- 
tery at  sundry  times  Avithin  the  year  ending  January  31,  1860,  the  sum  of  twenty- 
one  thousand  four  hundred  Jifty-four  and  \&-\00  dollars,  which,  with  the  balance  on 
hand,  January  31,  1859,  of  eight  hundred  sixty-three  and  54-100  dollars,  makes  a  total 
receipt  of  the  year  of  twenty-two  thousand  three  hundred  seventeen  and  70-100  dol- 
lars ;  and  there  has  been  paid  from  the  Treasury  during  the  same  period,  on  the 
order  of  the  Commissioners,  the  sum  of  twenty-one  thousand  seventy-nine  and  29-100 
dollars,  leaving  a  balance  in  the  Treasury,  January  31,  1860,  of  twelve  hundred 
thirty-eight  and  41-100  dollars. 

JOHN  C.  CLAPP, 

AI.ONZO  W.  FOLSOM,  Committee 

B.  F.  CAMPBELL,  \         on 

GEORGE  B.  FAUNCE,  Accounts. 

CHARLES  D.  SWAIN, 


In  Common  Council,  March  5,  1859. 

Read  and  accepted,  and  sent  up  for  concurrence. 

FRANKLIN  WILLIAMS,  Qerh. 

In  Board  of  Aldermen,  March  5,  1859. 
ConcuiTed. 

JOSEPH  W.  TUCKER,  City  Cleric. 


61 


REAL   ESTATE   OWNED  BY  THE   CITY. 


The  City  Hall,  (of  brick,)  buildings  adjacent  and  land 


:g  12,000  00 


32,000  00 
3,000  00 

15,000  00 
2,500  00 

14,263  70 
7.000  00 

12,000  00 


The  Alms-house,  (of  brick,)  barn  and  land,  about  II  acres 
The  Dwelling-house,  (of  wood,)  Highland  Street 

The  City  Wharf  at  Point,  21,4-71  feet 

Dwelling-house,  (of  wood.)  and  land  on  Washington  Street 
Land,  corner  of  Washington  and  Heath  Streets,  about  8^  acres, 

Stony  Brook  Lands,  27,702  feet 

Land  on  Winthrop  Street,  28,341  feet,  and  Brick  School-House, 

Dudley  School-house,  (of  stone,)  and  land,  Kenilworth  Street  P  .^^  ^g~ /-^       14  000  00 

Dudley  School-house,  (of  brick,)  and  land  Bnrtlett  Street  .      ) 

Washington  School-house,  (of  brick,)  aud  18,900  feet  of  land,  Washington 

Street 14,000  00 

Dearborn  School-house,  (of  brick,)  and  24.500  feet  of  land,  near  Davis  St.  30,000  00 
Comins  School-house,  (of  brick,)  and  20,000  feet  of  land,  Gore  Avenue  .  30,000  00 
School-house,  (of  wood,)  and  5000  feet  of  land,  Yeoman  Street,  JSos.  1,  2, 

3  and  4 4,000  00 

School-house,  (of  wood,)  and  6396  feet  of  land,  Eustis  and   Sumner  Sts., 

Nos.  5,  6,  7  &  8, 7,000  00 

School-house,  (of  wood,)  and  7593  feet  of  land,  Vernon  Street,  Nos.  9,   10 

and   Intermediate 5,000  00 

School-house, (of  wood,)  and  15.000  ft.  land,  Sudbury  St.,  Xos.  11,12,13&14,  10,000  00 
School-house,  (of  wood,)  and  9850  feet  of  land,  Avon  Place,  Nos.  15  and  16,  3,500  00 
School-house,  (of  wood,)  No.    17        .        .         . 

School-hoUse,  (of  wood,)  and  4,000  ft.  land.  Orange  Street,  Nos.  18  and  19, 
School-house,  (of  wood,)  and  7,200  ft.  land.  Smith  Street,  Nos.  20  and  21, 
School-house,  (of  wood,)  and  10,200  feet  of  land,  Francis  Street,  No.  22 

and  Grammar  School 

School-house,  (of  wood,)  and  land.  Centre  Street,  JSos.  23  and  24 
School-house,  (of  wood,)  and  11,600  ft.  land.  Heath  Street,  No.  25,  . 
School-house,  (of  wood,)  and  6720  feet  of  land,  Edinboro' Street,  Nos.  26 

and  27 • 

School-house,  (of  wood,)  and  11,825  feet  of  land,  Munroe  Street,  No.  28,  . 
School-house,  (of  wood,)  and  9,512  feet  ofland,  Elm  Street,  Nos.  29  and  30, 

School-house,  and  13.779  feet  of  land.  Heath  Place 

Engine-house,  (of  brick,)  No.  1,  and  land,  corner  Warren  and  Dudley  Sts. 
Engine-house,  (of  brick,)  No.  2,  and  land,  Centre  Street     .... 
Engine-house,  (of  brick,)  No.  6,  and  land,  Eustis  Street      .... 
Engine-house,  (of  wood,)  No.  7,  on  lease  land,  Ruggles  Street 
Land  of  C.  M.  Ellis,  Shawmut  Avenus;,  134,671  feet,  .... 

Forest  Hills  Cemetery,  (situated  in  West  Boxbury,)  about  104  acres— not 

valued 

Cemetery  on  Eustis  Street — not  valued        ....... 

Cemetery  on  Warren  Street — not  valued     .,,..,. 

^275,784  09 


600  00 

2,600  00 

3,000  00 

3,800  00 

2,000  00 

4,800  00 

3.500  00 

4,000  00 

3,500  00 

10,000  00 

6,000  00 

2,000  00 

2,500  00 

600  00 

12,124  39 

62 


PERSONAL    PROPERTY 


BELONaiNG     TO     THE     CITY. 


* 


rurniture  in  City  Hall, 

"  Mayor     and     Aldermen's 

Room, 
"  Common  Council  Room, 

"  Police  Court  Room, 

"  City  Marshal's  Office, 

In  charge  of  the  Chief  Engineer — 

5  Fire  Engines, 
1  Hook  and  Ladder  Carriage, 
7  Hose  Carriages, 
5,175  Feet  of  Leading  Hose, 
142  Feet  of  Suction  Hose, 
14  Ladders, 
4  Hooks, 


Furniture  in  City  Clerk's  Office, 
"  City  Treasurer's  Office, 

"  Watch-house, 

"  Engine-houses,   Hook  and 

Ladder  and  Hose  Co. 
"  School-houses. 


4  Crotch  Poles, 
3  Rakes, 
6  Forks, 

40  Buckets, 
13  Axes, 

41  Reservoirs, 
17  Hydrants. 


In  charge  of  the  Superintendent  of  the  Alms-house — 


Stock  and  Utensils  at  Alms-house. 
3  Horses, 
3  Cows, 
3  Horse  Wagons,  with  Harness, 


1  Horse  Cart,  with  Harness, 
Ploughs,    Harrows,    and    other 
Farming  Tools. 


In  charge  of  the  Commissioner  of  Streets- 

10  Horses,  I 

9  Carts, 

8  Cart  Harnesses, 
5  Chain  Harnesses,  I 


2  Hay  Cutters, 
Lot    of   Picks,    Shovels,    Hoes, 
Hammers,  Drilling  Tools,  &c. 


In  charge  of  the  Undertaker — 2  Hearses. 

In  charge  of  Weigher  of  Hay — 1  Scale. 

In  chai'ge  of  Lamp-lighters — 
372  Gas  Lamps, 
167  Fluid  Lamps. 


*  The  value  of  the  Personal  Property  waa  not  ascertained  by  the  Committee  on  Public 
Property. 


REPORT 


COMMISSIONER  OF  STREETS. 


The  undersigned,  Commissioner  of  Streets,  respectfully  submits 
the  following  Report  of  the  Expenses  on  the  Streets,  Side- 
walks and  Crossings,  from  February  1,  1859,  to  January  31, 
1860,  inclusive. 


Amount  expended  on  repairs  ©f  Tremont  Street  . 
"  Sidewalks  .     .     . 


"Warren  Street 
Sidewalks  .     . 


Washington  Street 
Sidewalks  .     .     . 


Parker  Street, 
Sidewalks  .     . 


Mall  Street 
Sidewalks  . 


Shawmut  Avenue 
Sidewalks  .     .     . 


Centre  Street 
Sidewalks  . 


Lowell  Street  . 
Sidewalks  .     . 


Vernon  Street 
Sidewalks  .     . 


Elm  Street 
Sidewalks  . 


$8,030  18 
2,285  46 


1,874 

07 

299 

45 

966 

02 

213 

51 

2,383 

59 

318 

67 

385 

55 

115 

30 

311 

35 

181 

78 

i;022 

38 

151 

47 

34 

63 

13 

00 

370 

53 

126 

28 

381 

97 

150 

00 

Amount  carried  forward, 


$10,315  64 

2,173  52 

1,179  53 

2,702  26 

500  85 

493  13 

1,173  85 

47  63 

496  81 

531  97 
$19,615  19 


64 


Amount  brought  forward, 
Amount  expended  on  repairs  of  Dennis  Street 
"  "  "  Sidewalks  .     . 


Winthrop  Street 
Sidewalks  .     . 


Eustis  Street 
Sidewalks  . 


Bartlett  Street 
Sidewalks  .     . 


Short  Street 
Sidewalks  . 


Walnut  Street 
Sidewalks  .     . 


Ruggles  Street 
Sidewalks  .     . 


Cabot  Street 
Sidewalks  . 


East  Street 
Sidewalks   . 


Plymouth  Street 
Sidewalks   .     . 


Dudley  Street 
Sidewalks  .     . 


School  Street 
Sidewalks   . 


Davis  Street 
Sidewalks   . 


St.  James  Street 
Sidewalks  .     . 


Sumner  Street 
Sidewalks  .     . 


Orchard  Street 
Sidewalks  .     . 


Cedar  Street 
Sidewalks   . 


Eliot  Square 
Sidewalks  . 


119  84 
6  40 


338 
36 

20 
08 

472 

58 

01 
66 

33 

30 

55 
00 

749 
136 

34 
20 

84 
5 

63 

44 

528 
165 

02 

98 

74 
36 

00 
00 

1,688 
561 

11 

85 

124 
9 

25 
44 

379 

58 

83 
33 

210 
25 

00 

40 

95 
57 

10 
70 

148 
40 

61 
90 

876 
113 

70 

38 

331 
157 

26 

84 

3 
1 

25 

38 

569  50 

48  80 


Amount  carried  forward , 


$19,615  19 

126  24 

374  28 

530  67 

63  55 

885  54 

90  07 

694  00 

110  00 

2,249  96 

133  69 

438  16 

235  40 

152  80 

189  51 

990  OS 

489  10 

4  63 

618  30 
$27,991   17 


65 


Amount  brought  forward, 
Amount  expended  on  repairs  of  Heath  Street    . 

"  "  "  Grenville  Street 

"  "  "  Swett  Street    . 

"  "  "  Dearborn  Street 

Oxford  Street 

"  "  "  Belmont  Street 

"  "  "  Circuit  Street 

"  "  "  Highland  Street 

"  "  "  Zeigler  Street,— Sidewalks 

Sudbury  Street, 
Smith  Street,  " 

"  "  Union  Street,  " 

"            "        on  building  and  repairing  drains  and 
cespools 

"  "        shovelling  and  removing  snow  .     .     . 

"  "         cleaning  streets,  crossings  and  gutters 

"  "         sprinkling  streets 

"  "        running  ash  carts 

"  "         repairs  on  harness  room       .... 

"  "        one  horse 

"  "        hay,  grain  and  bedding 

"  "        harnesses,  blankets  and  repairing  do. 

"  "        repairing  carts 

"  "        blacksmith  work, 

"  "        T.  M.  Cottin,  hostler 

"  "        hardware,  shovels,  &c 

"  "        printing 

"  "         Commissioner's  salary 

"  "        lanterns  and  fluid 

"  •'        repairs  on  stable      ....... 

"  "        one  set  pulley  blocks 

"            "        cutting  stone  monuments  for  bound- 
aries   

"  "        cracking  stone  at  gravel  bank    .     .     . 

21,515  feet  of  edge  stones  have  been  set. 
8,000  yards  of  cobble  paving. 
2,613  yards  of  block  crossings  and  driveways. 
4,562  yards  of  brick  paving. 

Schedule  of  City  Property  in  charge  of  Commissioner. 


7,991 

17 

252 

71 

65 

50 

35 

00 

30 

85 

66 

25 

41 

00 

22 

41 

28 

35 

16 

32 

36 

91 

123 

46 

14 

92 

919 

69 

271 

56 

963 

10 

2,157 

71 

1,493 

00 

33 

01 

250 

00 

1,334 

34 

130 

00 

107 

18 

792 

58 

300 

00 

119 

70 

7 

12 

1,000 

00 

39 

19 

11 

42 

18 

76 

49 

50 

170 

00 

B,892  71 


10  horses, 
6  one-horse  carts, 
3  two-horse  carts, 
8  cart  harnesses, 
5  chain  harnesses, 

10  horse  blankets. 


1 0  halters, 

8  curry  combs  and  brushes, 
2  sleds, 
1  pung, 

1  wagon, 

2  hay  cutters, 


66 


2  axes, 
2  iron  rakes, 
2  wheelbarrows, 
20  lanterns, 

2  planes, 

1  iron  square, 
1  set  tackle, 

3  water  buckets, 
3  pitchforks, 

1  handsaw, 
20  pick  handles, 
13  iron  bars, 

5  churn  drills. 


16  jumper  drills, 

7  striking  hammers, 

8  sledge  hammers, 
14  cracking  hammers, 
1 9  picks, 

24  shovels, 
11  snow  shovels, 
8  steel  wedges, 
6  hoes, 
92  stone  monuments, 
22|  tons  hay  on  hand, 

Freight  blocks  at  Ham's  wharf, 
lot  of  iHmber  at  stable  yai-d. 


Widening  Tremont  Street. 
Amount  expended  by  the  Commissioner  on  account  of  this 
appropriation 


5,565  72 
$439  37 


Widening  Short  Street. 
Amount  expended  by  the  Commissioner 

Respectfully  submitted, 

MOSES  H.  LIBBEY, 

Commissioner  of  Streets. 
Hoxbury,  Jan.  30,  1860. 


In  Board  op  Aldermen,  Feb.  6,  1860. 

Referred  to  the  Committee  on  Accounts,  with  direction  to  print  such  parts  of 
the  Report  as  they  deem  expedient  with  the  Report  of  the  Receipts  and  Expen- 
ditures of  the  City. 

Sent  down  for  concurrence.  * 

JOSEPH  W.  TUCKER,  Cit;/  Clerk. 


Concurred. 


In  Common  Council,  Feb.  6,  1860. 
FRANKLIN  WILLIAMS,  Clerk. 


REPORT 

ON 

BIETHS,  MAMIAGES  AND  DEATHS, 

1859. 


To  the  Honorable  Mayor  and  City  Council : 

Gentlemen — The  following  tabular  statement  in  relation  to 
the  Registration  of  Births,  Marriages  and  Deaths  in  the  City  of 
Roxbury  for  the  year  1859,  is  respectfully  submitted. 

JOSEPH  W.  TUCKER,  City  Registrar. 

TaMe  Ko.  1. 

BIRTHS    REGISTERED   IN   THE    CITY   OF   ROXBURY,    1859. 

Males 429 

Females 364 

Total 793 

Both  parents  native  born 205 

Both  parents  foreigners 527 

One  parent  native  born 61 

Total  •  •' 793 

Born  in  each  month  as  follmos : — 
January,  February,  March,  April,         May,  June, 

46  62  65  58  59  61 

July,      August,      September,      October,     November,      December, 
67  62  61  82  89  81 

MARRIAGES  REGISTERED  IN  THE  CITY  OF  ROXBURY  IN  THE  YEAR  1859. 

American  parents  both 74 

Foreign  parents  both 147 

American  one — foreign  one 21 

242 
Married  in  each  month  of  the  year : — 
January,  February,  March,         April,         May,         June, 

25  20  15  14  25  19 

July,      August,      September,      October,     November,      December, 
16  23  29  24  20  12 


68 


MORTUARY     STATISTICS. 
Table  ISTo.  2. 

Diseases  and  causes  of  Death  in  Roxbury  in  1859. 


[s^ 

S 

!>> 

C" 

. 

pC 

b 

^ 

,n 

DISEASES. 

- 

1 

"3 

< 

Hi 

2 

] 

1 

S 
2 

o 

o 
1 

s 

> 

o 

o 

H 

Accidents 

8 

Apoplexy, 

2 

2 

Bowels,  diseases  of  the 

2 

3 

Brain,  diseases  of  the 

3 

2 

1 

4 

6 

3 

1 

3 

26 

Canker     . 

1 

2 

Cancer     . 

1 

1 

Childbirth,  diseases 

of 

1 

1 

1 

2 

6 

Consumption    . 

8 

8 

4 

5 

5 

10 

7 

4 

11 

5 

5 

7 

79 

Convulsions 

1 

2 

1 

1 

2 

2 

1 

1 

12 

Croup 

1 

2 

1 

3 

2 

1 

2 

4 

2 

18 

Diabetis   . 

1 

1 

Dropsy     . 

2 

1 

1 

1 

6 

Drowning 

1 

1 

1 

4 

Dysentery 

1 

5 

2 

8 

Diarrhoea 

1 

1 

5 

2 

9 

Erysipelas 

1 

Fever,  Lung     . 

5 

3 

1 

1 

3 

2 

3 

1 

1 

20 

"       Typhoid 

1 

1 

1 

3 

1 

8 

"      Scarlet 

4 

1 

2 

2 

2 

6 

1 

19 

Fever 

1 

1 

2 

Fits 

1 

1 

1 

1 

4 

Heart,  diseases  of  th 

e 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

5 

Hooping  Cough 

1 

1 

1 

2 

2 

2 

9 

Infantile  diseases 

8 

2 

2 

8 

2 

2 

5 

6 

13 

8 

2 

58 

Liver,  diseases  of  the 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

5 

Lungs,  diseases  of  the 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

5 

Measles    . 

3 

3 

Old  Age 

4 

1 

1 

1 

1 

2 

2 

1 

2 

2 

17 

Paralysis 

1 

1 

3 

5 

Pleurisy  . 

1 

1 

1 

3 

Scrofula  . 

1 

1 

Stillborn  . 

4 

2 

1 

2 

3 

1 

2 

1 

4 

1 

21 

Small-pox 

1 

1 

2 

Sore  Throat     . 

1 

1 

1 

3 

Spine  Complaint 

2 

1 

3 

Suicide     . 

1 

1 

Teething 

1 

1 

1 

1 

2 

3 

3 

2 

1 

15 

Tumor     . 

1 

1 

2 

Ulcer 

1 

1 

Other  causes    .        .        ,        . 

1 

2 

1 

2 

2 

1 

2 

12 

43 

25 

20 

7i 

7^ 

29 

35 

49 

53 

41 

27 

32 

410 

In  Board  of  Aldermen,  March  26,  1860. 
Report  accepted  and  sent  down  for  concurrence. 

JOSEPH  W.  TUCKER,  CiUj  Clerk. 

In  Common  Council  March  26,  1860. 
Passed  in  concurrence. 

FRANKLIN  WILLIAMS,  Clerk. 


