Skip to main content

Full text of "[City documents, 1847-1867]"

See other formats


City  Document— No.  2. 

THE 
SEVENTEENTH 

ANNUAL  REPORT 


Cotnmitte  on  ^aflimts 


RECEIPTS    AND    EXPENDITURES 


CITY  OF  ROXBMY, 

FOR   THE 
YEAR    ENBINCJ    JANUAR"E"    31st,    1863. 


ROXBURY: 
JOHN    M.     HEWES,     PKINTER. 

1863. 


€ii^  nf  Enxlitin[» 


In  Board  of  Aldermen,  March  9,  1863. 

Ordeukd,  That  twenty-eight  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  the  same  to 
be  distributed  among  the  inhabitants  of  the  City. 

Passed  and  sent  down  for  concurrence. 

JOSEPH  W.  TUCKER,  City  Clerk. 

In  Common  Council,  March  9,  1863. 
Concurred. 

JOSHUA  SEAVER,  Clerk. 


REPORT 


OF    THE 


COMMITTEE  ON  ACCOUNTS. 


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

EEPOET. 

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, 1863,  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  $517,580  31. 

There  was  remaining   in   the  Treasury,   Feb.  1, 

1862,  a  balance  of $62,564  97 

And  the  amount  received  for  the  year,  from  all 

sources,  as  per  account  of  the  Treasurer,  is       .      527,006  83 


Making  a  total  of       .         .  $589,571  80 


Of  this  sum  there  was  received : — 

From  Taxes  assessed  in  1862,        .  $257,041  20 

"     Loans  authorized,         .         .      236,034  06 

"  Commonwealth  and  other 
sources,  for  Pauper  Ac- 
counts,   ....  248  03 

"     Income  of  City  Property,  rent 

of  wharves,  houses,  &c.,    .  .       1,430  32 

«     Sales  of  Stony  Brook  land,    .  4,333  66 

"     Sales  of  Brook  Farm,  .         .  2,158  20 

•    "     Sales  of  Munroe  land,  .         .  1,044  44 

"     Joseph  W.  Tucker,  for  fees 

received,  .         .         .  215  00 

"     Joseph  W.  Tucker,  for  dog 

licenses,  .         .         .  356  00 

"  Goodwin  &  Wilder,  for  li- 
cense,     ....  25  00 

"     Ariel  I.  Cummings,  for  fees 

received,  .        .        .  645  63 

"  Phineas  B.  Smith,  Jr.,  for 
fees  received, 

"     Watering  streets, 

"     Edge-stone  and  bricks, 

"     Dudley  H.  Bailey,  for  horse, 

"     Sewer,  Dudley  Street, 

"     Sewer,  Eustis  Street,   . 

"     Sewer,  Davis  Street,    . 

"     Sewer,  Plymouth  Street, 

"     Dana  &  Sanborn,  for  brick,  . 

"     Commonwealth,    for    aid    to 

families  of  Volunteers,       .  9,145  39 

"  Rufus  Wyman,  for  money  re- 
funded,             .228  59 

"     Evan   R.   Jones,  for  bounty 

refunded,         ...  100  00 


1,654  08 

2,206 

11 

2,910 

87 

55 

75 

1,908 

72 

2,129 

23 

301  58 

16 

60 

552 

00 

Amount  carried  forward,       $524,640  46 


Amount  Irouglit  forivard, 

$524,640  46 

From  Spear  &  Binnej,  for  house 

offal,        .... 

97  13 

(( 

Ezra  Young,  for  house  offal,  . 

229  00 

(( 

Metropolitan  Railroad  Co.,  for 

repairs  on  lamp, 

8  52 

(( 

Commonwealth  of  Massachu- 

setts, from  School  Fund,    . 

1,085  84 

(( 

Interest  on  Taxes, 

945  88 

a 

Balance  on  hand,  Feb.  1,1862, 

62,564  97 

$589,571  80 


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  $517,580  31. 

And  these  Expenditures  were  chargeable  to  the  following 
appropriations  or  accounts,  viz.  : — 


To  Schools,  for  Teachers' .  salaries 

fuel  and  contingencies, 

$45,421  47 

"  Roxburj  Grammar  School, 

500  00 

"  Support  of  Poor,      .     '     . 

9,212  91 

"  House  Offal,  .         .         .         . 