E  E  P  0  R  T 


OYERSEERS  OF  THE  POOR 


:i. 


RoxBURY,  Feb.  27,  1860. 

The  Overseers  of  the  Poor  of  the  City  of  Roxburj,  respect- 
fully submit  their  Annual  Report  for  the  past  year. 

There  are  now  in  the  Alms-house  thirty  inmates,  consisting  of 
old  people  past  work,  middle  aged,  incapacitated,  either  bodily  or 
mentally,  and  children.  All  need  kind  and  indulgent  treatment, 
which  they  have  ;  and  it  is  creditable  to  the  liberality  and  human- 
of  the  City,  that  they  are  better  provided  for,  fed  and  clothed, 
than  a  large  number  of  the  tax  payers.  There  seems  little,  if 
any  thing,  to  be  done  to  improve  the  condition  of  such,  except 
educating  and  properly  guiding  the  young,  which  is  attended  to.  • 

A  large  part  of  the  building  being  unoccupied,  a  recommenda- 
tion was  made  last  year,  that  it  be  made  useful  as  a  place  of  con- 
finement for  truant  children.  The  necessary  alterations  have 
been  made,  and  ample  provision  of  house  and  yard  room  secured, 
from  which  the  best  results  are  expected. 

It  has  been  found  difficult,  dangerous,  and  expensive,  to  heat 
the  number  of  apartments  necessary,  with  stoves, — the  mode 
heretofore  adopted.  To  overcome  these  obstacles  the  Overseers 
have  recently  put  in  operation  there,  the  steam  heating  appara- 
tus of  Messrs.  Chubbuck  &  Son.  The  result  is  most  satisfactory 
and  gratifying.  The  saving  of  fuel  is  very  considerable ;  the 
heat  abundant  and  of  the  most  agreeable  quality,  and  the  labor  of 
the  house  as  well  as  danger  from  fire  largely  diminished.  Con- 
nected with  the  boiler  are  the  wash-tubs  in  the  lower  room,  so  that 
all  the  water  is  heated  by  steam,  and  this  is  made  a  convenient, 
comfortable  apartment  now,  in  place  of  the  opposite,  as  before. 


70 

The  neat,  orderly  and  homelike  manner  in  which  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Young  conduct  the  establishment,  entitle  it  to  take  rank  with 
those  most  approved. 

The  number  of  transient  lodgers  during  the  year  has  been  303. 
The  number  sent  to  the  State  Alms-house  during  the  same 
period,  103. 

The  Receipts  for  Support  of  the  Poor  from  February  1,  1859,  to 
February  1,  1860,  were  as  follows  : — 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1859, 
To  cash  received  of  West  Eoxbury, 

"  "  Other  Towns  and  Cities,    , 

"  "  Commonwealth,  Pauper  Account 

"  "  Ezra  Yovmg,    . 

"        Appropriated,  ... 


Expenditures. 

For  support  of  the  Poor  from  February  1,  1859, 

February  1,  1860, 

Transferred  to  Contingent  Expenses  of  1859-60, 
To  balance  undrawn  February  1,  1860,  . 


.  |1,650  17 

579 

86 

77  60 

t,    120  00 

^ 

50 

.  8,000 

00 

$10,477 

63 

0 

.  $8,352  82 

763 

60 

.   1,361 

21 

,477  63 


Accompanying  this  Report  are  the  Annual  Reports  of  the 
Superintendent  of  the  Alms-house,  the  Alms-house  Physician  and 
the  Agent  of  the  Overseers,  by  which  the  details  and  particulars 
of  the  establishment  will  fully  appear.  The  above  officers  have 
all  been  faithful  and  attentive  to  their  duties,  and  merit  the  full 
confidence  of  the  community. 

THEODORE  OTIS, 

Chairman  of  the  Overseers  of  the  Poor. 


In  Boakd  of  Ovekseeks  op  the  Pook,  March  5,  1860. 

that  he  will  cause  the  same  to  b 
)ts  and  Expenditures  of  the  City. 

JOSHUA  SEAVER,  Secretary. 


RefeiTed  to  the  Mayor,  with  the  request  that  he  will  cause  the  same  to  be 
printed  with  the  Annual  Report  of  the  Receipts  and  Expenditures  of  the  City. 


71 


REPORT   OF  THE   SUPERINTENDENT  OF  THE 
ALMS-HOUSE. 

RoxBURY  Almshouse,  January  30,  1860. 

To  the  Overseers  of  the  Poor  of  the  City  of  Roxbury  : 

Gentlemen — As  it  becomes  my  duty  again  to  make  to  you 
the  Annual  Report  of  the  condition  of  the  poor  at  the  Alms- 
house, permit  me  to  present  the  following  statements  : — 


The  number  of  inmates  in  the  house,  February  1, 

1859,  were      .... 
Roxbury  people  admitted  during  the  year. 


Discharged  and  absconded, 
Died,     .         .         .         = 


24 
33 

—  57 

27 
3 

—  30 

27    ' 
30 


Now  remaining  in  the  house,     . 
Average  number,     .... 

Four  of  the  above  number  are  West  Roxbury  paupers,  for 
which  the  City  have  been  liberally  paid  for  their  support,  and 
during  the  last  week  they  have  removed  two  of  their  paupers, 
leaving  only  two,  which  they  will  remove  soon. 

The  number  of  travellers  furnished  Avith  food  and  lodging  dur 
ing  the  year,  not  having  any  settlement  here  or  elsewhere  in  th 
State,  have  been  330. 

The  number  sent  to  the  State  Alms-house  were  105. 

The  health  of  the  inmates  the  past  year  will  compare  favorably 
with  former  years.  There  have  been  several  cases  which  required 
the  constant  attention  of  the  physician.  Dr.  Streeter,  who  has 
always  attended  to  them  with  cheerfulness  and  with  good  results. 
For  a  further  knowledge  of  the  medical  department,  you  will 
please  see  his  report. 

As  a  general  thing  the  inmates  have  conducted  themselves  well. 
A  majority  of  them  appear  satisfied  with  the  good  home  the  City 
have  provided  for  them.  I  have  done  all  in  my  power  to  make 
their  lot  pleasant. 

There  are  fault-finders,  and  my  experience  with  that  class  of 
our  inmates  has  been  that  before  coming  here  they  made  their 
homes  and  friends  miserable  by  their  unhappy  and  irritable  dispo- 
sitions ;  from  such  ones  I  give  ear  to  their  complaints  and  do  the 
best  with  them  I  can. 

The  expenses  for  the  support  of  all  the  poor,  in  years  past,  has 


72 

been  denominated  "  Aim-house,"  and  with  the  public,  who  are 
not  acquainted  with  the  facts  in  the  case,  the  house  is  charged 
with  expenses  not  properly  belonging  to  it. 

In  justice  to  myself  and  the  Board  of  Overseers  of  the  Poor,  I 
deem  it  my  duty  to  set  forth  the  whole  amount  for  support  of 
the  poor  the  past  year  as  follows  : —  ^7,954  48 

Of  this  amount  there  has  been  paid  for  support 

of  poor  outside  of  the  Almshouse,  .         .     2,498  00 

Leaving  the  net  expenditures  for  support  of  poor 
in  the  Alms-house,  including  a  steam  appa- 
ratus for  heating  the  house  and  washing  pur- 
poses, (which  cost  $1,000,)  and  all  other 
necessary  repairs,         .....    5,456  00 

During  the  past  fall  the  City  Council  have  erected  a  fence, 
enclosing  about  5,000  feet  of  land  at  the  west  end  of  the  house 
for  the  purpose  of  a  school  yard  for  truant  boys,  sent  to  this 
Institution  by  the  Pohce  Court  under  the  provisions  of  the  Ordi- 
nance of  the  City  Council  relating  to  truant  children.  Three 
rooms  have  been  fitted  up  for  the  reception  of  such  boys  as  are 
sent  here  by  order  of  the  Court.  The  number  already  admitted 
under  sentence  is  seven.  The  school  for  them  will  commence  this 
week.  The  expense  for  the  support  of  the  school  and  boys  should 
be  chargeable  to  some  other  appropriation  than  the  Poor  De- 
partment. 

The  produce  raised  on  the  land  I  do  not  deem  necessary  to 
give  in  detail,  suffice  it  to  say  there  were  all  kinds  of  vegetables 
raised  in  sufficient  quantities  for  the  use  of  the  house,  except 
potatoes,  and  they  have  been  a  perfect  failure  every  year  since 
we  left  the  Brook  Farm. 

Pork  raised  and  killed,  2,719  pounds  ;  milk,  1,500  gallons. 

8tock  and  Utensils. — Horses,  1  ;  cows,  3  ;  hogs,  6  ;  horse-r 
wagons  with  harnesses,  3  ;  horse  carts,  1  ;  sleigh,  1 ;  and  all  other 
farming  tools  necessary  for  the  use  of  the  place.  There  are  two 
horses,  with  wagons  and  harnesses,  for  the  collection  of  house 
offal,  that  do  not  belong  to  the  Poor  Department,  the  expense  of 
which  is  charged  to  the  "  House  Offal"  account. 

Furniture  and  Bedding. — There  are  37  iron  bedsteads  ;  5 
wooden  do,  ;  tables,  chairs  and  other  furniture,  a  necessary  sup- 
ply ;  feather  beds,  under  beds,  pillows  and  pillow  cases,  sheets, 
bed-spreads,  &c.,  all  in  sufficient  quantities  to  supply  the  wants  of 
the  house. 

Respectfully  submitted, 

Ezra  Young, 
Superintendent  of  the  Alms-house. 


73 


REPORT  OF  THE  AGENT  OF  THE  OVERSEERS 
OF  THE  POOR. 

To  the  Overseers  of  the  Poor  for  the  Qity  of  Roxbury  : 

The  Subscriber,  your  Agent  for  receiving  applicants  for  out-of- 
door  aid  and  for  granting  relief  to  such  as  are  deemed  proper 
subjects  to  receive  the  assistance  of  the  Boards  herewith  submits 
his  Annual  Report  for  the  year  ending  with  this  month. 

As  directed  by  the  Board,  he  gives  his  personal  attendance  in 
the  office  assigned  him,  the  three  first  and  two  last  months  of  the 
year,  from  9  to  12  every  forenoon  and  the  afternoons  to  the  inves- 
tigation of  the  cases  presented.  During  the  other  seven  months 
he  hears  and  examines  all  cases  that  are  presented,  but  is  not  con- 
fined to  office  hours.  The  last  year  has  been  more  favorable 
to  the  laboring  classes  than  its  immediate  predecessor,  and  yet 
the  applicants  for  aid  have  been  as  numerous  as  in  1858.  A 
certain  class  of  applicants,  in  the  nature  of  things,  will  be  annual, 
caused  by  sickness,  accidents  and  deaths  in  their  families.  Many 
live  from  hand  to  mouth,  and  when  from  any  cause,  labor  ceases, 
supplies  also  cease. 

I  have  endeavored  to  carry  out  the  views  of  the  Board  in  a 
system  of  pohcy  for  granting  aid.  When  an  industrious  woman 
with  a  family  of  children  applies,  and  I  am  satisfied  that  a  monthly 
allowance  of  fuel  will  help  her  through  the  winter,  I  feel  that  I 
carry  out  your  views  to  grant  it.  Such  as  are  not  of  that  indus- 
trious class  and  have  no  means  of  support,  I  refuse,  and  propose 
the  State's  provision.  As  a  general  rule  I  refuse  aid  where  the 
head  of  the  family  is  an  able-bodied  man,  except  by  reason  of 
some  unusual  sickness.  There  are  in  this  city  a  number  of  widows 
living  alone  in  single  rooms,  paying  from  $1  to  $1.50  per  month 
rent,  earning  (many  of  them)  nothing,  and  are  very  pertinacious 
in  their  demands  for  fuel,  and  who  undertake  to  place  their  cases 
side  by  side  with  an  industrious  class  who,  with  the  aid  the  city 
gives,  support  and  clothe  their  children  and  keep  them  at  school. 
As  a  rule  that  class  of  applicants  are  refused  aid.  The  outside 
pressure  of  individuals  (who  in  the  very  nature  of  things  know 
but  very  little  of  the  merits  of  the  case)  compels  me  to  depart 
from  what  I  think  to  be  a  good  rule  sometimes.  The  same  objec- 
tion exists  that  I  noted  last  year,  on  the  part  of  many,  to  the 
State  Alms-house — why  it  does,  I  cannot  tell ;  here  they  are  well 
fed,  well  clad,  and  if  sick,  properly  nursed,  and  if  there  are  chil- 
dren sent,  they  enjoy  the  privileges  of  schools  as  good  as  our  own. 

10 


74 

The  number  of  applicants  for  aid  during  the  year,  with  the 
number  aided  and  amount  granted  for  those  who  have  no  settle- 
ment in  the  State,  and  also  the  number  applying,  and  amount 
granted  to  such  as  have  a  settlement  here  or  elsewhere  in  the 
State,  is  annexed  to  this. 

Number  of  persons  applying  to  the  Agent  for  aid,  numbers  aided 
and  amount  of  aid  granted  to  those  who  have  no  settlement  in 


this  State,  by  Wards  : — 

No, 

•  applying. 

No.  aided. 

Whole  No.  aided, 
including  children. 

Amount. 

Ward  1, 

128 

86 

301 

275 

"      2, 

81 

64 

189 

160 

"      3, 

220 

144 

504 

410 

"      4, 

24 

14 

49 

50 

"      5, 

21 

12 

42 

44 

474  310  1085  $939 

Amount  of  aid  granted  to  persons  having  a  settlement  in  this 
city  and  elsewhere,  in  this  State,  is  very  nearly  as  follows,  viz  : — 
Number  of  appUcants,  25.     Amount  given,  $450. 

Respectfully  submitted," 

Joshua  Seaver. 


REPORT   OF  THE  PHYSICIAN  TO  THE  ALMS- 
HOUSE. 

To  the  Board  of  Overseers  of  the  Poor  : 

Gentlemen, — In  submitting  the  Annual  Report  of  the  Medical 
Department  of  the  Alms-house,  I  can  present  nothing  of  particu- 
lar interest,  or  add  any  thing  to  what  has  been  said  in  former 
reports. 

The  average  of  health  of  the  inmates  proper,  during  the  year, 
has  been  good,  although  the  number  requiring  medical  attendance 
has  been  larger  than  for  several  years — a  number  of  persons  hav- 
ing been  received  into  the  house  who  were  too  ill  to  be  removed 
to  the  State  Alms-house.  Thirty-two  persons  have  received  med- 
ical attendance  at  the  house  during  the  year,  sick  with  various 


75 

diseases,  viz  : — Inflammation  of  the  lungs,  measles,  typhoid  fever, 
scarlet  fever,  small  pox,  varioloid,  dysentery,  consumption,  dropsy 
and  syphilis  ;  besides  others  for  trifling  illness.  One  person  sick 
with  typhoid  fever  has  been  attended  at  his  boarding  place,  being 
too  sick  to  be  removed.  Three  deaths  have  occurred  in  the 
house,  one  each  of  consumption,  dropsy  and  small  pox.  There 
has  been  one  birth. 

I  congratulate  the  Board  upon  the  consummation  of  a  long 
desired  improvement  in  the  method  of  heating  the  house  by  the 
introduction  of  steam.  Its  beneficial  efifects  have  already  been 
shown  by  producing  a  uniform  temperature  throughout  the  house, 
adding  to  the  comfort  of  the  inmates,  lessening  the  amount  of 
sickness  by  diminishing  the  liability  to  sudden  colds,  to  which  the 
inmates  were  exposed  by  the  former  method  of  heating  Avith  close 
stoves  ;  vastly  improving  the  quality  of  the  air  which  they  breathe, 
and  obviating  almost  entirely  the  danger  from  fire.  As  an  eco- 
nomical measure,  I  believe  its  operation  will  be  twofold — the  sav- 
ing of  fuel,  and  promoting  the  health  of  the  inmates. 

It  gives  me  pleasure  again  to  commend  the  uniform  kindness 
and  attention  of  the  Superintendent  and  his  wife  to  those  commit- 
ted to  their  charge.  The  old,  the  middle-aged  and  the  young, 
are  alike  the  object  of  their  faithful  care. 

Having  held  the  office  of  Physician  to  the  Alms-house  the  past 
four  years,  I  would  respectfully  decline  a  re-election.  In  taking 
leave  of  the  Board  I  desire  to  return  my  thanks  to  the  members, 
past  and  present,  and  to  the  Secretary,  for  the  kindness  and  cour- 
tesy extended  to  me  during  my  official  connection  with  the  Board. 

Respectfully  submitted, 

Joseph  H.  Streeter, 

Physician  to  the  Alms-house. 

Roxhury,  Jan.  31, 1860. 


E  E  P  0  r.  T 

OF    THE 

CHIEF  ENGINEER  OF  THE  FIRE  DEPARTMENT. 


To  the  Honorable  Mayor ^  Aldermen  and  Common  Council : 

Gentlemen, — Agreeably  to  the  Ordinance  regulating  the  Fire 
Department  of  this  Citj,  I  hereby  transmit  my  Annual  Report. 

The  present  condition  of  the  Department  is  every  way  satisfac- 
tory. The  companies  have  a  full  complement  of  men  and  are 
prompt  to  respond  when  duty  requires. 

For  several  years  past  the  number  of  false  alarms  has  been  a 
source  of  great  annoyance  to  the  firemen,  calUng  them  needlessly 
from  their  work,  or  their  beds,  without  cause.  Early  in  the 
season  the  Board  of  Engineers  caused  measures  to  be  taken  to 
prevent  their  so  frequent  occurrence  if  possible.  The  result,  I 
am  happy  to  state,  has  been  most  satisfactory. 

The  Department  has  not  been  called  out  but  three  times  the 
past  year  by  false  alarms. 

While  the  Department  has  been  through  the  year  in  all  respects 
fully  equipped  and  ready  for  action,  it  gives  me  great  pleasure  to 
state  that  the  loss  to  the  community  the  last  year  was  far  less  than 
the  previous  one. 

The  Board  of  Engineers  have  striven  to  be  always  ready  for 
action,  but  to  have  the  occasions  as  few  as  possible. 

The  community  have  been,  for  two  or  three  years,  justly 
alarmed  at  the  numerous  incendiary  fires  constantly  occurring ; 
they  grew  continually  more  bold  and  audacious,  but,  thanks 
to  the  skill  and  wisdom  of  the  City  Marshal  and  his  Assist- 
ants, the  measures  which  they  instituted  to  detect  the  villains  were 
crowned  with  success.  Several  parties  were  caught  in  the  act  of 
firing  buildings,  and  it  is  believed  from  the  fact  that  incendiary 
fires  have  almost  ceased,  that  the  right  ones  were  caught,  and 
their  accomplices  (if  they  had  any)  from  fear  of  falling  into  the 
hands  of  the  officers,  have  abandoned  the  business. 

In  most  cases  where  persons  are  detected  in  acts  of  incendiar- 
ism, it  is  sad  to  find  that  they  are  attached,  in  some  way,  to  the 
Department. 