1,692  48 

"  Repairs  of  Highways, 

30,832  83 

"  Madison  Square, 

8,907  43 

"  Widening  Washington  Street, 

398  84 

"  Widening  Plymouth  Street, 

500  00 

"  Widening  Lambert  Avenue, 

396  19 

"  Widening  Warren  Street, 

75  75 

"  Widening  Walnut  Street, 

126  00 

"  Sewers, 

1,326  84 

"  Sewer,  Dudley  Street, 

20  00 

"  Sewer,  Plymouth  Street,  . 

2,092  75 

"  Sewer,  Winslow  Street,    . 

488  47 

Amount  carried  forward, 

$102,051  96 

1* 

I 


6 


Amount  brought  forward, 
To  Sewer,  Sumner  Street,     . 
"  Pay  of  Firemen, 
"  Contingent    Expenses    of    Fire 

Department, 
"  Reservoirs, 
"  Watch  and  Police,  . 
"  Lamps, 

"  Citj  Debt  and  Interest,    . 
"  Aid  to  Families  of  Volunteers 
"  Bounty  to  Volunteers, 
"  Salaries  of  City  Officers,  . 
"  Militia, 
"  New  Wharf,    . 
"  State  Tax,      . 
"  County  Tax,   . 
"  Abatement  of  Taxes, 
"  Discount  of  Taxes,  . 
"  Contingent  Expenses, 


$102,051  96 

374  16 

9,938  60 

4,611  11 

1,200  00 

16,088  61 

11,752  68 

163,701  96 

68,862  90 

61,937  17 

7,575  00 

950  00 

250  00 

45,882  00 

19,972  32 

3,258  11 

8,093  62 

11,080  21 


Showing  a  balance,  and  remaining  in  the  Treasury, 


$517,580  81 
71,991  49 


Making 


,571  80 


The  City  Debt  on  the  first  of  February,  1862,  as 

per  account  of  last  year,  was    .         .         .         .    $721,215  00 

Of  this  sum,  there  has  been  paid  during  the  year, 

when  falling  due, "  .      122,000  00 


$599,215  00 


And  this  sum  has  been  increased  by  loans  author- 
ized, for  renewal  of  a  portion  of  the  City  Debt 
and  other  purposes, 231,850  00 


$831,065  00 


The  times  -when  this  sum  becomes  payable,  may  be  seen  bj  re- 
ferring 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  aid  to  Families  of  Volunteers, 

"    Bounty  to  Volunteers, 

"    City  Debt, 

"    Madison  Square, 

"   Repairs  of  Highways, 

"    Support  of  Poor, 
In  anticipation  of  Taxes,     . 


$50,000  00 

52,000  00 

51,850  00 

6,000  00 

5,000  00 

2,000  00 

65,000  00 


$231,850  00 

There  has  been  received  for  the  sales  of  land,  the  sum  of 
$7,536  80,  and  this  has  been  appropriated  towards  the  reduction 
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  $24,450  64,  which,  as  they  become 
due,  will  be  appropriated  to  the  liquidation  of  the  City  Debt,  as 
directed. 

There  is  due  from  the  Commonwealth,  for  amount  disbursed  to 
families  of  volunteers  for  the  year  1862,  $38,520  46. 

There  is  yet  outstanding,  and  due  from  sundry  individuals, 
for  sewer  assessments  and  for  bills  for  edge-stones  and  bricks, 

$8,876  72. 

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 


8 

the  order  of  the  Commissioners,  to  be  applied  bj  them  in  the 
manner  provided  bj  law.  For  further  details  concerning  the 
affairs  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,  1862,  to  February  1,  1863,  from  sun- 
dry persons,  for  sales  and  grading  lots,  including 
balance  on  hand,  was $39,776  14 

And  the  amount  paid  upon  the  drafts  or  orders  of 

Commissioners,  for  the  same  period,  was    .         .        31,874  05 


Leaving  a  balance  in  the  Treasury,  Feb.  1, 1863,         $7,902  09 

The  Cemetery  Debt,  Feb,  1,  1862,  was        .         .  7,000  00 

Of  which  there  has  been  paid  during  the  year,      .  1,000  00 


Reducing  the  debt  to         .         .       $6,000  00 

Note.  During  the  past  year  the  Commissioners  of  Forest  Hills  Cemeteiy 
have  invested  the  sum  of  Fifteen  Thousand  Dollars  in  United  States  Government 
securities. 

Annexed  are  statements  of  the  unexpended  balances  of  the 
appropriations  of  the  previous  year,  and  the  appropriations  and 
transfers  of  1862 ; — the  details  of  the  expenditures  under  their 
appropriate  heads, — and  the  present  balances  of  each  appropria- 
tion,— 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 ; 


9 

Report  of  the  City  Registrar, — Tabular  Statement  of  Births, 
Marriages  and  Deaths, — Mortuary  Statistics  ; 
Report  of  the  City  Marshal ; 
Report  of  the  Commissioner  of  Streets  ; 
Report  of  the  Chief  Engineer  of  the  Fire  Department. 

All  of  which  is  respectfully  submitted, 

SAMUEL  LITTLE,  1 

MOSES  H.  DAY, 

GEORGE  ONION,  [    Committee 

FRANCIS  W.  WELCH,       "^^  Accounts. 
FRANKLIN  CURTIS, 
EoxBURY,  March  9,  1863. 


4 


APPROPRIATIONS  AND  EXPENDITURES. 


The  Appropriations  made  by  the  City  Council  for  different  purposes  in 
1862,  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,  1862 Si  1,304  60 

APPROPRIATION    46,700  00 

"  for  fuel 2,500  00 

$60,504  60 

EXPENDITURES. 

HIGH  SCHOOL. 
Paid  for  INSTRUCTION— 
To  Samuel  M.  "Weston,  Principal  •  •  •  •    2,000  00 

"  George  H.  Goreley,  Assistant 750  00 

"  Sarah  A.  M.  Gushing,      "       600  00 

"  Eunice  T.  Plumer,  "       208  33 

"  Julia  P.  Brooks,  »       •  •  •  • .       100  00 

3,658  33 

DUDLEY  SCHOOL. 
Paid  for  INSTRUCTION— 

To  Sarah  J.  Baker,  Principal 500  00 

"  Emmie  C.  Allen,  Assistant 375  00 

*'  Jennie  S.  Leavitt,       "         375  00 

"  Clara  B.  Tucker,        "         350  00 

"  Helen  J.  Otis,  «         350  00 

"  Eliza  Brown,  "         322  92 

■ 2,272  92 

WASHINGTON  SCHOOL.^ 
Paid  for  INSTRUCTION— 

To  John  Kneeland,  Principal 1,500  00 

"  Harriet  E.  Burrell,  Assistant 375  00 

"  Anna  M.  Williams,         "         375  00 

Amount  carried  forward,    2,250  00 


12 


Amount  hrougld  forward,  2,250  00 

To  Delia  Mansfield,      Assistant 350  GO 

»  Eebecca  A.  Jordan,        "         350  00 

.  «  Harriet  M.  Daniel,          «         350  00 

"  Caroline  C.  Drown,        "         375  00 


3,675  00 


DEAEBORN  SCHOOL. 

Paid  for  INSTRUCTION— 

To  William  H.  Long,  Principal 1,500  00 

"  Maria  L.  Tincker,  Assistant 375  00 

"  Rebecca  R.  Pettingell,    "       375  00 

"  Sarah  S.  Adams,              "       343  75 

"  Henrietta  M.  Young,      "      350  00 

^'  Frances  L.  Breeden,      "       347  90 

"  Anna  M.  Backup,           "      321   75 

"  Margaret  E.  Davis,         «      334  37 

"  Ellen  A.  Marean,            "      375  00 

"  Caroline  J.  Nash,             "       350  00 

*'  Clementine  B.  Thompson,  Assistant  306  25 

"  Mary  G.  Hewes,                         "  350  00 

«  Louisa  J.  Fisher,                        "  350  00 

^'  Louisa  E.  Harris,                        "  43  75 


COMINS  SCHOOL. 
Paid  for  INSTRUCTION— 

To  Daniel  W.  Jones,  Principal 1,400  00 

"  Mary  C.  Eaton,        Assistant 375  00 

"  Elizabeth  W.  Young,      "        350  00 

"  Almira  W.  Chamberline,  "        350  00 

"  Lizzie  A.  Morse,              "        437  50 

"  Charlotte  P.  Williams,     «        350  00 

"  Anna  L.  Tucker,             "        350  00 

^'  Alice  C.  Pierce,                "        375  00 

"  Sarah  M.  Vose,                «        350  00 

"  Emma  M.  Tafft,               "        206  73 

"  Esther  M.  Nickerson,      «        350  00 

"  Carrie  K.  Nickerson,       "        350  00 

"  Sarah  E.  Field,                "        274  04 


5,722  77 


5,518  27 


GRAMMAR  SCHOOL. 
Paid  for  INSTRUCTION— 
To  Sophronia  F.  Wright,  Principal 

Paid  for  MUSIC  and  DRAWING— 

To  Charles  Butler,  teaching  music 

"  Benj.  F.  Nutting,  teaching  drawing 

Amount  carried  forward, 


Fkancis  Street. 