These  things,  and  other  evils  which  we  will  not  here  specify, 
have  caused  many  to  believe  that  the  time  has  about  come  in  our 


77 

large  cities,  to  devise  some  more  satisfactory  method  of  extinguish- 
ing fires.  The  trial  which  is  now  going  on  in  many  places,  of 
using  steam  fire  engines,  is  fraught  with  important  results,  and  I 
would  express  it  as  my  conviction  that  the  day  is  not  distant  when 
we  shall  be  called  upon  to  consider  the  expediency  of  having  one 
in  our  city. 

Our  Department  is  small,  yet  I  hesitate  to  urge  that  it  should 
be  increased  ;  but  if  it  should  be  decided  to  procure  a  suitable 
steam  fire  engine  in  place  of  one  of  the  organized  companies  now 
existing,  it  would  be  the  beginning  of  better  things  in  the  Depart- 
ment, and  would  eventuate  in  making  the  extinguishment  of  fires 
a  matter  of  business,  instead  of  excitement,  rivalry  and  severe 
physical  toil,  as  is  now  too  often  the  case,  and  in  my  opinion,  be 
more  economical. 

We  have  been  careful  not  to  ask  for  assistance  from  out-of-town, 
unless  absolutely  called  for  ;  while  our  Department  has  rendered 
effective  service  to  the  neighboring  towns  nine  times. 

In  conclusion,  allow  me  to  return  my  thanks  to  the  government 
for  the  readiness  to  meet  the  wants  of  the  Department,  and  also 
to  express  the  opinion  that  it  would  be  wise  to  continue  the  con- 
struction of  reservoirs  in  the  most  exposed  places,  as  heretofore. 

The  accompanying  documents  give  a  complete  report  in  detail 
of  the  members  of  the  Department — the  condition  of  the  engines 
and  apparatus — list  of  hydrants  and  reservoirs,  and  the  general 
condition  of  the  Department. 

Whole  number  of  alarms  the  past  year, 73 

Actual  fires,  ......         39 

Alarms  out  of  City,  ....         26 

False  alarms,  .....  3 

Other  causes,  .....  5 

—    73 

Total  amount  of  loss,  $18,446 ;  of  insurance,  29,570. 

Whole  number  of  alarms  the  previous  year,   .     .     .     119 
Actual  fires,    .....         57 
False  alarms,  .....         35 

Out  of  City, 19 

Other  causes, .....  8 

119 

Total  amount  of  loss,  |51,140  ;  of  insurance,  33,890. 

Respectfully  submitted. 

JAMES  MUNROE, 

OMef  JEngineer. 


78 


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RESERVOIRS, 

AND    OTHER    SOURCES    OF    OBTAINING    WATER. 


No. 


1 

2 
3 
4 
5 
6 
7 
8 
9 

10 
11 
12 
13 
14. 
15 
16 
17 
18 
19 
20 
21 
22 
23 
24 
23 
26 
27 
28 
29 
30 
31 
32 
33 
34 
33 
36 
37 


Location. 


No.  of 
Gallons. 


Condition. 


Eliot  Square  ..... 

Warren,  near  Washington   Street 
Corner  of  Washington  and  Eustis  Streets 

Short  Street 

Chestnut  Street,  Mount  Pleasant 

Corner  of  Fellows  and  Hunneman  Streets 

Cedar  Street  ..... 

Sidewalk,  opposite  No.  2  Engine-house  . 

Corner  of  Washington  and  Huggles  Streets 

Corner  of  Vernon  and  Auburn  Streets 

Corner  of  Dudley  and  Kenil  worth  Streets 

Dudley,  near  Warren  Street     . 

Corner  of  Dudley  and  Greenville  Streets 

Eaton,  near  Yeoman  Street 

Centre  Street        ..... 

Porter  Street 

Elm  Street,  Mount  Pleasant 

Walnut  Street 

Pearl  Street  ...... 

Eustis,  corner  of  East  Street    . 

Copeland  Square 

Well,  corner  of  East  and  Davis  Streets    . 
Well,  corner  of  Davis  and  Eustis  Streets   . 
Regent,  near  St.  James  Street 
Corner  of  Ruggles  and  Cabot  Streets     . 
Adams,  near  Eustis  Street 

Davis  Street 

Oak  Street 

Norfolk  Street 

Corner  of  Greenville  and  Winthrop  Streets 

Smith  Street,  near  Parker  Street, 

(Corner  of  Warren  and  Waverly  Streets     . 

Corner  of  Parker  and  Alleghany  Streets 

East  Sireetj  opposite  Norfolk  Avenue 

Washington  Street,  opposite  City  Hotel, 

Swett  Street,  near  Lead  Factory, 

Shawmut  Avenue,  .... 

Well  in  G.  A.  Simmons's  yard,  Highland  Street 

Well  in  Samuel  Guild's  3'ard,  near  Bartlett  Street 

Well  in  Patent  Leather  Works  yard,  Water  Street 


25,000 
30,000 
16,(100 
25,000 
15,000 
15,000 
15,000 
1,300 
18,000 
18,000 
18,000 
18,000 
18,000 
18.000 
18.000 
18,000 
18,000 
18,000 
18,000 
18,000 
18,000 


15,000 
17.000 
17,000 
16,500 
18,000 
16,000 
19.500 
18,500 
28,000 
26,000 
26,000 
26,000 
30,000 


Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

(jood. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 
Not  Good. 
JNoi  Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 
Not  Good. 

Good. 

Good. 

Good. 


80 


HYDRANTS, 

FROM  MOUNT  WARREN,  COCHITUATE  AND  JAMAICA  POND  PIPES. 


No. 

Location. 

Source. 

Condition. 

1 

St  James  Street 

Mt.  W. 

Good. 

2 

Alpine  Street 

'' 

Good. 

3 

Neirrit  James  Street 

" 

Good. 

4 

Dale  Street 

" 

Good. 

6 

Fremont  Street,  corner  of  Franklin  Place    .... 

Cochit. 

Good. 

6 

Tremoul  Street,  corner  of  Sudoury  Street 

" 

Good. 

7 

Tremonl  Street,  corner  of  Ru  j-^le.s  Street      .... 

" 

Good. 

8 

Tremont  Street,  opposite  Carpet  Works 

" 

Good. 

9 

.Sidewalk,  Texas  Avenue,      ....... 

" 

Good. 

10 

Washington  Street,  corner  of  Phillips  Place 

u 

Good. 

11 

Washington  Street  opposite  Isaac  l);ivis's    .... 

" 

Good. 

12 

Rngj;les  Street,  opposite  ilie  late  ('atliolic  Church 

J.  Pond. 

(iood. 

13 

Vernon  Street,  corner  of  Belmont  Street         .... 

" 

Good. 

14 

Vernon  Street,  corner  of  Washington  Street 

" 

Good. 

15 

Davis  Street,  corner  of  Webber  Street 

"  . 

Good. 

16 

Bast  Street,  opposite  Siuhb's  shi)p      .         .        .         . 

" 

Good. 

17 

b^ast  Street,  corner  of  Davis  .Street 

" 

Good. 

18 

Swett  Street,  near  Curii-i  &  Bl  ike's  Mill, 

" 

Good. 

19 

Corner  of  Orchard  and  Eustis  Streets,  ..... 

" 

Good. 

19 

Orchard  Street,  corner  of  Kusiis, 

" 

Good. 

20 

Washington  Street,  opposite  Bacon's  Block, 

it 

Good. 

21 

Rug'gles  Street,  near  Avon  Place       ..... 

It 

Good. 

22 

Western  Avenue,  near  Francis  Street  ..... 

Cochit. 

Good. 

23 

Western  Avenue,  Appleton  Place, 

' 

Good. 

81 


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03  - 


REPORT 


In  conformity  to  the  fifth  section  of  "  An  Act  relative  to  a  Public 
Cemeterj  in  the  City  of  Roxbury,"  the  Commissioners  respect- 
fully submit  their 

TWELFTH  ANNUAL  REPORT. 

A  LOT  has  been  purchased  by  the  "  Firemen's  Association  of 
the  Boston  Fire  Department,"  containing  13,594  square  feet,  sit- 
uated on  Cypress  Hill,  and  bounded  by  Columbine  Path,  Cypress 
and  Poplar  Avenues.  It  commands  one  of  the  finest  views  in  the 
Cemetery,  and  it  is  the  intention  of  the  Association  to  erect,  at 
some  future  time,  a  suitable  monument. 

Lots  prepared.  One  hundred  and  thirty-three  lots  have 
been  prepared  and  ornamented  with  trees  and  shrubs. 

Lots  sold.  Eighty-six  lots,  averaging  300  square  feet,  and 
one  hundred  and  three  graves  in  the  Field  of  Ephron. 

Lots  finished.  One  hundred  and  fifteen  lots  are  now  finished 
and  ready  for  sale.  There  are  sixty  lots  in  progress.  One  hun- 
dred and  tAventy  graves  are  finished  in  the  Field  of  Ephron. 

Monuments.  Twenty-three  monuments  have  been  erected  the 
past  year. 

Avenues  and  paths.  Eight  hundred  feet  of  avenues  and 
fifteen  hundred  feet  of  paths  have  been  excavated  and  filled  with 
stone  and  gravel. 

Fences.  Twenty-seven  lots  have  been  enclosed  with  iron 
fences,  five  with  hedges  and  four  with  granite  curbing,  the  past 
year. 

InteRjMENTS.  Four  hundred  and  eighty-four  interments  in 
private  lots  and  in  the  Field   of  Ephron  have  been  made  the  past 


86 

year.  A  lot  of  land  containing  36,250  square  feet  has  been  pur- 
chased of  the  heirs  of  Frederick  Chandler.  This  piece  of  land  is 
situated  on  Canterbury  Street,  and  bounded  on  three  sides  by 
land  of  the  Cemetery. 

A  drain  has  been  deepened  through  land  of  John  Parkinson, 
which  causes  a  better  drainage  to  the  Cemetery  land,  and  "will 
admit  of  the  drawing  the  water  from  Lake  Hibiscus  whenever  fur- 
ther excavation  shall  be  made  for  the  purpose  of  enlarging  the 
lake. 

The  Commissioners  would  call  the  attention  of  all  owners  of  lots 
to  an  act  passed  by  the  Legislature,  Feb.  25th,  1852,  and  ac- 
cepted by  the  City  Council,  March  8th,  1852.  It  is  provided 
by  this  act  that  a  sum  of  money,  which  shall  be  agreed  upon, 
may  be  deposited,  the  interest  of  which  will  provide  for  the  per- 
petual care  of  a  lot. 

The  importance  of  this  arrangement  will  be  appreciated  when 
it  is  considered  that  families  are  liable  to  become  extinct ;  to  re- 
move from  this  part  of  the  country ;  or  from  any  cause  to  cease 
to  be  able  or  wilhng  to  keep  a  lot  in  preservation.  The  fund,  the 
income  of  which  is  to  be  devoted  to  the  perpetual  care  of  desig- 
nated lots,  amounts  to  the  sum  of  nine  hundred  and  seventy-five 
dollars,  and  we  hope  this  amount  will  be  largely  increased  the 
ensuing  year. 

The  Receipts  and  Expenditures  for  the  year  have  been  as 
follows  : — 

Balance  unexpended  February  1,  1859,            .         .  $863  54 

Received  for  103  graves,        .....  980  00 

"         "      86  lots  of  land,         .         .         .         .  6,140  08 

"         "      gradinglots,stoneposts,  rent  and  wood,  14,334  08 


$22,317  70 

Expenditures. 

Paid  for  labor  on  avenues,  paths  and  lots,         .         .  7,820  59 

"    J.  Seaverns,  notes  as  principal,        .         .         .  2,000  00 

"    Interest  on  notes,           .....  940  33 

"    Daniel  Brims,  as  Superintendent,  and  for  teams, 

1858,       .         .         .         .         .         .         .  753  16 

"    Daniel  Brims,  for  horses,  carts  and  harnesses,    .  1,340  00 

''    Daniel  Brims,  for  hay,  manure,  llower-pots,  &c.,  81  84 


Amount  carried  forward,  $12,935  92 


87 


Amount  brought  forward,  $12,935  92 

Paid  Charles  H.  Hardwick  &  Co.,  stone  posts,  1858,  355  26 

"  Charles  H.  Hardwick  &  Co.,          "          1859,  1,451  63 

"  Thomas  Swithen,                             "          1859,  187  50 

"  Peter  R.  Page,                                "          1859,  134  33 

"  Patrick  O'Donnell,                           "          1859,  261  67 

"  Thomas  Drake,                                "          1859,  33  33 

"  Horn  &  Co.,                                    "          1859,  45  33 

"  Kendall  &  Wood,  labor,  stock  and  materials  on 

buildings, 609  84 

"  Thomas  Feek,  blacksmith's  work  ...  299  08 
"  John  C.  Hubbard,  chairs  for  office,  .  .  48  00 
"  Ballard  &  Prince,  carpet  for  office,  .  .  49  44 
"  James  Paul  &  Co.,  window  shades,  .  .  6  20 
"  Joseph  W.  Tucker,  keeping  books  and  collect- 
ing bills, 300  00 

"  West  Castleton  R.  R.  Slate  Co.,  for  slate  stones 

for  grave  covers,        .....  759  54 

"  Oliver  Moulton,  salary  as  Superintendent,         .  700  00 

"  Heirs  of  Frederick  Chandler,  house  and  land,  .  750  00 

"  John  B.  Baker,  horse  blankets,       .         .         .  36  00 

"  Norfolk  County  Journal  Office,  printing,  .         .  3  50 

"  John  M.  Hewes,  printing  Report,    .         .         .  70  00 

"    Henry  H.  Chandler 13  00 

"  Joseph  Houghton,  grain  and  meal,  .         .         •  691  51 

"  G.  G.  Drew,  painting  buildings,       .          .          .  234  35 

"  Oliver  Moulton,  small  bills  paid,       .         .         .  221  85 

"  George  T.  Curtis,  evergreens,          ...  51  19 

"  James  Hyde  &  Sons,  trees  and  shrubs,    .         .  113  38 

"  Abraham  F.  Howe,  insurance,         .         .         ,  10  10 

"  Asa  Hunting,  pump,      .         .         .         .         .  .     21  30 

"  James  Boyd  &  Sons,  straps,  &c.     .         .         ,  24  75 

"  E.  A.  Hovey,  mending  harness,      ...  4  25 

"  Aaron  D.  WiUiams,  manure,  ....  48  00 

"    S.  W.  Lewis, 10  00 

"  John  T.  Ellis  &  Co.,  powder,           ...  101  79 

"  Parker,  Gannett  &  Osgood,  tools     ...  84  76 

"  J.  E.  Adams  &  Co.,  manure,           '.         .         ,  36  00 

"  Chase  Brothers  &  Co.,  iron  work,   .         .         .  50  00 

"  Duncan  Welch,  small  bills,      ....  11  83 

"  West  Roxbury  tax  bill,            .         .         ,         .  12  90 

''  J.  E.  &  G.  H.  Williams,  mending  harnesses,  &c.  30  47 

"    Clark  k  Shaw 12  50 


Amount  fnrried  forward. 


$20,720  00 


$20,720 

00 

190  75 

25 

71 

20 

00 

108 

45 

14 

38 

,   1,238 

41 

Amount  hr ought  forward^ 
Paid  Nelson  Curtis,  bricks  and  cement, 

"    Estate  of  Aaron  R.  Gaj,  books  and  stationery, 

"    Edward  Holden,  collecting,    .... 

"    David  Hardacker,  Avheelwright's  Avork,     . 

"    Allen  Putnam  &  Co.,  coal,      ... 
Balance  carried  forward  to  new  account, 

122,317  70 

Cemetery  Debt.     The  Debt  has  been  reduced  two  thousand 
dollars  the  past  year.     The  balance  now  due  is  $11,000. 

FRANCIS  C.  HEAD, 

Secretary  of  the  Commissioners  of  Forest  Hills  Cemetery. 
RoxBTJRY,  February  27,  i860. 


Ix  Board  of  Aldermen,  Feb.  27,  1860. 

Eeferred  to  the  Committee  on  Accounts,  with  instructions  to  print  the  same 
with  the  Annual  Eeport  of  Receipts  and  Expenditures  of  the  City. 
Sent  down  for  concurrence. 

JOSEPH  W.  TUCKEE,  City  Clerk. 


Concurred. 


In  Common  Council,  Feb.  27,  1860. 
FRANKLIN  WILLIAMS,  Clerk. 


DIRECTORY 

TO 

THE    AVENUES    AND    PATHS 


AVENUES. 

ASPEN  leads  from  White  Oak  to  Willow  avenue. 

BEECH  leads  from  Canterbury  street  gate  to  Lake  avenue. 

CEDAR  leads  from  Rock  Maple  to  Elm  avenue. 

CHERRY  leads  from  Willow  to  White  Oak  avenue. 

CHESTNUT  leads  from  Egyptian  gate  to  Rock  Maple  avenue. 

CONSECRATION,  from  Chestnut  avenue  near  Consecration  hill. 

CYPRESS  leads  from  Beech  to  Larch  avenue. 

ELM  leads  from  Fountain  avenue  to  Canterbury  street  gate. 

EIR,  from  Mount  Vernon  to  Tupelo  avenue. 

i  OUNTAIN  leads  from  Juniper  to  Rock  Maple  and  Willow  avenue. 

HEMLOCK  leads  from  White  Oak  to  Fountain  avenue. 

JUNIPER  leads  from  Cherry  to  Fountain  avenue. 

LAKE  leads  from  Fountain,  round  Lake  Hibiscus  to  Elm  avenue. 

LARCH  leads  from  Fountain  avenue  to  Cypress  hill. 

LINDEN  leads  from  Mount  Warren  to  Mount  Warren  avenue. 

LOCUST  leads  from  Egyptian  gate  to  Mount  Warren  avenue. 

MAGNOLIA  leads  from  Chestnut  avenue  to  the  summit  of  Conse- 
cration hill. 

MULBERRY,  from  Egyptian  gateway  to  White  Oak  avenue. 

MOUNT  VERNON,  from  White  Oak  to  Mulberry. 

NESUTAN  leads  from  White  Oak  avenue  round  Eliot  Monument  hill. 

PINE  leads  from  Mount  Warren  to  Mulberry  avenue. 

POPLAR  leads  from  Lake  to  Larch  avenue. 

RED  OAK  leads  from  Willow  to  White  Oak  avenue. 

ROCK  MAPLE  leads  from  the  junction  of  Fountain  and  White 
Oak  to  the  junction  of  Tupelo  and  Cedar  avenues. 

SPRUCE  leads  from  the  junction  of  Fountain  and  Juniper  avenues 
past  the  Field  of  Macpelah  to  Lake  avenue. 

TUPELi )  leads  from  Chestnut  to  Rock  Maple  avenue. 

WALNUT  leads  from  Tupelo  to  the  junction  of  Mount  Warren  and 
Mulberry  avenues. 

WHITE  OAK  leads  from  Walk  Hill  street  gate  to  Rock  Maple 
avenue. 

WHITE  PINE  leads  from  White  Oak  to  Cherry  avenue. 

WILLOW  leads  from  White  Oak  to  Fountain  avenue. 

YEW  leads  from  Magnolia  avenue  to  the  summit  of  Chapel  hill. 
12 


90 


PATHS. 

AILANTHUS  leads  from  White  Pine  to  Cherry  avenue. 

ALPINE  leads  from  Althea  path  to  Cherry  avenue. 

ALTHEA  leads  from  Hemlock  to  Fountain  avenue. 

AMARANTH  leads  from  Cherry  to  Hemlock  avenue. 

ANDROMEDA  leads  from  Cranberry  path  to  Locust  avenue. 

ANEMONE  leads  from  Hemlock  avenue  to  Eglantine  path. 

ARETHUSA  leads  from  Lake  to  Cedar  avenue. 

ASPHODEL  leads  from  Fir  to  Mount  Warren  avenue. 

ASTER  leads  from  Hemlock  to  White  Oak  avenue. 

AZALEA  leads  from  Mount  Warren  to  Mount  Warren  avenue. 

BARBERRY  leads  from  Columbine  path  to  Locust  avenue. 

BELLFLOWER  leads  from  Hemlock  to  Cherry  avenue. 

BIGNONIA  leads  from  Spruce  to  Cypress  avenue. 

CHRYSANTHEMUM  leads  from  Fountain  to  Hemlock  avenue. 

CLEMATIS  leads  from  Mulberry  avenue  to  White  Oak. 

COLUMBINE  leads  from  Spruce  avenue  to  Cypress. 

COWSLIP  leads  from  White  Oak  avenue  to  junction  of  Sweet  Brier 
-and  Violet  paths  on  Mount  Dearborn. 

CRANBERRY  leads  from  Mount  Warren  to  White  Oak  avenue. 

CROCUS  leads  from  Spruce  to  Poplar  avenue. 

EGLANTINE  leads  from  Hemlock  to  White  Oak  avenue. 

ELDER  leads  from  Chestnut  to  Magnolia,  on  the  southern  side  of 
Consecration  hill. 

ELIOT  HILLS  leads  from  White  Oak  to  Nesutan  avenue. 

GERANIUM  leads  from  Hemlock  to  White  Oak   avenue. 

GRAPE  leads  from  Mount  Warren  to  Tupelo  avenue. 

GREEN  BRIER  leads  from  White  Oak  avenue,  at  its  junction 
■with  Eliot  Hills  path. 

HAREBELL  leads  from  Grape  path  to  Mount  Warren  avenue. 

HAWTHORN  leads  from  White  Oak  avenue  to  Eliot  Hills  path. 

HAZEL  leads  from  Egyptian  gate,  near  Mulberry,  to  Tupelo  avenue. 

HELIOTROPE  leads  from  Cherry  to  White  Oak  avenue. 

HOLLY  leads  from  Red  Oak  to  W'^hite  Oak  avenue. 

HONEYSUCKLE  leads  from  Larch  avenue  to  Spruce. 

HYACINTH  leads  from  Geranium  path  to  White  Oak  avenue. 

IRIS  leads  from  Hemlock  avenue,  near  Fountain. 

IVY  leads  from  Mount  Warren  to  Pine  avenue. 

JASMINE  leads  from  Green  Brier  to  Hawthorn  path. 

KALMIA  leads  from  Linden  to  Linden  avenue. 

LAUREL  leads  from  Linden  to  Mount  Warren  avenue. 

LICHEN  leads  from  Cherry  round  the  top  of  Fountain  hill. 

LILAC  leads  from  Juniper  to  Hemlock  avenue. 

LILY  leads  from  Alder  avenue,  near  Consecration  hill, 

LOTUS  leads  from  Larch  to  Lake  avenue. 

LUPINE  leads  from  Juniper  to  Hemlock  avenue. 


91 

MAYFLOWEE  leads  from  near  the  soiUhern  end  of  White  Oak  to 
Nesutan  avenue. 

MIMOSA  leads  from  Elm  avenue  to  Cedar. 

MISTLETOE  leads  from  Mulberry  avenue  to  Hazel  path. 

MOSS  leads  from  White  Oak  to  Nesutan  avenue. 

MYRTLE  leads  from  Red  Oak  to  White  Oak  avenue. 

NARCISSUS  leads  from  Myrtle  to  White  Oak  avenue. 

OLEANDER  leads  from  Lupine  to  Verbena  path. 

PINK  leads  from  Spruce  avenue  to  Cypress. 

PRIMROSE  leads  from  White  Oak  avenue  to  the  junction  of  Sweet 
Brier  path,  on  the  summit  of  Mount  Dearborn. 

PYROLA  leads  from  Lake  to  Cedar  avenue. 

RHODODENDRON  leads  from  Spruce  to  Cypress  avenue. 

RHODORA  leads  from  Mount  Warren  avenue  to  Mount  Warren 
avenue. 

ROSE  leads  from  Cypress  avenue  to  Poplar. 

ROSEMARY  leads  from  Hemlock  avenue  to  Bellflower  path. 

SUMACH  leads  from  Mount  Warren  to  Harebell  path. 

SNOW-FLAKE  leads  from  Walnut  avenue  to  Mistletoe  path. 

SNOW-DROP  leads  from  Magnolia  avenue  to  Magnolia. 

SWEET  BRIER  leads  from  Willow  avenue  to  summit  of  Mount 
Dearborn. 

TULIP  leads  from  Hemlock  to  Fountain  avenue. 

VERBENA  leads  from  Juniper  to  Hemlock  avenue. 

VIBERNUM  leads  from  White  Oak  to  Nesutan  avenue. 

VIOLET  leads  from  Red  Oak  avenue  to  the  junction  of  Sweet  Brier 
and  Cowslip  paths,  on  Mount  Dearborn. 

WABON  leads  from  near  Green  Brier  path,  round  Eliot  Monument 
hill  to  Moss  path. 

WOODBINE  leads  from  Mount  Warren  avenue  to  Linden  avenue. 

YARROW  leads  from  Spruce  avenue  to  Poplar. 


NESUTAN. — The  name  of  the  Indian  who  aided  the  Apostle  Eliot  in  learning 
the  English  language,  and  in  translating  the  Bible  into  that  language. 

WABON  was  the  Indian  Chief  at  Nonantum  Hill,  in  Watertown,  where  Eliot 
established  his  first  Indian  church  and  school. 


CEMETERY  NOTICE. 

For  the  information  of  those  who  do  not  know  already,  it  may  be  well  to 
state,  that  visitors  can  take  the  Dedham  train  of  cars,  and  stop  at  the  Forest 
Hills  station,  which  leaves  them  within  five  minutes  walk  of  the  Cemetery. 
Any  information  relative  to  the  Cemetery  can  be  obtained  of  Oliver 
MouLTON,  Superintendent  at  the  grounds ;  Joseph  W.  Tuckek,  City 
Clerk,  City  Hall,  Roxbury ;  or  either  of  the  Commissioners. 


MEMORANDA  FOR  PROPRIETORS. 


The  Records  of  Deeds  are  kept  in  the  City  Hall,  under  the  direction  of 
the  City  Clerk,  and  are  the  only  evidence  of  the  title  of  a  Proprietor  recog- 
nized by  the  Commissioners  ;  consequently  when  a  person  receives  a  lot  by 
transfer  from  a  Proprietor,  he  should  immediately  send  his  deed  at  once  to 
the  City  Clerk's  office  for  record. 

Care  of  Lots.  A  book  is  kept  at  the  Superintendent's  office  at  the  Cem- 
etery, in  -which  are  entered  all  orders  for  the  care  of  lots.  Proprietors 
should  be  particular  to  specify  what  care  they  desire  to  be  devoted  to  their 
lots,  and  it  is  requested  that  all  orders  given  should  be  in  writing. 

Flowers.  Proprietors  in  want  of  flowers  to  beautify  their  lots,  will  find 
them  at  the  Cemetery  by  calling  on  Mr.  Duncan  Welsh,  the  gardener,  with 
whom  they  can  settle  for  the  same. 

Interments.  For  a  deposit  in  the  receiving  tomb,  to  remain  not  over  60 
days,  the  price  charged  will  he  fifteen  dollars.  If  a  lot  is  purchased  within 
that  time,  a  part  of  the  deposit  money  will  be  refunded.  For  a  single  grave 
in  the  "Field  of  Ephron,"  ten  dollars  and  the  necessary  fees  for  digging  a 
grave,  interment,  &c.  For  digging  a  grave  for  an  adult,  making  interment 
and  recording,  S2.  For  digging  a  grave  for  a  child  under  ten  years  old, 
$1.50.  If  the  coffin  is  enclosed  in  a  box,  fifty  cents  additional  will  be 
charged. 

The  above  sums  are  all  payable  at  or  before  the  time  of  the  interment. 


CEMETERY   AT   FOREST   HILLS. 


COMMISSIONERS. 
Alvah  Kittredge,  William  J.  Reynolds, 

Francis  C.  Head,  E.  W.  Bumstead. 

George  Lewis. 


CATALOGUE   OF  PROPRIETORS   OF  LOTS. 

A.rra.nsecl  according  to  BfitinT>crs. 


Proprietors. 

JVo. 

Sawyer,  Benjamin  F. 

1 

Harlow,  George 

2 

Parker,  Moses 

3 

Sears,  Paul,  Jr. 

4 

Gregerson,  George 

5 

Humphris,  Edward,  Jr. 

(J 

Emerson,  John  S. 

7 

Hemmenway,  Benjamin 

8 

Faxon,  Oren 

9 

Blake,  Charles 

10 

Adams,  Adoniram  J. 

11 

Tilden,  Thomas 

12 

Brownell,  Uriah  T. 

13 

Sweat,  Thatcher 

14 

Hersey,  Nathan 

15 

Hanson,  John  L. 

16 

Mayo,  Amy 

17 

Goodnow,  R.  D. 

18 

Pratt,  Henry 

19 

Simpson,  David 

20 

Dudley,  Joseph  W. 

21 

Dudley,  H.  A.  S.  D. 

22 

Dudley,  Sarah  W. 

23 

Bates,  Ruth 

24 

Cowan,  William  H. 

25 

Parmelee,  Asaph 

26 

AVise,  John 

27 

Rand,  Eldred 

28 

Barnes,  John 

29 

Hall,  Hiram 

30 

Hamblen,  David 

31 

Nute,  Enoch 

32 

Dorr,  Nathaniel 

ob 

Albert,  J,  M. 

34 

Curtis,  Francis 

35 

Situation. 

Feet. 

Bellflower  path 

150 

Bellflower  path 

160 

White  Oak  avenue 

202 

White  Oak  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

460 

White  Oak  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

AVliite  Oak  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

Wiiite  Oak  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

380 

White  Oak  avenue 

380 

White  Oak  avenue 

380 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

Cherry  avenue 

Willow  avenue 

200 

Heliotrope  path 

150 

White  Oak  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

Red  Oak  avenue 

Willow  avenue 

Willow  avenue 

Willow  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

"White  Oak  avenue 

400 

Note.    Where  the  number  of  feet  ag.iinrt  a  lot  is  not  designated,  it  contains  300  feet. 


94 


Sanborn,  Christopher  P. 

Munroe,  James 

Plummer,  John  L. 

Jones,  John  B. 

Jackson,  Samuel  and  Daniel 

Spear,  Susannah  R. 

Maeomber,  Ichabod 

Williams,  Horace 

Hewins,  Whiting 

Beal,  Wilder 

Sleeper,  John  S. 

Burckes,  Catherine 

Slade,  Robert 

Copeland,  Benjamin  F. 

Copeland,  Charles 

Bacon,  William,  Boston 

Sumner,  Austin 

Drinkwater,  Josiah 

Loring,  William  M. 

Howes,  Elisha 

Fobes,  Edwin 

Gould,  Joseph  D. 

Field,  Ozias 

Hendee,  Charles  J. 

Lewis,  Samuel  S. 

Barton,  Jabez  W. 

Shattuck,  Samuel 

Willis,  Hamilton 

Windship,  Charles  M. 

Hayes,  Joshua 

Steam  C,  B.  &  N.  Royal  Mail 

Kuhn,  Christian 

Seaver,  Robert 

Seaver,  Joshua 

Seaver,  Nathaniel 

Seaverns,  Joel 

Seaver,  Joseph 

Seaver,  William 

Keyes,  Lucy  S. 

Wentworth,  P.  H. 

Jiingsbury,  William  B. 

Williams,  Aaron  D. 

Williams,  A.  D.,  Jr. 

Whitaker,  William  H. 

Peirce,  Charles  H. 

Scott,  Elbridge  G. 

Patten,  Asa 

pasford,  Henry 

Putnam,  John 

Comins,  Linus  B. 

Guild,  William  H. 

Carter,  Nelspa 

Floyd,  Eliza 

Rowell,  Ruf'us 

Parker,  Jonathan 

Plidley,  Eliza 


36 

Hemlock  avenue 

37 

Amaranth  path 

200 

38 

Green  Brier  path 

39 

Green  Brier  path 

520 

40 

Red  Oak  avenue 

41 

Cherry  avenue 

42 

Cherry  avenue 

513 

43 

Cherry  avenue 

44 

Cherry  avenue 

417 

45 

Cherry  avenue 

46 

Cherry  avenue 

4^9 

47 

Cherry  avenue 

48 

Cherry  avenue 

49 

Cherry  avenue 

50 

Cherry  avenue 

51 

Cherry  avenue 

52 

Cherry  avenue 

53 

Aster  path 

150 

54 

AVhite  Pine  avenue 

65 

Cherry  avenue 

56 

White  Pine  avenue 

57 

Amaranth  path 

58 

Amaranth  path 

59 

Cherry  avenue 

60 

Cherry  avenue 

660 

61 

Cberry  avenue 

420 

62 

Cherry  avenue 

63 

Cherry  avenue 

64 

Cherry  avenue 

65 

Willow  avenue 

66 

Cherry  avenue 

67 

Aspen  avenue 

68 

White  Pine  avenue 

69 

White  Pine  avenue 

400 

70 

White  Pine  avenue 

71 

White  Pine  avenue 

600 

72 

White  Pine  avenue 

73 

White  Pine  avenue 

74 

White  Pine  avenue 

75 

White  Pine  avenue 

76 

White  Pine  avenue 

77 

White  Pine  avenue 

78 

White  Pine  avenue 

79 

White  Pine  avenue 

80 

White  Pine  avenue 

81 

White  Pine  avenue 

82 

White  Pine  avenue 

83 

Red  Oak  avenue 

84 

Red  Oak  avenue 

85 

Red  Oak  avenue 

837 

86 

White  Oak  avenue 

87 

Heliotrope  path 

240 

88 

Cherry  avenue 

89 

Clematis  path 

90 

Narcissus  path 

91 

White  Oak  avenue 

96 


Low,  Francis 

02 

Amaranth  path 

Low,  John  J. 

93 

Amaranth  path 

Hennessy,  Richard 

94 

Clematis  path 

Gregg,  Mary 

95 

Hemlock  avenue 

Jordan,  John  T. 

90 

Hawthorn  path 

Morse,  WiUiam 

97 

White  Oak  avenue 

Smith,  Melancthon 

98 

Cherry  avenue 

Swett,  Samuel  W. 

99 

Cherry  avenue 

Gorham,  James  L. 

100 

Cherry  avenue 

Bachelder,  Josiah  G. 

101 

White  Oak  avenue 

Fowle,  Isaac 

102 

"White  Oak  avenue 

Lawler,  William 

103 

White  Oak  avenue 

Bradford,  Charles  F. 

104 

Willow  avenue 

Hickling,  Charles 

105 

Willow  avenue 

Blanchard,  William 

106 

Willow  avenue 

Williams,  Isaac  F. 

107 

Amaranth  path 

Holland,  Thomas  R. 

108 

Narcissus  path 

Tappan,  Amelia  C. 

109 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

Whipple,  James 

110 

White  Oak  avenue 

Hant,  James 

111 

Red  Oak  avenue 

Manning,  Charles 

112 

Red  Oak  avenue 

Pitman,  John  H. 

113 

Red  Oak  avenue 

Blaney,  Charles  P. 

114 

Narcissus  path 

Clark,  Alexander 

115 

White  Oak  avenue 

Wyman,  Asa 

116 

Narcissus  path 

Tucker,  Joseph  W. 

117 

Narcissus  path 

Whitmore,  Creighton 

118 

Narcissus  path 

Gwynne,  Samuel 

119 

White  Oak  avenue 

Krogman,  S.  B. 

120 

White  Pine  avenue 

Franks,  Dolly  G. 

121 

White  Oak  avenue 

Waters,  Ebenezer 

122 

White  Oak  avenue 

Perry,  Rufus  A. 

123 

White  Oak  avenue 

Vila,  James 

124 

White  Oak  avenue 

Sigourney,  Daniel  A. 

125 

Moss  path 

Barry,  James 

126 

Narcissus  path 

Ware,  Leonard 

127 

Narcissus  path 

Daniell,  Josiah  N. 

128 

Narcissus  path 

Wrightington,  B.  T. 

129 

Narcissus  path 

Anderson,  Rufus 

130 

Nai'cissus  path 

Brown,  James  W.  L. 

131 

Narcissus  path 

Heard,  John  J. 

132 

Hawthorn  path 

Molineux,  Robert  W. 

133 

Hawthorn  path 

Cunningham,  Andrew 

134 

Hawthorn  path 

Wadsworth,  Samuel 

135 

Hawthorn  path 

Rogers,  John 

136 

Hawthorn  path 

Blake,  Samuel  P. 

137 

Hawthorn  path 

Copeland,  Franklin 

138 

Hawthorn  path 

Fowler,  Edmund  M. 

139 

Hawthorn  path 

Crane,  Samuel  D.,  for  the  heirs 

of  Larra  Crane,  dec. 

140 

Green  Brier  path 

White,  Isaac  D. 

141 

Hawthorn  path 

Morgan,  Abigail 

142 

Hawthorn  path 

Parker,  Caleb 

143 

Eliot  Hills  path 

Whitmore,  G.  D. 

144 

Eliot  Hills  path 

Dunbar,  David  A. 

145 

Aspen  avenue 

Steele,  E.  F. 

146 

Hawthorn  path 

500 


360 
360 
360 


360 
360 


195 

600 
120 


150 


400 


460 


540 


150 


96 


Taf't,  Read 
Taft,  Charles  M. 
Winslow,  Roland 
Mann,  N.  P. 
Russell,  Georjie  R. 
Whitwell,  William 
Blake,  Jesse 
Brown,  W.  H. 
Wellman,  William  A. 
Kittredge,  Alvah 
Dickinson,  Jos.  F. 
Thompson,  A.  C. 
Davis,  Gilman 
Blanchard,  A.  R.,  Mrs. 
Dove,  George 
Weld,  Benjamin 
McKay,  William  P. 
Andrews,  Henry  R. 
Hill,  David  W. 
Hobart,  Mary  W. 
Lee,  W.  Raymond 
Amory,  Elizabeth 
Howe,  M.  A.  D'Wolf 
Head,  Charles  Dudley 
Head,  Francis  C. 
Sherman,  Amory  F. 
Bond,  Sewall  B. 
Scates,  Dodavah 
Cliubbuck,  S.  E. 
Campbell,  Benjamin  F. 
Pratt,  Jerahmeel  C. 
Parker,  Abraham  S. 
Mathes,  Albert  R. 
Haven,  Calvin  W. 
Haven,  Calvin  W. 
Keith,  William 
Lothrop,  Ansel 
Pear,  Edward 
Bacal,  Thomas 
Badger,  George  W^. 
Allen,  Isaac 
Walker,  Catherine  R. 
Vose,  Elijah 
Gray,  Alfred  T. 
Wiswall,  Samuel  S. 
Day,  Moses 
Sewall,  Moses 
Bartlett,  Pliny 
Sears,  Joseph  H. 
Fuller,  David  S. 
i^ichols,  William  S. 
Webber,  John,  Jr. 
Backall,  William  K. 
Felton,  Samuel 
Train,  Samuel  F. 
Thwing,  Supply  C. 