250  00 
250  00 


450  00 


500  00 


$21,797  29 


13 

Amount  hrougJit  forward,  $21,797  29 

PRIMARY  SCHOOLS. 

No.    1.  Paid  Lizzie  M.  Wood,  instruction 283  33 

"      2.  »  Anna  M.  Balch,            "          300  00 

"     3.  "  Susan  F.  Rowe,            "         295  75 

"      5.  «  Mary  F.  Neal,               "          •  • 300  00 

"      6.  "  Emma  C.  Wales,           "         300  00 

"      7.  "  Mary  L.  Walker,           "         "• 300  00 

"      8.  "  Elizabeth  E.  Backup,  "          300  00 

"      9.  "  Clara  M.  Adams,          "         300  00 

"    10.  "  S.  Louisa  Durant,        "          300  00 

"    11.  "  Eliza  D.  Cole,               "         250  00 

"    11.  "  ElizaJ.  Goss,                "          45  82 

"    12.  «  KateF.  Mayall,            "          300  00 

"    13.  "  S.  Louisa  Dove,            "          25  00 

"    13.  "  Anna  G.  Fillebrown,   "          290  42 

"    14.  "  Sarah  E.  Field,            "         25  96 

"    14.  "  Olive  E.  Emery,           "          252  08 

"    15.  "  Cornelia  J.  Bills,          "          375  00 

"    16.  "  Mary  C.  Williams,       "         300  00 

"    17.  "  Sarah  J.  Davis,            "         300  00 

"    18.  "  Eliza  G.  Lewis,             "          296  60 

"    19.  "  Sarah  W.  Holbrook,     "          300  00 

"    20.  "  Elizabeth  H.  Hall,       "         281  25 

"    21.  "  Caroline  N.  Heath,      "          300  00 

"    22.  "  Anna  M.Eaton,           "         300  00 

"    23.  "  Anna  E.  Clark,            "         300  00 

"    24.  "  Mary  E.  Tucker,          "          281  25 

"    25.  "  Mary  E.  Munroe,         "          283  64 

"    26.  "  Charlotte  C.  Simpson,  "■          225  00 

"    26.  "  Mary  L.  Gore,              "          68  75 

"   27.  "  Asenath  Nichols,          "         300  00 

"   28.  "  Sarah  A.  P.  Fernald,  »         •  300  00 

"    29.  "  Martha  H.  Horn,          "          300  00 

"    30.  "  Henrietta  M.  Wood,    "         . .  300  00 

"   31.  "  Mary  A.  Morse,            "  .......  300  00 

"   32.  "  M.  L.  Josephine  Perry, "         300  00 

"   33.  "  Matilda  M.  Hutchins,  "         150  00 

"    33.  "  Mary  F.  Drown,           "          137  50 

"   34.  "  Almira  B.  Russell,       "         300  00 

"   35.  "  Frances  N.  Brooks,      "         300  00 

"   36.  "  Maria  L.  Young,          "         300  00 

•'   37.  "  Anna  E.  Boynton,       "         300  00 

"    38.  "  Fanny  H.  C.  Bradley, "           279  16 

"   40.  "  Sarah  H.  Hosmer,        "         300  00 

"  41.  "  Caroline  C.  Jennison,  "         300  00 

"  42.  ■"  Mary  C.  Bartlett,         "         297  36 

"   43.  "  Susan  H.  Blaisdell,      "         235  33 

"   43.  "  H.  B.  Scammel,             "         42  74 

"   44.  "  Josephine  G.  Thaxter, "         37  67 

"   45.  "  Mary  E.  Johnson,        "         252  08 


$12,511  69 


Amount  carried  forward,  $34,308  98 

2 


14 


Amount  brought  forward,  $34,308  98 

CONTINGENT  EXPENSES  OF  SCHOOLS. 