147 
148 
149 
150 
151 
152 
153 
154 
155 
156  and  157 
158 
159 
ICO 
161 
162 
163 
164 
165 
166 
167 
168 
169 
170 
171 
172 
173 
174 
175 
176 
177 
178 
179 
180 
181 
182 
183 
184 
185 
186 
187 
188 
180 
190 
191 
192 
193 
194 
195 
196 
197 
198 
199 
200 
201 
202 
203 


Yiolet  path 
Violet  path 
Violet  path 
Violet  path 
Sweet  Brier  path 
Cherry  avenue 
Hemlock  avenue 
Aster  path 
Holly  path 
Holly  path 
Holly  path 
Holly  path 
Red  Oak  avenue 
Red  Oak  avenue 
Red  Oak  avenue 
Holly  path 
Magnolia  avenue 
White  Oak  avenue 
White  Oak  avenue 
Red  Oak  avenue 
Violet  path 
Violet  path 
Violet  path 
Violet  path 
Violet  path 
Red  Oak  avenue 
Myrtle  path 
Myrtle  path 
Red  Oak  avenue 
Red  Oak  avenue 
Tupelo  avenue 
Tupelo  avenue 

W^hite  Oak  avenue 
White  Oak  avenue 
Hemlock  avenue 
White  Oak  avenue 
White  Oak  avenne 
White  Oak  avenue 
Clematis  path 
White  Pine  avenue 
Cherry  avenue 
White  Pine  avenue 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Yew  avenue 
Chrysanthemum  path 
Chrysanthemum  path 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Rosemary  path 
Clematis  path 
Rosemary  path 
Willow  avenue 
Willow  avenue 
Willow  avenue 
Aspen  avenue 
Aspen  avenue 


164 

720 

150 
600 

380 


500 


400 
400 
400 
400 


250 
250 
360 
350 

200 
400 
400 
200 

400 

450 
450 
100 
430 


97 


Bartlett,  Henry 
Kettell,  John  B. 
Kettell,  John 
Miller,  David 
Miller,  George 
Smith,  George  W. 
Grossman,  Nathaniel  W. 
Jenney,  Nelson 
Davis,  William  H. 
Pearce,  William 
Lovell,  Josiah  G. 
Wood,  Alexander 
White,  David,  Jr. 
Gray,  John  H. 
Wiley,  Thomas 
Wells,  Edward 
Campbell,  R.  C. 
Penniman,  Ed.  L. 
Packer,  George 
Rea,  Archelaus 
Arnold,  Elizabeth 
Webster,  Albert 
Holmes,  Richard 
Dudley,  Elbridge  Gerry 
Curtis,  Nelson 
Gore,  Watson,  Jr. 
Maybin,  D.  Crav?ford 
Sears,  Joseph  H, 
Kramer,  Matthias 
Sturgis,  Russell 
Williams,  Sydney  B. 
Payson,  Samuel 
Shales,  Edward 
Cook,  Betsey 
Andrews,  Alonzo 
Barry,  Charles 
Pratt,  Joseph 

Clark,  Moses  241 

Burbank,  Alonzo 
Field,  Alexander  H. 
Gage,  John 
Schmidt,  Henry 
Osgood,  Mary 
Ryerson,  Ebenezer 
Wight,  Sylvanus 
Byron,  Joseph 

Lovering,  Nathaniel  P. 
Hunter,  William 
Towle,  Merribah  H. 
Veazie,  J.  T. 
Coffin,  Gardner  S. 
Frost,  William  C. 
Dudley,  Ebenezer 
Seaver,  John  C. 
Seaver,  William  D. 


204 

Aspen  avenue 

205 

White  Pine  avenue 

206 

White  Pine  avenue 

207 

Willow  avenue 

250 

208 

Willow  avenue 

250 

209 

Aspen  avenue 

210 

Clematis  path 

211 
212 
213 

Aspen  avenue 

Aspen  avenue 

214 

Aspen  avenue 

215 

Aspen  avenue 

360 

216 

Aspen  avenue 

400 

217 

Cherry  avenue 

218 

White  Oak  avenue 

500 

219 

Heliotrope  path 

220 

Heliotrope  path 

221 

White  Pine  avenue 

222 

Cherry  avenue 

223 

Cowslip  path 

224 

White  Oak  avenue 

225 

Grape  path 

226 

Viburnam  path 

227 

Rosemary  path 

228 

White  Oak  avenue 

229 

White  Pine  avenue 

230 

White  Pine  avenue 

231 

Rosemary  path 

232 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

233 

Magnolia  avenue 

234 

Chetry  avenue 

235 

Helioti'ope  path 

236 

Aspen  avenue 

237 

White  Oak  avenue 

238 

Aspen  avenue 

239 

Geranium  path 

240 

White  Oak  avenue 

and  242 

White  Oak  avenue 

710 

243 

Geranium  path 

130 

2i4 

Cherry  avenue 

245 

Geranium  path 

246 

Cherry  avenue 

247 

Sweet  Brier  path 

100 

248 

Heliotrope  path 

249 

Belltlower  path 

200 

250 

Aspen  avenue 

251 

Cherry  avenue 

252 

White  Oak  avenue 

400 

253 

Aspen  avenue 

254 

Cherry  avenue 

255 

Aspen  avenue 

256 

Aspen  avenue 

200 

257 

Green  Brier  ])ath 

72 

258 

Willow  avenue 

259 

White  Oak  avenue 

2G0 

White  Oak  avenue 

Weld,  Daniel 
Weld,  John  D. 
Dickson,  Alexander 
Huston,  William  R. 
Kenney,  John 
Minot,  AVilliam,  Jr. 
Dearborn,  H.  A.  S. 
Dearborn,  W.  L. 
White,  William  A. 
Pierce,  Horace  W. 
Davis,  David  P. 
Griggs,  George  S. 
Houghton,  Joseph 
Joyce,  George  F. 
Williams,  James 
Eeynolds,  William  J.      27 
Pollock,  George 
Pollard,  Abner  W. 
Bazin,  George  W. 
Eand,  Abraham  W. 
Ayres,  John 
Elliott,  Charles  E. 
Thomas,  Charles  A. 

Glines,  Nathan  H. 

Sturgis,  James 
Dumaresq,  Philip 

Gay,  Aaron  R. 

Gay,  Samuel  S. 

Faunce,  George  B. 

Eaton,  William  G. 

Groom,  Thomas 

Dudley,  Ephraim  M. 

Davis,  Horatio 

Kobinson,  J.  P. 

Torrey,  Joseph  G. 

Brown,  George,  Boston 

Scott,  George 

Fay,  Cyrus  H. 

Rogers,  S.  G. 

Hunnewell,  Frank 

Wentworth,  E.  M.  M. 

Felling,  James 

Bell,  Amory 

Humphrey,  W.  A. 

Ellis,  Charles 

Ellis,  Charles  M. 

Whiting,  William 

Eastman,  Sally 

Williams,  Col.  Jos.,  heirs 

AVilliams,  Stedman 

Williams,  Nehemiah  D. 

Williams,  John 

Richards,  Isaiah  D. 

Hall,  Charles  G. 

Fearing,  Lincoln 

Williams,  Stephen 


2G1 
262 
263 
264 
265 
266 
267 
268 
269 
270 
271 
272 
273 
274 
275 
6  and  277 
278 
279 
280 
281 
282 
283 
284 
285 
286 
287 
288 
289 
290 
291 
292 
293 
294 
295 
296 
297 
298 
299 
300 
301 
302 
303 
304 
305 
306 
307 
308 
309 
310 
311 
312 
313 
314 
315 
316 
317 


of 


Amaranth  path 

Amaranth  path 

Amriranth  path 

White  Oak  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

Chrysanthemum  path 

Sweet  Brier  path 

Sweet  Brier  path 

Eliot  liills  path 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

Clematis  path 

Clematis  path 

Cowslip  path 

Heliotrope  path 

Eliot  Hills  path 

Eliot  Hills  path 

Heliotrope  path 
Cherry  avenue 
White  Pine  avenue 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Aspen  avenue 
Sweet  Brier  path 
Sweet  Brier  path 
White  Oak  avenue 
White  Oak  avenue 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Heliotrope  path 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Linden  avenue 
Mount  Warren  avenue 

Mount  Warren  avenue 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Cherry  avenue 
White  Oak  avenue 
Hemlock  avenue 
Hemlock  avenue 
White  Oak  avenue 
White  Pine  avenue 
Kalmia  path 
Ivalmia  path 
]\lount  Warren  avenue 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Mount  AVarren  avenue 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Laurel  path 
Aspen  avenue 
Cherry  avenue 
Laurel  path 
Laurel  path 


645 
345 

345 

345 
400 


400 

600 
233 


912 
100 


414 
460 


340 
490 


99 


Buffinton,  Jonathan 

318 

Cherry  avenue 

Weld,  Nancy- 

319 

Cherry  avenue 

Lewis,  Elijah 

820 

Cherry  avenue 

Harrington,  Ephraim 

321 

Grape  path 

480 

Fisher,  Warren 

322 

Grape  path 

480 

Simmons,  Thomas 

323 

Grape  path 

480 

Simmons,  David  A. 

324 

Grape  path 

480 

Simmons,  George  A. 

325 

Grape  path 

480 

Webber,  John 

326 

Willow  avenue 

Williams,  Thomas 

327 

Laurel  path 

Browning,  Mary  E. 

328 

White  Oak  avenue 

32S 

French,  Jonathan 

329 

Amaranth  path 

Williams,  Jonathan  T. 

330 

Laurel  path 

Hazin,  Charles 

381 

Eliot  Hills  path 

Frederick,  Jabez 

332 

White  Oak  avenue 

250 

Nichols,  Lawrence 

838 

Clematis  path 

Braj^,  Charles  F. 

334 

White  Oak  avenue 

250 

Bray,  Edgar  W. 

385 

White  Oak  avenue 

250 

Burnham,  T.  0.  H.  P. 

336 

Cherry  avenue 

Paige,  Charles  E. 

337 

White  Oak  avenue 

Hammond,  Stephen 

338 

Hawthorn  path 

Sawyer,  Alpha 

839 

Hawthorn  path 

Pollard,  George 

340 

Hawthorn  path 

Billings,  George 

341 

Hawthorn  path 

Baker,  John 

342 

White  Oak  avenue 

154 

Sawyer,  James 

343 

Cowslip  path 

Kittredge,  John  D. 

344 

Cowslip  path 

Rice,  William 

345 

Amaranth  path 

Langley,  Samuel 

346 

Green  Brier  path 

360 

Faunce,  Stephen 

347 

Green  Brier  path 

S60 

March,  Andrew  S. 

348 

Holly  path 

480 

Pettes,  George  W. 

349 

White  Oak  avenue 

Swift,  John  L. 

350 

Hawthorn  path 

Pettes,  Henry 

351 

White  Oak  avenue 

Young,  Calvin 

352 

Jasmine  path 

Barry,  William 

353 

Jasmine  path 

Litchfield,  Simeon 

354 

Green  Brier  path 

Mayo,  John  M. 

355 

White  Oak  aveune 

dsa 

Cumston,  William 

356 

Sweet  Brier  path 

Smith,  Daniel  D. 

357 

Hemlock  avenue 

Ames,  Eobert  W. 

358 

Eliot  Hills  path 

O'Brien,  Mehitable 

359 

Green  Brier  path 

135 

Weld,  Sarah 

360 

Aster  path 

Leman,  John 

861 

White  Oak  avenue 

Newell,  James  M. 

362 

Rosemary  path 

Hinkley,  Thomas  F. 

363 

Geranium  path 

Hathorne,  J.  H. 

364 

Amaranth  path 

Nunn,  Charles 

365 

White  Oak  avenue 

250 

Williams,  Henry  H. 

366 

Laurel  path 

360 

Williams,  Dudley 

367 

Laurel  path 

360 

Weld,  James 

368 

Hemlock  avenue 

450 

Bacon,  Jacob 

869 

Hemlock  avenue 

450 

Peters,  EdAvard  D. 

370 

Pine  avenue 

2000 

Rumrill,  Nancy 

371 

Rosemary  path 

Bills,  Harriet 

372 

Tupelo  avenue 

Calrow,  John  G. 

373 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

100 


Plympton,  Jeremiah 
Tupper,  E.  E. 
Mcintosh,  George  B. 
Dwight,  Edmund 
Shaw,  Joseph  P. 
Heath,  Margaret 
Bacon,  William,  Roxbury 
Bacon,  Horace 
Pearson,  George  W. 
Smith,  Daniel  C. 
Newcombi  James 
Bobbins,  Shepard 
Shelton,  Stephen 
Chapin,  David 
Prescott,  Edward 
Severance,  E.  H. 
Gilbert,  Lemuel 
Leavens,  S.  Davis,  heirs  of 
Peters,  George  H. 
Osgood,  Samuel 
Littlefield,  Samuel  S. 
Huckins,  James  H.  W. 
Hutchinson,  Andrew  B. 
Rogers,  Henry,  Jr. 
Newman,  Robert 
])avenport,  Mary  C. 
Williams,  David  W. 
Williams,  John  D.  W. 
French,  Jonathan 
Williams,  George  F. 
Lodge,  Giles  H. 
Austin,  Thomas 
Buffbrd,  J.  H. 
Carter,  Caroline  W. 
Sargent,  L.  M.,  Jr. 
Clark,  Helen  M.,  Mrs. 
Kennedy,  Thomas  J.  W. 
Lee,  Nancy 
Fowle,  Joshua  B. 
Clark,  Joseph  W. 
Austin,  Thomas 
Barker,  Theodore  T. 
Byram,  Robert  J. 
Gay,  George,  Mrs. 
Crichton,  George  H. 
Rand,  Isaac  P. 
Mason,  Ezekiel  F. 
Lowry,  Maxwell 
Sands,  Edward 
Williams,  Tilson 
Flint,  Thomas 
Worthington,  Caroline 
Patten,  1).  &  G. 
Barnes,  James 
Smith,  Martha 
Sanderson,  John  H. 


374 

Rosemary  path 

375 

Clematis  path 

180 

376 

Geranium  path 

150 

377 

Walnut  avenue 

3850 

378 

Geranium  path 

379 

Geranium  path 

180 

380 

Cherry  avenue 

600 

381 

Cherry  avenue 

382 

White  Pine  avenue 

383 

Hemlock  avenue 

365 

384 

Hemlock  avenue 

385 

Eglantine  path 

386 

Eglantine  path 

387 

Eglantine  path 

388 

Eglantine  path 

389 

Rosemary  path 

390 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

391 

Narcissus  path 

102 

392 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

270 

393 

Azalea  path 

394 

White  Oak  avenue 

395 

Rosemary  path 

396 

White  Pine  avenue 

397 

Cherry  avenue 

398 

Cherry  avenue 

399 

Aspen  avenue 

190 

400 

Cherry  avenue 

700 

401 

Cherry  avenue 

700 

402 

Cherry  avenue 

700 

403 

Cherry  avenue 

700 

404 

Cherry  avenue 

700 

405 

Aster  path 

406 

Aster  path 

407 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

408 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

340 

409 

Geranium  path 

340 

410 

Geranium  path 

150 

411 

Rosemary  path 

412 

Aster  path 

413 

Wliite  Pine  avenue 

400 

414 

Aster  path 

415 

Geranium  path 

416 

Aster  path 

417 

Aster  path 

418 

Geranium  path 

160 

419 

Cherry  avenue 

440 

420 

Cherry  avenue 

421 

Aspen  avenue 

422 

Willow  avenue 

400 

423 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

424 

Cherry  avenue 

425 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

180 

426 

Rosemary  path 

427 

White  Pine  avenue 

428 

Geranium  patli 

429 

Aspen  avenue 

100 

101 


Hunnewell,  Joseph  W.  430 

Stowe,  Orville  431 

White,  Benjamin  C.  432 

Snow,  Nathaniel  433 

Drew,  William  434 

Jackson,  Jane  435 

AVainwright,  Peter  436 

Hunting,  Reuben  437 

Cooley,  William  438 

Page,  Kilby  439 

Spaulding,  S.  E.  440 

Spaulding,  B.  P.  441 

Chadbourn,  Seth  442 

Glover,  Thomas  443 

Smith,  Phineas  B.  444 

Sinclair,  Thomas  445 

Wentworth,  E.  M.  M.  446 

Blendell,  Sophia  M.  447 

Chamberlain,  Dexter  H.  448 

Hook,  William  R.  M.  44 D 

Dean,  Amos  J.  450 

Cunningham,  Lucy  451 

Davis,  Ezra  452 

Sweetser,  George  H.  453 

Sloan,  Charles  F.  464 

Prescott,  Samuel  455 

Ford,  Eliza  456 

Farrington,  Ebenezer  T.  45  7 

Faunce,  Calvin  B.  458 

Davenport,  George  459 

Davenport,  Henry  460 

Sherburne,  Charles  461 

Bursley,  Henry  462 

Peck,  Hannah  463 

Cracklin,  Joseph  464 

Thayer,  Robert  H.  465 

Clark,  William  466 

Huff",  Owen  467 

Wallis,  Levi  468 

Marsh,  John  469 

Perry,  William,  Jr.  470 

Hard  wick,  William  471 

Gaston,  Alexander  472 

Fisk,  Bela  S.  473 

Jenkins,  Wealthy  Ann  474 

Seaverns,  Thomas  W.  475 

Stevens,  Polly  476 

Seaverns,  Abijah  477 

Taft,  Alonzo  4  78 

D wight,  Thomas  479 

Appleton,  William,  Jr.  480 

Warren,  J.  M.  481 

Warren,  J.  S.  482 

Lyman,  Charles  483 

Warren,  John  C.  484 

Arnold,  Mattrom  V.  485 


White  Pine  avenue 
White  Pine  avenue 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Cherry  avenue 
Aster  path 
Sweet  Brier  path 
Cherry  avenue 
Clematis  path 
Viburnum  path 
Geranium  path 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Cherry  avenue 
Cherry  avenue 
Cherry  avenue 
Cherry  avenue 
White  Pine  avenue 
Aster  path 
Geranium  path 
Rosemary  path 
White  Pine  avenue 
Aster  path 
Geranium  path 
Cherry  avenue 
Cherry  avenue 
Bellflower  path 
Aspen  avenue 
tlyacinth  path 
Clematis  path 
Clematis  path 
Clematis  path 
Hyacinth  path 
Hyacinth  path 
Hemlock  avenue 
Geranium  path 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Clematis  path 
Anemone  path 
Clematis  path 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
White  Pine  avenue 
White  Pine  avenue 
Bellflower  path 
Bellflower  path 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Mount  AVa,rren  avenue 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Rosemary  path 


440 
100 
380 
340 


320 
200 


200 
200 


224 

250 
250 
310 

260 
500 


500 


102 


CuT'tis,  Sarah 
Hills,  Sarah 
Park,  John  C. 
Turner,  Henry 
Beck,  Lewis, 
Binney,  John 
Brown,  Joseph 
Witherbee,  John  B. 
Osgood,  Samuel 
White,  Joseph  A. 
Warren,  Frederick 
White,  James  T. 
Hiland,  Ira 
Hitchcock,  Henry 
Simmons,  Melvin 
Bisbee,  Thomas 
Speare,  Alden 
Speare,  Alden 
Brewer,  Nathaniel 
Boylston  &  Prince 
Williams,  J.  D.,  estate  of 
Peirce,  William 
Howes,  Osborn 
Crowell,  Henry  G. 
Bixby,  S.  Clarke 
Dean,  Enos  W. 
Barker,  Edward  H. 
Lambert,  Joseph 
Burt,  Laban 

Nichols,  Charles,  (for  Miss  1 
Powars)  j 

Allen,  C.  J.  F. 
Williams,  Moses 
Weld,  Aaron  D. 
Johnson,  Henry  Augustus 
Wells,  Mary 
Smith,  Cyrus 
Shelton,  Thomas  J. 
Richards,  Joseph  L. 
Lincoln,  C.  D.  and  J.  S. 
Hill,  Henry 
Cunningham,  John  A. 
Meriam,  Abijah  S. 
Wentworth,  Alexander 
Wentworth,  F.  B. 
Way,  Samuel  A. 
Cotting,  Caroline  M. 
Hunt,  George  H. 
Butler,  Nathaniel 
Weld,  Franklin  534  and 

Millard,  Charles  J. 
Pierce,  Jonathan 
Cragin,  Daniel 
Burchstead,  Benjamin 
Lcavitt,  David 
Poland,  William  C. 