Paid  for  SUNDRIES— 

To  Jonas  Pierce,  Jr.,  Curator,  •  •  • 699  96 

u       "          "         "     pd.  for  making  fires,  sweep- 
ing, cleaning,  &c. 1,205  47 

"  Mrs.  Moore,  cleaning, - 9  82 

"  Sophronia  F.  Wright,  cleaning, 2  40 

"  E.  W.  Noyes,      brooms,  mats,  &c. 129  33 

"  Nelson  Wortlien,      "          "       "    5^3 

"  William  Seaver,       "          "       "    103  99 

"  Swain  &  Craft,          "          "       "    69   15 

"  Francis  Freeman,    "          "       "    3  75 

"  Tho.  M.  Lewis,  carpenter's  work, 49  00 

"  Eben  B.  Rumrill,                "              2  25 

"  John  Gilbert,                      "             83  00 

"  William  Morse,                   "             3  2o 

"  John  M.  Marston,               »              •  303  58 

**  Johnson  &  Leavitt,             "              75  18 

*'  Fabius  Rose,                        "              27  99 

^'  George  Simpson,                 "             12  93 

"  Jarvis  W.  Dean,                 "             3  50 

•"  Mich.  McElaney,                "             1140 

^'  James  Crawford,                 "             14  96 

"  Alvin  M.  Robbins,              "             37  29 

''  Horatio  G.  Simpson,          "             3  55 

"  George  Curtis,  lumber    38  30 

*'  Nelson  Curtis,  mason  work 1 7  52 

"  I.  &  H.  M.  Harmon,  »         582  10 

"   Soloman  Sanborn,      ' '^^f  on 

«  Thomas  Parker,   repairs     1  ^^ 

^'  John  A.  Cracklin,       "          1125 

^'  H.  R.  Taylor,  curtains  and  repairs, 104  50 

"  Fillebrown  &  Holbrook,  stove  work,  &c. 179  59 

»  William  White,  furnace  work,  &c. 179  86 

"  Francis  W.  Fuller,  hardware 18  13 

"  Charles  H.  Hudson,       "         \f 

"  Whiting  &  Clapp,  castings -,  o?  ^n 

"  Joseph  L.  Ross,  desks  and  seats 1  ib  ou 

"  Wm.  G.  Shattuck,  "     "      "      '^^'^  2? 

"  James  McMann,  repairing  slates ^^   vn 

"  John  Bowdlear,  repairing  pumps 62   70 

»  Geo.  Bowdlear,           »            "      11  ^0 

''  Chester  M.  Gay,         "            "      10  05 

"  Phineas  D.  Allen,      «            »      14  99 

"  Henry  Glynn,  blacksmith's  work ■  112 

"  John  Carruthers,  repairing  clocks ■'■'*  f^ 

"  George  Harlow,          «            "     3  50 

"  Square  G.  Brooks,      «            »     10  00 

"  L.  D.  Davenport,  clocks 14  00 

"  Howard  &  Co.,          »     42  00 

"  Henry  Pratt,  repairing  locks 2J  »o . 