486 

Clematis  path 

250 

487 

Bellflower  path 

488 

Clematis  path 

400 

489 

Aster  path 

315 

490 

White  Pine  avenue 

170 

491 

White  Pine  avenue 

170 

492 

White  Pine  avenue 

493 

Aster  path 

494 

Azalea  path 

495 

Viburnum  path 

496 

Eliot  Hills  path 

400 

497 

Aster  path 

200 

498 

Aster  path 

240 

499 

Hyacinth  path 

500 

Rosemary  path 

188 

501 

Rosemary  path 

188 

502 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

260 

503 

Rosemary  path 

260 

504 

Aster  path 

505 

Cherry  avenue 

506 

Cherry  avenue 

400 

507 

Bellflower  path 

508 

Anemone  path 

360 

509 

Anemone  path 

360 

510 

AVhite  Pine  avenue 

360 

511 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

80 

512 

Clematis  path 

513 

Bellflower  path 

215 

514 

White  Pine  avenue     ■ 

360 

515 

Bellflower  path 

516 

Bellflower  path 

517 

Cherry  avenue 

400 

518 

Cherry  avenue 

400 

519 

White  Pine  avenue 

520 

Aster  path 

521 

Anemone  path 

320 

522 

Bellflower  path 

523 

Eglantine  path 

524 

Bellflower  path 

525 

Woodbine  path 

290 

526 

Geranium  path 

527 

Aster  path 

528 

White  Pine  avenue 

365 

529 

White  Pine  avenue 

365 

530 

AVhite  Pine  avenue 

430 

531 

AVhite  Pine  avenue 

290 

532 

Bellflower  path 

533 

Clematis  path 

250 

535 

White  Pine  avenue 

730 

530 

Eglantine  path 

537 

White  Pine  avenue 

538 

Eglantine  path 

539 

Eglantine  path 

540 

Eglantine  path 

541 

Aster  path 

103 


Foster,  William  Hammond 

Perkins,  Christine 

WiUard,  J.  D. 

Chapin,  George  A. 

Babbitt,  Isaac 

Kinstler,  Conrad 

Feyhl,  John 

Hunt,  Sanford  M, 

Nickerson,  Joseph 

Green,  Daniel  B. 

Dexter,  George  S. 

Leighton,  Rutus 

Meriam,  Abigail 

Mansur,  Samuel 

Moore,  Eliza 

Lincoln,  L.  W. 

Morse,  Horatio  G. 

Lyford,  Thomas 

Cass,  Moses 

Bailey,  Adams 

Williams,  Joseph 

Hinds,  Justin 

Griggs,  John  H. 

Rogers,  John  S. 

Stevens,  Sarah  J. 

Hinckley,  James  H. 

Hayes,  Ephraim 

Bodge,  Mary  L. 

Brown,  Abigail 

Bowdlear,  Samuel 

Gates,  Martin  L. 

Brewer,  Otis 

Richardson,  John 

Otis,  Theodore 

Winslow,  Isaac 

Winslow,  Edward 

Winslow,  George 

Spence,  John 

Hemmenway,  Henry  C. 

Hanson,  John  A. 

Foster,  Henrietta 

Pearce,  Robert 

Learock,  John  B. 

Gardner,  Robert 

Fowle,  Parker, 

Fowle,  William  P. 

Everett,  Oliver  C. 

Williams,  Geo.  F.,  (Guardian) 

Durkee,  Silas 

George,  Greenleaf  C. 

Bacon,  John  F. 

Bosworth,  George  W. 

Curtis,  Henry 

Ripley,  Samuel  W. 

Putnam,  E.  M. 

White,  Warren  L. 


542 

Laurel  path 

543 

Pine  avenue 

2130 

544 

Woodbine  path 

545 

Bellflower  path 

350 

546 

Bellflower  path 

547 

Eglantine  path 

220 

548 

Eglantine  path 

220 

549 

Anemone  path 

550 

Anemone  path 

551 

Aster  path 

552 

Laurel  path 

553 

Eglantine  path 

554 

Bellflower  path 

555 

Bellflower  path 

556 

Laurel  path 

315 

557 

Eglantine  path 

558 

White  Pine  avenue 

559 

Bellflower  path 

340 

560 

Eglantine  path 

561 

Laurel  path 

562 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

563 

Hyacinth  path 

564 

White  Pine  avenue 

565 

Eglantine  path 

566 

Cherry  avenue 

567 

Eglantine  path 

568 

Eglantine  path 

569 

White  Pine  avenue 

570 

Eglantine  path 

571 

AVbite  Pine  avenue 

340 

572 

Eliot  Hills  path 

260 

573 

White  Oak  avenue 

400 

574 

Azalea  path 

130 

575 

Ailanthus  path 

700 

576 

Clematis  path 

330 

577 

Clematis  path 

578 

Clematis  path 

340 

579 

White  Pine  avenue 

500 

580 

Azalea  path 

150 

581 

Woodbine  path 

582 

Aster  path 

583 

Aster  path 

584 

White  Oak  avenue 

585 

Chrysanthemum  path 

586 

Woodbine  path 

265 

587 

AVoodbine  path 

265 

588 

Cherry  avenue 

440 

589 

Cherry  avenue 

440 

590 

Aster  path 

591 

Hyacinth  path 

592 

Sweet  Brier  path 

593 

Eglantine  path 

594 

Eglantine  path 

595 

White  Pine  avenue 

596 

Rosemary  path 

170 

597 

Rosemary  path 

170 

104 


Child,  Isaac 

Everett,  Otis  599 

Jacobs,  Jane  L. 
Beal,  Levi 
Linzee,  Elizabeth 
Curtis,  Samuel  S. 
Richardson,  John  A. 
Sumner,  Alfred  H. 
Cushing,  Zenas 
White,'Robert 
Halliburton,  George  M. 
Hutchins,  Ivory 
Haskins,  George  F. 
Wood,  Charles  G. 
Hunt,  George,  Mrs. 
Cornell,  Walter 
Pickering,  Daniel  N. 
Hager,  George 
Richardson,  Abijah 
Webster,  William  P. 
Ditson,  Oliver 
Burroughs,  Caroline 
Ring,  Nathaniel 
White,  Charles  A.         ' 
Morrill,  Mrs.  Mary  Ann 
Taylor,  George 
Brown,  Benjamin,  Jr. 
Bender,  John 
Yerrick,  Christine 
Bean,  Aaron  H. 
Partridge,  Polly  W. 
Pray,  Thomas  O. 
Tufts,  Gardner  G. 
Nightingale,  James 
Ballard,  Francis  G. 
Ward,  Richard 
Burroughs,  Henry 
Cole,  William 
Smith,  John,  Capt. 
Wheeler,  Gillam  B. 
Davis,  Isaac 
Guild,  Samuel 
Everson,  George  H. 
Richards,  Reuben 
Blanchard,  Charles 
Jordan,  Charles 
Wis  wall,  Elisha 
Federhen,  John,  Jr. 
Dudley,  James  H. 
Sanford,  Philo 
Pomeroy,  Henry  A.  G. 
Heyer,  William  A. 
Odin,  John 

Copeland,  William  H.  C. 
Hyde,  M.  Smith 
Ritchie,  Edward  S. 


598 

Azalea  path 

230 

and  600 

Eglantine  path 

400 

601 

Ailanthus  path 

225 

602 

Hyacinth  path 

225 

603 

Chrysanthemum  path 

604 

Chrysanthemum  path 

320 

605 

Chrysanthemum  path 

320 

606 

Chrysanthemum  path 

320 

607 

Ailanthus  path 

325 

608 

Ailanthus  path 

225 

609 

Hyacinth  path 

225 

610 

Geranium  path 

225 

611 

Geranium  path 

612 

White  Pine  avenue 

613 

Ailanthus  path 

400 

614 

White  Pine  avenue 

615 

Chrysanthemum  path 

360 

616 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

250 

617 

Azalea  path 

618 

Geranium  path 

270 

619 

Cherry  avenue 

380 

620 

Chrysanthemum  path 

621 

White  Pine  avenue 

622 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

400 

623 

Hyacinth  path 

225 

624 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

625 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

626 

Juniper  avenue 

150 

627 

Juniper  avenue 

150 

628 

White  Oak  avenue 

629 

Hyacinth  path 

180 

630 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

631 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

292 

632 

Hyacinth  path 

225 

633 

Chrysanthemum  path 

634 

Mount  Warren  avenue ' 

635 

Chrysanthemum  path 

636 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

637 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

638 

White  Pine  avenue 

639 

Wabon  path 

325 

640 

Wabon  path 

950 

641 

Chrysanthemum  path 

642 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

643 

Holly  path 

180 

644 

Juniper  avenue 

645 

Clematis  path 

646 

Azalea  path 

647 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

648 

Azalea  path 

649 

Woodbine  path 

650 

Azalea  path 

275 

651 

Azalea  path 

652 

Azalea  path 

653 

Azalea  path 

260 

654 

Clematis  path 

105 


Coolidge,  John  T. 
Palmer,  Simeon,  estate  of 
Lord,  Robert  W. 
Jenkins,  Henry  T. 
Corey,  Barney 
Mair,  George  Herbert 
Mallett,  Charlotte 
Smith,  Thomas  H. 
Davis,  George  A. 
Wheeler,  Samuel 
White,  Benjamin  C. 
Dudley,  H.  A.  S.  D. 
Harrington,  Rebecca 
Harrington,  Ellen  E. 
Conant,  Ezra 
Conant,  Caleb  A. 
Crane,  Friend 
Pear,  John  S. 
Thayer,  John  P. 
Davis,  William  H. 
Davis,  William  H. 
Weeks,  Andrew  G. 
Walker,  Samuel  A. 
Ladd,  Frederick  P. 
Minot,  William 
Howe,  John 
Minot,  William 
Torrey,  John  G. 
Tilden,  Charles  L. 
Barney,  Sarah  B. 
Sawyer,  Stephen  L. 
Sawyer,  Nathan 
Minot,  Albert  T. 
Hodgdon,  Luther 
Ayres,  Benjamin  F. 
Wheelwright,  Caroline 
Wheelwright,  Josiah 
Carlisle,  George  W. 
Allen,  Frederick  D. 
Buoncore,  Lewis 
Dupee,  Lewis,  heirs  of 
Blake,  John  H. 
Dorr,  E.  Ritchie 
Russell,  Lydia  S. 
D  wight,  Mary 
May,  Benjamin 
Hodge,  Thomas  S. 
Fitzgerald,  Stephen 
James,  Elisha 
Calder,  John  W. 
Maxwell,  Charles 
Barnard,  Lucinda 
Parkinson,  John 
Townsend,  Eliza  G. 
Newell,  Willard 
EUicott,  Joseph  P. 

14 


055 

Chrysanthemum  path 

of              G5G 

Chrysanthemum  path 

720 

G57 

Azalea  path 

658 

Chrysanthemum  path 

669 

Chrysanthemum  path 

420 

660 

Althea  path 

661 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

168 

662 

Hyacinth  path 

240 

663 

Azalea  path 

664 

White  Pine  avenue 

250 

665 

Linden  avenue 

666 

Kalmia  path 

1254 

667 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

330 

668 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

330 

669 

Grape  path 

436 

670 

Grape  path 

350 

671 

Cherry  avenue 

672 

Hyacinth  path 

260 

673 

Hyacinth  path 

674  and  675 

Laurel  path 

1067 

676  and  677 

Woodbine  path 

1333 

6  78 

Green  Brier  path 

380 

679 

Cherry  avenue 

400 

680 

Cherry  avenue 

360 

681 

Chrysanthemum  path 

682 

Chrysanthemum  path 

360 

683 

Chrysanthemum  path 

360 

684 

Chrysanthemum  path 

350 

685 

Chrysanthemum  path 

350 

686 

Hawthorn  patli 

100 

687 

Chei  ry  avenue 

200 

688 

Che} ly  avenue 

200 

689 

Cherry  avenue 

690 

Juni])er  avenue 

200 

691 

Junijjer  avenue 

200 

692 

Chrysanthemum  path 

323 

693 

Chrysanthemum  path 

323 

694 

Clematis  path 

695 

Cherry  avenue 

696 

Clematis  path 

697 

Hyacinth  path 

698 

Althea  path 

340 

699 

Althea  path 

700 

Althea  path 

701 

Althea  path 

702 

Cherry  avenue 

703 

Hyacinth  path 

225 

704 

Juniper  avenue 

200 

705 

Juniper  avenue 

200 

706 

Geranium  path 

220 

7U7 

Hyacinth  path 

708 

White  Oak  avenue 

120 

7u9 

Lily  path 

710 

Lily  path 

711 

Juniper  avenue 

130 

712 

Linden  avenue 

goo 

106 


Fuller,  Albert 

713 

Hyacinth  path 

Tolman,  James  P. 

714 

Linden  avenue 

Dexter,  Samuel  A. 

715 

Linden  avenue 

Morey,  George,  for  M.  Newell 

716 

Linden  avenue 

Smith,  James  W. 

717 

Linden  avenue 

Drury,  Gardner  P. 

718 

Woodbine  path 

320 

Wheelwright,  Sarah 

719 

Chrysanthemum  path 

Briggs,  Nathaniel  0. 

720 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

144 

Cummings,  Charles 

721 

Hyacinth  path 

165 

Dudley,  Charles  H. 

722 

Juniper  avenue 

125 

Forbes,  John  M. 

723 

Magnolia  avenue 

354 

Forbes,  Robert  B. 

724 

Magnolia  avenue 

354 

Forbes,  Margaret 

725 

Magnolia  avenue 

354 

Stackpole,  Reuben  M. 

726 

Juniper  avenue 

340 

Chiids,  Nathaniel  R. 

727 

Juniper  avenue 

340 

Childs,  Albert 

728 

Juniper  avenue 

340 

Stone,  Baman 

729 

Juniper  avenue 

340 

Watson,  Nathan 

730 

Juniper  avenue 

Waldron,  John,  heirs  of 

731 

Geranium  path 

Heath,  Stephen 

732 

Geranium  path 

Littlefield,  James 

733 

Clematis  path 

Smith,  Joseph  P. 

734 

Cherry  avenue 

Shiverick,  George 

735 

Geranium  path 

Remick,  Ai 

736 

Juniper  avenue 

May,  Samuel 

737 

Walnut  avenue 

2175 

Blanchard,  Charles  H. 

738 

Cherry  avenue 

200 

Stephenson,  George 

739 

Cherry  avenue 

200 

Stewart,  Alexander 

740 

Chrysanthemum  path 

Weld,  William  F. 

741 

Linden  avenue 

630 

Weld,  William  G. 

742 

Linden  avenue 

580 

Townsend,  John  P.         743  and  744 

Chrysanthemum  path 

680 

Lemon,  George  E. 

745 

Juniper  avenue 

Thompson,  George 

746 

Cherry  avenue 

Weir,  Andrew  A. 

747 

Juniper  avenue 

Clarke,  John  J. 

748 

Althea  path 

Clarke,  Frances  C, 

749 

Althea  path 

Loring,  David 

750 

Geranium  path 

Hastings,  Catherine  E. 

751 

Geranium  path 

280 

Woodman,  John 

752 

Juniper  avenue 

225 

Bicknell,  Joseph 

753 

Juniper  avenue 

225 

Clarke,  C.  S. 

754 

Grape  path 

132 

Atkinson,  Andrew 

755 

Cherry  avenue 

Kibbee,  Parley  M. 

756 

Cherry  avenue 

Bobbins,  John  M. 

757 

Grape  path 

260 

Whittier,  Robert  R. 

758 

Juniper  avenue 

Stanton,  John  L. 

759 

Juniper  avenue 

Hastings,  Joseph 

760 

Juniper  avenue 

Brown,  Charlotte  R. 

761 

Geranium  path 

Ashley,  Ossian  D. 

762 

Althea  path 

350 

Long,  Georije  W. 

763 

Althea  path 

350 

Hobart,  William  H. 

764 

Althea  path 

Hobart,  Peter,  Jr. 

765 

Althea  path 

360 

Page,  Willard 

766 

Geranium  path 

Jaquith,  Augustus  D. 

767 

Juniper  avenue 

Tarr,  Daniel  W. 

768 

Juniper  avenue 

Steveng,  Benjamin  F. 

769 

Geranium  path 

107 


Trueman,  Jedediah  L. 

770 

Geranium  path 

220 

Milton,  Homan,  Jr. 

771 

Oleander  path 

225 

Lothrop,  Elias  C. 

772 

Juniper  avenue 

Rodgers,  Ammon 

773 

Juniper  avenue 

Defrees,  William  H. 

774 

Juniper  avenue 

Swallow,  Daniel  W. 

775 

Geranium  path 

Seward,  Joshua 

776 

White  Oak  avenue 

Callahan,  Hannah  W. 

777 

Clematis  path 

340 

Deblois  M.  and  C. 

778 

Juniper  avenue 

Elbridge,  John  S. 

779 

Linden  avenue 

Marshall,  Lueretia  S. 

780 

Oleander  path 

225 

Hamilton,  Edward 

781 

Juniper  avenue 

400 

Stanford,  Joanna  A. 

782 

Azalea  path 

85 

Pope,  Holly  K. 

783 

Linden  avenue 

200 

Trescott,  Elijah,  Jr. 

784 

Linden  avenue 

200 

Kingman,  Abner 

785 

Althea  path 

Woodman,  George 

786 

Juniper  avenue 

Hill,  Charles  H. 

787 

Juniper  avenue 

W^elch,  Charles  W. 

788 

Lilac  path 

Pedder,  James 

789 

Clematis  path 

Shepherd,  Betsey 

790 

Althea  path 

Nightingale,  John  F. 

791 

Juniper  avenue 

Moorhead,  William 

792 

Juniper  avenue 

Varnum,  William 

793 

Linden  avenue 

Perham,  Charlotte  G. 

794 

Althea  path 

220 

Hovey,  John 

795 

Althea  path 

220 

Haste,  Eliza 

796 

Oleander  path 

217 

Howe,  B.  Miles 

797 

Oleander  path 

225 

Jackson,  Isaac 

798 

Clematis  path 

200 

Lovett,  Isabella 

799 

Clematis  path 

200 

Evans,  Harriet  F. 

800 

Linden  avenue 

Field,  Pearson  H. 

801 

Linden  avenue 

Preston,  Elisha  H. 

802 

Tulip  path 

Payson,  Edwin 

803 

Juniper  avenue 

Chessman,  Nancy  W. 

804 

Lilac  path 

Campbell,  Jeremiah  E, 

805 

Lilac  path 

Mathes,  Charles  L. 

806 

Clematis  path 

Head,  Edward  F. 

807 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

260 

Tarbell,  Eben 

808 

Lilac  path 

220 

Tarbell,  Eben  R. 

809 

Lilac  path 

220 

Brayton,  John  D. 

810 

Lilac  path 

Anderson,  Robert  P. 

811 

Linden  avenue 

Munroe,  Josiah  J. 

812 

Fountain  avenue 

Brigham,  Mary  F. 

813 

Fountain  avenue 

Quincy,  Thomas  D. 

814 

Kalmia  path 

315 

Bradford,  William  B. 

815 

Kalmia  path 

Loring,  William 

816 

Juniper  avenue 

200 

Adams,  Ashur 

817 

Juniper  avenue 

200 

Curtis,  Joseph  H. 

818 

Pine  avenue 

463 

Curtis  J.  H.  and  George  S. 

819 

Pine  avenue 

463 

Curtis,  George  S. 

820 

Pine  avenue 

463 

AVillard,  William  D. 

821 

Lilac  path 

Hinckley,  Aaron  A. 

822 

Fountain  avenue 

Linton,  William 

823 

Fountain  avenue 

Gordon,  Robert 

824 

Lilac  path 

Loveland,  Jennett  L. 

825 

Fountain  avenue 

280 

108 


Perkins,  Edward 
Libbey,  Julia 
Green,  Abraham  M. 
Low,  Ariel 
Sargent,  John  T. 
Allison,  John  W. 
Nichols,  Robert  C. 
Parkinson,  Janaes 
Fus&ell,  John 
Melzar,  Augustus  P. 
Hunting,  Thomas 
AValker,  William  L. 
Weld,  Christopher  M. 
Weld,  John  G. 
Weld,  Stephen  M. 
Weld,  Francis  M. 
Lamb,  Reuben  A. 
Sumner,  William  H. 
Tucker,  Nathaniel 
Tucker,  Nathaniel 
Moore,  Charles,  heirs  of 
Hill,  Hamilton  A. 
Brown,  Mary 
Brown,  Henry 
Crafts,  Ebenezer 
Pope,  Otis 
Guild,  Aaron 
Tileston,  John  N. 
Amory,  James  S. 
Barnard,  Jonas 
Cook,  John  V. 
Massy,  Mary  L. 
Harris,  George 
Matthews,  William,  Jr. 
Tucker,  Otis  W. 
Frothingham,  E.  L. 
Palmer,  Stevens  C. 
White,  Abijah  P. 
Edd)'^,  James 
Kingsley,  Joseph 
Kendall,  Charles  S. 
Perrin,  Augustus  W. 
Fullerton,  Alexander 
Perrin,  G.  W. 
Miller,  Erasmus  D. 
Wilder,  Marshall  P. 
Adams,  Nathaniel 
Lincoln,  Joshua 
Richards,  George  H. 
Comerais,  Henry 
French,  Abram 
Burrage,  William 
Hentz,  Frederick  W. 
Young,  Calvin,  Dorchester 
Park,  Ann 
Baldwin,  Luke  881 


826 

Bellflower  path 

140 

827 

Oleander  path 

225 

828 

Oleander  path 

255 

829 

Linden  avenue 

400 

830 

Lilac  path 

831 

Lilac  path 

832 

Lilac  path 

833 

Tulip  path 

220 

834 

Tulip  path 

220 

835 

Verbena  path 

836 

Linden  avenue 

837 

Linden  avenue 

838 

Linden  avenue 

839 

Linden  avenue 

840 

Azalea  path 

340 

841 

Azalea  path 

410 

842 

Linden  avenue 

500 

843 

Sumner  hill 

2150 

844 

Linden  avenue 

428 

845 

Azalea  path 

362 

846 

Lilac  path 

350 

847 

Lilac  path 

848 

Lilac  path 

360 

849 

Lilac  path 

850 

Nesutan  avenue 

440 

851 

Mayflower  path 

852 

Mayflower  path 

,853 

Mayflower  path 

854 

Walnut  avenue 

2040 

855 

Verbena  path 

856 

Verbena  path 

857 

Oleander  path 

200 

858 

Lilac  path 

300 

859 

Lilac  path 

860 

Fountain  avenue 

861 

Lilac  path 

862 

Tulip  path 

863 

Lilac  path 

864 

White  Oak  avenue 

865 

Verbena  path 

360 

866 

Lilac  path 

867 

Pine  avenue 

780 

868 

Pine  avenue 

310 

869 

Pine  avenue 

320 

870 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

400 

871 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

700 

872 

Lupine  path 

270 

873 

Tulip  path 

440 

874 

Lupine  path 

875 

Moss  path 

450 

876 

Moss  path 

350 

877 

Moss  path 

350 

878 

Lupine  path 

315 

879 

Lupine  path 

880 

Lilac  path 

and  882 

Linden  avenue 

109 


Cook,  William  D. 
Pieper,  Louise 
Huckins,  Francis 
Keith,  James  M. 
Palmer,  Ezra,  Jr. 
Bowditch,  Elizabeth  B. 
Alexander,  Ebenezer 
Strong,  George 
Borrowscale,  John 
Warren,  Eliza 
Cummins,  Maria  F. 
Cushing,  Sarah  P. 
Mowe,  George  W. 
Cloutman,  John  S. 
Watt,  Robert 
Smith,  Joel  H. 
Hadley,  Jane 
Weinz,  Christian 
Hale,  Daniel  L. 
Fay,  Charles  T. 
Wadleigh,  Dexter  E. 
Nute,  Clarissa 
Bartlett,  Dennis  S. 
AVheelock,  Edward  C. 
Hilton,  Celeste  J. 
Basto,  Mason 
Cunningham,  Sarah  E. 
Pitman,  David 
Eastham,  AVilliam  W. 
Kettell,  James 
Carter,  James  W. 
Carter,  John,  Jr. 
Currant,  John  F. 
Learned,  Isaac  M. 
Brimbecom,  Nathaniel 
Lethbridge,  Willard  F. 
Dexter,  George  N. 
Tutein,  Nancy 
Harris,  Luther  M. 
Tileston,  Edmund  P. 
Houghton,  Caleb  C. 
Boardman,  Janet 
Wilcox,  John  D.  F. 
Reed,  David  K. 
Barnes,  Loring  B. 
French,  Charles 
Coffin,  N.  W. 
Rowland,  Edward  W. 
Cobb,  Frances  A. 

Whiting,  Lewis  F. 
Roberts,  Joseph  D. 
Turner,  Sarah  L. 
Mackintosh,  Roger  S. 
Pope,  Thomas 
Taylor,  Isaac 


883 

Juniper  avenue 

160 

884 

Lupine  path 

270 

885 

Tulip  path 

440 

886 

Fountain  avenue 

887  and  888 

Tulip  path 

650 

889  and  890 

Tulip  path 

600 

891 

Lilac  path 

892 

Lupine  path 

270 

893 

Fountain  avenue 

500 

894 

Lupine  path 

270 

895 

Althea  path 

896 

Ivy  path 

897 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

280 

898 

Lupine  path 

270 

899 

Verbena  path 

900 

Tulip  path 

901 

Fountain  avenue 

902 

Lupine  path 

270 

903 

Fountain  avenue 

904 

Lupine  path 

180 

905 

Tulip  path 

906 

Fountain  avenue 

20  7 

907 

Fountain  avenue 

207 

908 

Lupine  path 

92 

909 

Iris  path 

180 

910 

Tulip  path 

911 

Iris  path 

120 

912 

Iris  path 

210 

913 

Tulip  path 

914 

Tulip  path 

915 

Mayllower  path 

600 

916 

Mayflower  path 

917 

Mayflower  path 

423 

918 

Mayflower  path 

305 

919 

Mayflower  path 

340 

920 

Iris  path 

180 

921 

Tulip  path 

922 

Iris  path 

180 

923 

Larch  avenue 

924 

Cypress  avenue 

875 

925 

Althea  path 

259 

926 

Althea  path 

135 

927 

Verbena  path    . 

150 

928 

Verbena  path 

150 

929 

Ivy  path 

270 

930 

Larch  avenue 

931 

Cypress  avenue 

500 

932 

Iris  path 

136 

933 

Verbena  path 

150 

934 

Nesutan  avenue 

280 

935 

Larch  avenue 

936 

Larch  avenue 

937 

Fountain  avenue 

938 

Fountain  avenue 

939 

Fountain  avenue 

940 

Ivy  path 

440 

no 


Curtis,  Nathaniel 
Martin,  Robert 
Fish,  Hosea  S. 
Walker,  Matthew 
Croft,  James  T. 
Duncan,  Archibald 
Lestrom,  Magnus 
Jackson,  Eben 
Robbins,  Charles 
Cleary,  Georsje  T. 
Willet,  William 
Child,  Elizabeth 
Rogers,  Charles  O. 
Richardson,  Josiah  B. 
Hobart,  Charles  G. 
Leeds,  Samuel 
Littlefield,  Alvah 
Mackintosh,  William  H. 
Palmer,  William 
Palmer,  William  H. 
Bixby,  Philip  W. 
Sprague,  William 
Winsor,  Edward 
Hyde,  Jerusha 
Hills,  Samuel 
Seaver,  Benjamin 
Moore,  Emery  N. 
Cochrane,  William  A. 
Hall,  Henry  A. 
Bryant,  Charles  B. 
Morse,  Frederick  W. 
Hill,  Samuel 
Reed,  Samuel  G. 
Fletcher,  Robert 
Mott,  Joshua 

Kupfer,  Charles  F.,  heirs  of 
Blake,  William 
Paul,  Joseph  F. 
McNutt,  John  J. 
Heaman,  John,  Mrs. 
Leavens,  Benjamin  F. 
Faxon,  Hannah  M. 
Young,  Catherine  C. 
Sturtevant,  Newell 
Bigelow,  D.  Jackson 
Wallis,  Paul  D. 
Winslow,  Reuben 
Mack,  Nehemiah 
Cary,  Nathan  C. 
Taber,  Harriet 
Elder,  William 
Linscott,  Wingate 
Scott,  Robert 
Collyer,  Isaac  J.  P. 
Briggs,  Andrew  G. 
Thayer,  Geoige  L. 


941 

Ivy  path 

500 

942 

Fountain  avenue 

943 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

320 

944 

Fountain  avenue 

945 

Fountain  avenue 

946 

Fountain  avenue 

947 

Lupine  path 

212 

948 

Fountain  avenue 

949 

Fountain  avenue 

950 

Fountain  avenue 

951 

White  Oak  avenue 

952 

Fountain  avenue 

953 

Larch  avenue 

954 

Larch  avenue 

955 

Larch  avenue 

956 

Larch  avenue 

957 

Larch  avenue 

958 

Larch  avenue 

959 

Larch  avenue 

960 

Larch  avenue 

961 

Larch  avenue 

962 

Larch  avenue 

963 

Larch  avenue 

964 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

320 

965 

Fountain  avenue 

966 

Larch  avenue 

400 

967 

Hemlock  avenue 

325 

968 

Fountain  avenue 

969 

Iris  path 

400 

970 

Lotus  path 

400 

971 

Larch  avenue 

972 

Ivy  path 

412 

973 

Consecration  avenue 

1000 

974 

Ivy  path 

440 

975 

Fountain  avenue 

976 

Sumach  path 

350 

977 

Sumach  path 

350 

978 

Tulip  path 

218 

979 

Tulip  path 

218 

980 

Fountain  avenue 

981 

Lotus  path 

360 

982 

Mayflower  path 

983 

Iris  path 

984 

Fountain  avenue 

985 

Rose  path 

986 

Larch  avenue 

987 

White  Oak  avenue 

480 

988 

Lotus  path 

989 

Fountain  avenue 

150 

990 

Fountain  avenue 

200 

991 

Lotus  path 

992 

Fountain  avenue 

993 

White  Oak  avenue 

994 

Fountain  avenue 

995 

Sumach  path 

996 

.  Sumach  path 

Ill 


Cassell,  G. 

Smith,  Michael  H. 

Pope,  Frederick,  Mrs. 

Getting,  Benjamin  E. 

Hutchins,  Simon 

Brown,  Asa 

Wharton,  Robert 

Smith,  Samuel  D. 

Ewell,  William  S. 

Scott  Thomas  A.,  and  Martha 

Drake 
Smith,  Dwelly  T. 
Stockwell,  M.  S. 
Sampson,  Charles 
Adams,  Lydia  Ann 
Sanford,  William  H. 
Morton,  Ebenezer 
Kingsley,  Julia  Ann 
Hall,  Richard 
Kennedy,  Donald 
Maguire,  Francis 
Bradish,  Levi  J. 
Burt,  Seth  F. 
Rollins,  John  W. 
Whitwell,  John  P. 
Mash,  Peter 
Balch,  John 
Whiting,  Samuel  W. 
Black,  Jane 
Chandler,  Henry  H. 
Capen,  Moses  L. 
Bartlett,  B.  C. 
Carnes,  John 
Bacon,  Margaret 
Grant,  Charles  E. 
Weston,  Oliver 
Atkins,  Simon  P. 
Barrett,  Gilman 
Lunt,  Henry 
Austin,  Arthur  W. 
Willard,  Paul 
Seaver,  George 
Seaver,  George 
Wright,  John  M. 
Hersey,  George  E. 
Soren,  John  J. 
Harmon,  Henry  M. 
Reynolds,  Cynthia 
Reynolds,  Grindall 
Lowd,  Charles  J. 
Page,  Edward 
Blackbird,  George 
Leeds,  Samuel 
Ames,  Asa 
Preston,  Elisha 
Leach,  Eliab 


997 

Fountain  avenue 

998 

Fountain  avenue 

999 

Rosemary  path 

1000 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

1000 

1001 

J^olus  path 

1002 

Lotus  path 

1003 

Fountain  avenue 

1004 

Mayflower  path 

1005 

Mimosa  path 

150 

1006 

Fountain  avenue 

1007 

Geranium  path 

150 

1008 

Fountain  avenue 

210 

1009 

Lupine  path 

315 

1010 

Bellflower  path 

120 

1011 

Magnolia  avenue 

935 

1012 

Mayflower  path 

1013 

Kalmia  path 

1014 

White  Oak  avenue 

1015 

White  Oak  avenue 

1016 

Larch  avenue 

400 

1017 

Mayflower  path 

1018 

Lotus  path 

1019 

Mimosa  path 

150 

1020 

Lotus  path 

1021 

Lotus  path 

1022 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

400 

1023 

Mimosa  path 

150 

1024 

Mimosa  path 

150 

1025 

Lotus  path 

1026 

Mayflower  path 

1027 

Lotus  path 

1028 

Mimosa  path 

150 

1029 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

1030 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

400 

1031 

Larch  avenue 

400 

1032 

Cypress  avenue 

250 

1033 

Cypress  avenue 

250 

1034 

Lotus  path 

1035 

Walnut  avenue 

360 

1036 

Walnut  avenue 

360 

1037 

Cypress  avenue 

225 

1038 

Cypress  avenue 

225 

1039 

Walnut  avenue 

360 

1040 

Walnut  avenue 

360 

1041 

Lotus  path 

1042 

Lotus  path 

1043 

Sumach  path 

1044 

Sumach  path 

352 

1045 

Mimosa  path 

150 

1046 

Lotus  path 

240 

1047 

Lotus  path 

1048 

Rose  path 

390 

1049 

Mimosa  path 

150 

1050 

Rose  path 

455 

1051 

Lotus  path 

112 


Baldwin,  Luke 
Furber,  Page 
Furber,  William  H.  H. 
Child,  Stephen 
Dudley,  Elbridge  G. 
Cook,  William  H. 
Richardson,  George 
Cheever,  William 
Curtis,  Hiram 
Whitney,  Salmon 
Cordwell,  Robert  H. 
Pratt,  Samuel  F. 
Fowle,  John  A. 
Reed.  Timothy 
Heyer,  Ellis  J. 
Hill,  Frederick  S. 
Sweetser,  Margaret  M. 
Mosely,  Thomas  M. 
Hall,  Martin 
Davip,  Ethan 
Richardson,  A.  Augustus 
Ayres,  Frances  E. 
Boyd,  Francis 
Stanwood,  Eben  C. 
Tyler,  John 
Dudley,  B.  F. 
Fenno,  William,  Mrs. 
Chad  wick,  Joseph  H. 
May,  William  B. 
Hill,  William  H. 
Turner,  Emeline  F. 
Rutledge,  James  S. 
Homer,  Fitzhenry,  heirs  of 
Ellis,  Freeman 
Merrill,  Joseph  VV. 
Noyes,  Mary 
Swazey,  Alexander 
Kendrick,  William  W. 
Adams,  Samuel 
Batchelder,  (leorge  A. 
Folsom,  James 
Thorndike,  Eben  B. 
Barnes,  David  C. 
Ager,  Solomon 
Pierce,  Samuel  S. 
Eager,  Edward  R. 
Marquand,  John  P. 
Wood,  Elijah  R. 
Wing,  Benjamin  F. 
Metcalf,  Theodore 
Lewis,  William  K. 
Wood  worth,  Robert  N. 
Walker,  Samuel,  Jr. 
Hall,  John 

Waterman,  Dependence  S. 
AVaterman,  Isaac 


1052 

Kalmia  path 

340 

1053 

Sumach  path 

177 

1054 

Sumach  path 

177 

1055 

Sumach  path 

330 

1056 

Sumach  path 

330 

1057 

Larch  avenue 

1058 

Rose  path 

1059 

Rose  path 

1060 

Rose  path 

1061 

Rose  path 

1062 

Lotus  path 

1063 

Mimosa  path 

150 

1064 

Spruce  avenue 

1065 

Lotus  path 

320 

li'66 

Lotus  path 

1067 

Mimosa  path 

150 

1068 

Kalmia  path 

1069 

Lotus  path 

1070 

Mimosa  path 

200 

1071 

Lotus  path 

1072 

Lotus  path 

1073 

Mimosa  path 

150 

1074 

Columbine  path 

1075 

Columbine  path 

1076 

Columbine  path 

1077 

Columbine  path 

280 

1078 

Lotus  path 

1079 

Rose  path 

1080 

Rose  path 

1081 

Rose  path 

1082 

Rose  path 

1083 

Hyacinth  path 

142 

1084 

Larch  avenue 

1085 

Spruce  avenue 

1086 

Lotus  path 

1087 

Larch  avenue 

1088 

Mimosa  path 

200 

1089 

Columbine  path 

1090 

Kalmia  path 

1091 

Fountain  avenue 

1092 

Larch  avenue 

200 

1093 

Larch  avenue 

200 

1094 

Lotus  path 

1095 

Larch  avenue 

1096 

Poplar  avenue 

540 

1097 

Lotus  path 

1098 

Kalmia  path 

1099 

Lotus  path 

1100 

Kalmia  path 

1101 

Lilac  path 

580 

1102 

Fountain  avenue 

280 

1103 

Larch  avenue 

1104 

Honeysuckle  path 

270 

1105 

Spruce  avenue 

1106 

Kalmia  path 

230 

1107 

Kalmia  path 

230 

113 


Parker,  John  D. 

1108 

Spruce  avenue 

Swinson,  William 

1109 

Larch  avenue 

Walker,  Clement  A. 

1110 

Rose  path 

240 

Walker,  Galen,  Mrs. 

]111 

Rose  path 

165 

Metcalf,  Thomas 

1112 

Rose  path 

Farnum,  Henry 

1113 

Larch  avenue 

Patch,  Franklin  F. 

1114 

Larch  avenue 

Gilmore,  Addison 

1115 

Cypress  avenue 

400 

Betton,  George  E. 

1116 

Larch  avenue 

W^allace,  Benjamin 

1117 

Larch  avenue 

Nightingale,  James  W.,  Mrs. 

1118 

Spruce  avenue 

240 

Talbot,  Samuel  D. 

1119 

Spruce  avenue 

Sprague,  Charles  J. 

1120 

Fountain  avenue 

600 

Sullivan,  James  P. 

1121 

Kalmia  path 

Chorley,  John 

1122 

Rose  path 

White,  George 

11-23 

Rose  path 

Hayden,  Charles  H. 

1124 

Rose  path 

Burkhardt,  Gotlieb  F. 

1125 

Rose  path 

Stephenson,  Charles  F. 

1126 

Fountain  avenue 

DeL-esdenier,  Emily  P. 

1127 

Fountain  avenue 

Fowle,  Edwin  M. 

1128 

Spruce  avenue 

Davis,  Daniel  C. 

1129 

Rose  path 

Ar  Showe,  Charles 

1130 

Fountain  avenue 

Morrison,  D.  D. 

1131 

Mimosa  path 

210 

Fernald,  WiUiam  M. 

1132 

Spruce  avenue 

Lecompte,  Francis  D. 

1133 

Mimosa  path 

150 

Bacon,  Joseph  V. 

1134 

Consecration  avenue 

350 

Cushing,  Lemuel 

1135 

Cypress  avenue 

Sleeper,  Hanson  M. 

1136 

Cypress  avenue 

Morton,  Josephus 

1137 

Mayflower  path 

Spare,  Galen 

1138 

Spruce  avenue 

Woodbury,  Joseph  P. 

1139 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

Hichborn,  George  R. 

1140 

Spruce  avenue 

Pray,  Amasa 

1141 

Cypress  avenue 

260 

Brewer,  Charles 

1142 

Cypress  avenue 

500 

Garden,  Eobert  C,  Mrs. 

1143 

Mimosa  path 

150 

James,  Benjamin  F. 

1144 

Rose  path 

Gilmore,  Eliab,  Mrs. 

1145 

Rose  path 

Starkweather,  Jos.  B.  1 146  and  1 14  7 

Larch  avenue 

400 

Carleton,  Guy 

1148 

Larch  avenue 

Barnes,  Thomas  P. 

1149 

Yarrow  path 

Morse,  Elijah 

1150 

Spruce  avenue 

Fullam,  David 

1151 

Fountain  avenue 

Chandler,  Theophilus  P. 

1152 

Magnolia  avenue 

Chandler,  Peleg  W. 

1153 

Magnolia  avenue 

Pillsbury,  John  C. 

1154 

Spruce  avenue 

Anderson,  John  W.,  Jr. 

1155 

Spruce  avenue 

Bradford,  J.  Eussell 

1156 

Rose  path 

Moore,  Ann  M. 

1157 

Honeysuckle  path 

Nutter,  Henry,  heirs  of 

1158 

Spruce  avenue 

Gavett,  Charles  H. 

1159 

Lotus  path 

Stevens,  Henry  R. 

1160 

Columbine  path 

Kupp,  Francis 

1161 

Yarrow  path 

Cushing,  Samuel  T. 

1162 

Fountain  avenue 

Marsh,  John 

1163 

Mimosa  pai  li 

Whytal,  Thomas  G. 

1164 

Spruce  avenue 

15 


114 


Rogers,  John,  Boston 
Beecher,  Laban  S. 
Atherton,  Caroline  F. 
Damrell,  William  S. 
Pratt,  Nancy  M. 
Norton,  William 
Chandler,  Benjamin 
Nudd,  Stephen  W. 
Smith,  James  M. 
Davis,  William,  Jr. 
Hardacker,  David 
Walker,  Eliza 
Miller,  Mary  A. 
Evans,  Horatio 
Tucker,  James  Jr. 
Proctor,  Charles 
Balch,  Joseph  W. 
Eldridge,  Asa,  Mrs. 
Balch,  Joseph  W.,  trustee  for  ] 
Martha  W.  Cowing  | 

Wesselhceft,  William  P. 
Haughton,  James 


Singleton,  John,  heirs  of 
Matthews,  William  B.,  Mrs. 
Lakin,  Louisa 
Way,  John  M. 
Eeed,  Loring  W. 
Chapman,  Mary  C. 
Wheeler,  Ward  A. 
Bodwell,  Charles  H. 
Bartlett,  George  T. 
Sherman,  William  H. 
Sparrell,  E.  Kirkwood 
Clapp,  William 
Worthington,  Wm.  F.,  adm'r, 
Bates,  Henry  M. 
Shute,  William  M. 
Weston,  Ebenezer  H. 
Stetson,  Cushing 
Bowles,  Robert  C.  M. 
Blake,  Mary 
Wheeler,  Theodore 
Stedman,  Francis  F. 
Mann,  Peleg,  heirs  of 
Swift,  William  A. 
Gerry,  Samuel  L. 
Hilliard,  Mrs.  Elizabeth  C. 
Frost,  H.  W.  B. 
Atkins,  Lydia  Ann 
Leman,  Eben  C. 
Todd,  Reuben  J. 
Webster,  John  G. 
Webster,  David  L, 


1165 

Mimosa  path 

150 

1166 

Cypress  avenue 

450 

1167 

Fountain  avenue 

1168 

Fountain  avenue 

1169 

Mimosa  path 

150 

1170 

Honeysuckle  path 

240 

1171 

Lotus  path 

1172 

Yarrow  path 

1173 

Yarrow  path  • 

150 

1174 

Moss  path 

1175 

Honeysuckle  path 

260 

1176 

Honeysuckle  path 

1177 

Honeysuckle  path 

1178 

Rose  path 

1179 

Sumach  path 

1000 

1180 

Spruce  avenue 

1181 

Snow  Drop  path 

1182 

Snow  Drop  path 

1183 

Snow  Drop  path 

1184 

1185 

Snow  Drop  path 

1186 

Sumach  path 

660 

1187 

Walnut  avenue 

1025 

1188 

Walnut  avenue 

1025 

1189 

Fountain  avenue 

1190 

Honeysuckle  path 

1191 

Fountain  avenue 

450 

1192 

Columbine  path 

1193 

Columbine  path 

, 

1194 

Fir  avenue 

1195 

Spruce  avenue 

1196 

Honeysuckle  path 

1197 

Yarrow  path 

1198 

Mayflower  path 

1199 

Yarrow  path 

1200 

Mimosa  path 

150 

1201 

Poplar  avenue 

1000 

1202 

Mimosa  path 

150 

1203 

Mayflower  path 

1204 

Mimosa  path 

150 

1205 

Fir  avenue 

350 

1206 

Fir  avenue 

350 

1207 

Yarrow  path 

1208 

Yarrow  path 

1209 

Larch  avenue 

1210 

Mimosa  path 

150 

1211 

Spruce  avenue 

1212 

Honeysuckle  path 

1213 

Mimosa  path 

150 

1214 

Lake  avenue 

1215 

Mimosa  path 

150 

1216 

Honeysuckle  path 

1217 

Spruce  avenue 

400 

1218 

Mayflower  path 

1219 

Mayflower  path 

115 


Brown,  James 

1220 

Mimosa  path 

150 

Warnock,  Samuel  L. 

1221 

Lake  avenue 

340 

Hepworth,  George  H. 

1222 

Lake  avenue 

Brown,  Benjamin  F. 

1223 

Lake  avenue 

Vinton,  Elisha 

1224 

Poplar  avenue 

400 

Seaver,  Susan 

1225 

Cherry  avenue 

285 

Harrington,  Solomon,  heirs  of 

1226 

Lake  avenue 

Barton,  William 

1227 

Honeysuckle  path 

Everett,  William 

1228 

Honeysuckle  path 

Osborn,  John 

1229 

Yarrow  path 

Spencer,  William  H. 

1230 

Larch  avenue 

Gushing,  Horace 

1231 

Poplar  avenue 

400 

Gollis,  William  H. 

1232 

Mimosa  path 

150 

Ward,  Sylvester  H. 

1233 

Spruce  avenue 

225 

Conant,  Nathan  D. 

1234 

Spruce  avenue 

225 

Adams,  William  D. 

1235 

Yarrow  path 

Saunders,  M.  M. 

1236 

Fir  avenue 

Wells,  Benjamin,  Jr. 

1237 

Cypress  avenue 

450 

Vose,  James  W. 

1238 

Pink  path 

560 

Pope,  George  W. 

1239 

Spruce  avenue 

Holbrook,  S.  F. 

1240 

Honeysuckle  path 

Hastings,  Sarah  H. 

1241 

Mimosa  path 

150 

Mitchell,  Thomas  S. 

1242 

Mulberry  avenue 

Woodward,  Sarah 

1243 

Pink  path 

280 

Roberts,  Edward 

1244 

Mayflower  path 

1245 

Honeysuckle  path 

Hallett,  Lothrop 

1246 

Pink  path 

Eaton,  William  D. 

1247 

Spruce  avenue 

Hiler,  Thomas  G. 

1248 

Spruce  avenue 

Coffin,  George 

1249 

Pyrola  path 

166 

Frost,  George,  1st 

1250 

Spruce  avenue 

460 

Frost,  Charles 

1251 

Spruce  avenue 

460 

Brown,  Jeremiah 

1252 

Lake  avenue 

Kimball,  Sylvester 

1253 

Spruce  avenue 

Hall,  Thomas 

1254 

Columbine  path 

Smith,  Charles  E. 

1255 

Pyrola  path 

150 

Litchfield,  Lawrence 

1256 

Spruce  avenue 

.        '400 

Heilge,  Charles  F. 

1257 

Columbine  path 

Munroe,  Daniel 

1258 

Pink  path 

Barnard,  Mrs.  William  P. 

1259 

Mayflower  path 

Hunkins,  John  H. 

1260 

Spruce  avenue 

Poole,  Samuel 

1261 

Spruce  avenue 

Brigham,  John  A. 

1262 

Pink  path 

Weller,  Andrew,  Jr. 

1263 

Pink  path 

Richardson,  J.  C. 

1264 

Pyrola  path 

150 

Walker,  James 

1265 

Fountain  avenue 

Weston,  Matilda  F. 

1266 

Pyrola  path 

150 

Tufts,  William 

1267 

Pyrola  path 

150 

Capen,  William 

1268 

Pyrola  path 

150 

Emmes,  Samuel 

1269 

Mulberry  avenue 

985 

Southack,  George 

1270 

Mulberry  avenue 

985 

Gould,  Thomas  R. 

1271 

Cypress  avenue 

450 

Mann,  Henry  E. 

1272 

Asphodel  path 

Morris,  Thomas  D. 

1273 

Pyrola  path 

150 

Emery,  Harriet  P. 

1274 

Pyrola  path 

150 

Shed,  Samuel  A. 

1275 

Mulberry  avenue 

116 


Bragg,  Wm.  M. 
fisk,  Samuel  C. 
Knights,  Frederick  M. 
Aikin,  James  B. 
Keating,  John  F. 
Chase,  Samuel  S. 
Wakefield,  Elizabeth 
Brooraan,  George 
Wilson,  Lewis  B. 
Hale,  Robert 
Paradise,  William  T. 
Sargent,  Joseph 
Sargent,  Henry- 
Rouse,  Samuel  M.  B. 
Calrow,  Joseph 
Damrell,  John  S. 
Pierce,  Samuel  B. 
Saville,  William  O. 
Lindsley,  Joseph  C. 
Gibbs,  Rufus 
Loring,  Elisha  T. 
King,  Franklin 
King,  Franklin 

Whittington,  Granville  N. 
Sargent,  Cyrus 
Crockett,  Selden 
Richardson,  Isaac  T. 
Crawford,  James 
O'Brine,  William 
Fobes,  Horace 

Clark,  John 

Association,  Boston  Young  ] 
Men's  Christian  j" 

Tenney,  Nathaniel  F. 

Hovey,  Elbridge  A. 
D'Wolf,  John  L. 
Hopkins,  Solomon 
Robinson,  John  T. 
Partridge,  Artemas 
Partridge,  Adin 
Walmsley,  Henry 
Porter,  Charles 
May,  John  W. 
Ward,  William  H. 

Drury,  Mary  Jane 
Elliott,  James  R. 
Wood,  James  F. 
Wright,  William 
Fowle,  William  B. 
Fowle,  William  B. 
Stiles,  Hosea  B. 
Allen,  Thomas  J. 


1276 
1277 

1278 
1279 
1280 
1281 
1282 
1283 
1284 
1285 
1286 
1287 
1288 
1289 
1290 
1291 
1292 
1293 
1294 
1295 
1296 
1297 
1298 
1299 
1300 
1301 
1302 
1303 
1304 
1305 
1306 
130  7 
1308 

1309 

1310 
1311 
1312 
1313 
1314 
1315 
1316 
1317 
1318 
1319 
1320 
1321 
1322 
1323 
1324 
1325 
1326 
1327 
1328 
1329 
1330 


Honeysuckle  path 
Columbine  path 
Columbine  path 
Pyrola  path 
Columbine  path 
Lake  avenue 
Pyrola  path 
Pyrola  path 
Honeysuckle  path 
Spruce  avenue 
Pyrola  path 
Pink  path 
Pink  path 
Pyrola  path 
Pyrola  path 
Poplar  avenue 
Rhododendron  path 
Columbine  path 
Pink  path 
Pink  path 
Pink  path 
Pink  path 
Pink  path 

Pink  path 
Pink  path 
Pink  path 
Pyrola  path 
Honeysuckle  path 
Pyrola  path 
Columbine  path 

Honeysuckle  path 
Pyrola  path 
Lake  avenue 

Pyrola  path 
Wabon  path 
Pink  path 
Pyrola  path 
Lake  avenue 
Lake  avenue 
Pink  path 
Pyrola  path 
Columbine  path 
Pink  path 

Pyrola  path 
Pink  path 
Arethusa  path 
Cypress  avenue 
Asphodel  path 
Asphodel  path 
Honeysuckle  path 
Mulberry  avenue 


287 
287 
150 


150 

150 
180 
330 
150 
207 
207 
188 
150 
400 
450 

307 
307 


400 

150 
180 
150 


240 
211 

150 

90 

150 
420 
150 

150 

180 
352 
220 
22a 
240 


117 


Acorn,  Jerusha 

1331 

Mulberry  avenue 

Ladd,  William  H. 

1332 

Arethusa  path 

Ramsay,  James  S. 

1333 

Honeysuckle  path 

Hoogs,  Stephen  F. 

1334 

Arethusa  path 

Kidder,  Henry  P. 

1335 

Pink  path 

Burrage,  William 

1336 

Rhododendron  path 

Howes,  Willis 

1337 

Columbine  path 

Brown,  John  N. 

1338 

Lake  avenue 

Mansur,  Oilman,  heirs  of 

1339 

Columbine  path 

Putnam,  Silas  S. 

1340 

Lake  avenue 

Pope,  William 

1341 

Rhododendron  path 

Curtis,  John 

1342 

Pyrola  path 

Estabrook,  Benjamin 

1343 

Pyrola  path 

Waterman,  Melzar 

1344 

Crocus  path 

Sanborn,  Ira  E.,  Jr. 

1345 

Pink  path 

Tremlitt,  Cordelia 

1346 

Asphodel  path 

Frost,  Eben  R. 

1347 

Spruce  avenue 

Montague,  Samuel  R. 

1348 

Spruce  avenue 

Nutter,  Charles  C. 

1349 

Rhododendron  path 

Winchester,  William  H. 

1350 

Columbine  path 

Dudley,  Henry 

1351 

Lake  avenue 

Kennard,  Martin  P. 

1352 

Snow  Drop  path 

Chapin,  Nathaniel  G. 

1353 

Snow  Drop  path 

Freeman,  Watson 

1354 

Cypress  avenue 

Stone,  Ebenezer 

1355 

Pink  path 

Josselyn,  Alonzo 

1356 
1357 

Spruce  avenue 

Hosley,  Benjamin 

1358 

Lake  avenue 

Shepard,  John 

1359 

Lake  avenue 

Kendall,  Thomas 

1360 

Bignonia  path 

Turner,  Job  A. 

1361 
1362 

Bignonia  path 

Kent,  Eleanor,  Mrs. 

1363 

Pyrola  path 

Prouty,  Dwight 

1364 

Columbine  path 

Pearce,  Nelson 

1365 

Columbine  path 

Cushing,  Lemuel 

1366 

Cypress  avenue 

Wiggin,  George  H. 

1367 

Pyrola  path 

Monks,  John  P.,  heirs  of 

1368 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

Fauchney,  David 

1369 

Pyrola  path 

Quincy,  John  W. 

1370 

Mount  W^arren  avenue 

Clark,  William  D. 

1371 

Pyrola  path 

Green,  Capt.  Benjamin  G. 

1372 

Pink  path 

Lash,  Augustus  F. 

1373 

Pyrola  path 

Stevens,  Albert  H. 

1374 

Lake  avenue 

Hicks,  Samuel  D. 

1375 

Rock  Maple  avenue 

Badger,  Erastus  B. 

1376 

Rock  Maple  avenue 

Bere,  John 

1377 

Columbine  path 

Brown,  Dorcas,  Mrs- 

1378 

Columbine  path 

White,  George 

1379 

Pyrola  path 

Barker,  George  T. 

1380 

Asphodel  path 

Anderson,  John 

1381 

Lake  avenue 

Anderson,  William  S. 

1382 

Lake  avenue 

Briggs,  Harrison  0. 

1383 

Pink  path 

Briggs,  Edwin 

1384 

Pink  path 

Powers,  Eliza  A. 

1385 

Pyrola  path 

Butler,  David  P. 

1386 

Arethusa  path 

Lincoln,  Charles  N.  M. 

1387 

Yarrow  path 

180 

150 
700 
600 


494 
150 
275 


500 


385 


200 
510 

150 


450 
150 
600 
150 
600 
150 

150 


200 
200 
150 
320 
180 
180 
360 
360 
150 
150