Amount  carried  forward,  4,759  65      S34,308  98 


15 


Amount  hr ought  forward,,  $4,759  65 

To  W.  H.  H.  Youn?,  cleaning  vaults 107  00 

"  B.  F.  &  G.  H.  Wiggin,  painting  and  glazing  97  29 

«'  G.  W.  Wilson,                      "                        "  11  93 

"  Charles  Erskine,                   "                        •'  19  55 

"  U.  T.  Brownell,                     «                         «  1  88 

«  C.  M.  Littlefield,                   "                        *'  4  75 

"  Nelson  Curtis,  rent  of  school-room 124  00 

"  Alvah  G.  Parker,  "               "           125  00 

"  Moses  Gragg,  rent 10  00 

"  Edward  Wise,  labor • 32  00 

"  Owen  Nawn,  gravel  and  carting 225  55 

"  Michael  Fitzmorris,  gravel  and  carting 49  50 

"  James  B.  Peirce,  carting 40  19 

"John  Backup,               books 516  29 

"  William  Henshaw,           "    5  00 

"  William  T.  Spear,           "    38  42 

"  Homer  &  McCaughey,     "    5  53 

"  D.  Appleton,                     «    18  48 

"  Alexander  Stuart,            "    145  62 

"  John  M.  Hewes,               "    3  75 

»  J.  M.  Whittemore  &  Co.,  "    29  00 

"  Horatio  G.  Morse,  maps 7  00 

"  A.  R.  Gay,  stationery 3  00 

"  Norfolk  County  Journal,  printing 287  95 

"  Wm.  H.  Hutchinson,               "       10  00 

"  Jamaica  Pond  Aqueduct  Co.,  water 70  40 

"  Boston  Belting  Co.,  pipe 6   90 

"  Brown  &  McCarty,  carriage  hire 13  00 

"  Wiggin  &  Chapman,  cloth 4  35 

"  W.  &  A.  Bacon,            "     5  12 

"  N.  B.  Chamberlin  &  Son,  philosophical  instru- 
ments    4  00 

"  Walker  &  Co.,  trees 8  00 

"  Joseph  Alford,  tuning  pianofortes 1   25 

"  Charles  Butler,  use  of        "           100  00 

"  S.  M.  Weston,  paid  travelling  expenses 5  08 

"  Gideon  B.  Richmond,  snow  guards 169  30 

Paid  for  SERVICES  OF  SCHOOL  COMMITTEE— 

To  Horatio  G.  Morse,        for  services 150  00 

"  John  S.  Sleeper,                      "          75  00 

"  George  Putnam,                      "          75  00 

"  Franklin  Williams,                 "         100  00 

"  William  A.  Crafts,                  "          ■•••  20  00 

"  John  D.  McGili,                      "          37  50 

"  Ira  Allen,                                  "         80  00 

"  A.  I.  Cummings,                      «          75  00 

"  John  W.  Olmstead,                «         75  00 

"  Jeremiah  Plympton,               "          75  00 

"  George  W.  Adams,                "         75  00 


$34,308  98 


$7,064   73 


Amount  carried  forioard, 


837  50      $41,373  71 


16 

Amount  hr  ought  forward,  837  50     $41,373   71 

To  Sylvester  Bliss,  for  services 75  00 

"  Alfred  P.  Putnam,  "         35  00 

"  Joshua  Seaver,  "         80  00 

"        "  "  "       as  Secretary         100  00 

$1,127  50 

Paid  for  fuel- 
To  William  Clark,         for  coal 2,466  51 

"  J.  E.  Adams  &  Co.,       "        177  66 

"  John  Mclnnis,                 "        13  12 

"  Daniel  TiiFany,  charcoal, 184  30 

"  Chaffee  &  Cummings,  charcoal 78  67 

$2,920  26 

Total  amount  of  expenses  for  High,  Grammar  and 

Primary  Schools,  -with  contingencies $45,421  47 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1863,  $15,083  13. 


ROXBURY  GRAMMAR  SCHOOL. 


Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1862 125  00 

APPROPRIATION 500  00 


EXPENDITURES. 

To  James  Guild,  Treasurer 250  00 

«  Supply  C.  Thwing,  "     250  00 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1863,  $125  00. 


$625  00 


$500  00 


SUPPORT    OF    POOR. 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1863, 578  54 

Received  of  other  cities  and  towns,  for  support  of 

paupers 98  03 

"        of  Ezra  Young,  for  sale  of  sundries- ••  •  150  00 

APPROPRIATION  April  1,  1862 2,000  00 

«  7,000  00 


),826  57 


17 


EXPENDITURES. 
Paid  for  SUPPLIES  AT  ALMSHOUSE— 

To  George  B.  Faunce,  groceries 169  76 

"  Isaac  H.  Meserve,           "         543  18 

"  Morse  Brothers,               "         69  61 

"  Nelson  Worthen,             "         181  47 

"  William  Seaver,              "          38  14 

»  G.  W.  &  H.  W.  Pierce,  meat,  &c. 549  74 

"  Matthew  Harris,  fish 35  47 

"  Joseph  B.  Young,  shoes 103  67 

«  W.  &  A.  Bacon,   dry  goods 119  81 

"  Wiggin  &  Chapman,  "         112  13 

"  Henry  Dudley,  grain 200  54 

"  (ieorge  Curtis,  lumber 145  90 

"  H.  L.  Lunt,  carpenter's  work 161  30 

"  Nelson  Curtis,  mason's  work ,62  80 

"  Ezra  Young,  supplies 1,1 78  29 

«      «          "        services 500  00 

"  Mary  McCarty,    "      104  00 

"  Sarah  Kidder,  nurse 7  00 

"  S.  E.  Chubbuck  &  Son,  heating  apparatus 55  70 

"  John  W.  Lord,  stove ^ 18   74 

"  J.  M.  &  G.  H.  Pike,  wood 94  00 

"  William  Clark,  coal 168  90 

"  J.  E.  Adams  &  Co.,  coal 18  64 

"  Roxbury  Gas  Light  Company,  gas 40   74 

"  E.  M.  Stodder  &  Co.,  ice 12  00 

"  A.  D.  Williams,  milk 21  40 

"  Hiram  Carleton,  harness  work 10  17 

"  John  S.  Flint,  physician 200  00 

"  Moses  H.  Webber,  blacksmith's  work 31  46 

"  Henry  White,  medicine 11   76 

"  Ira  Allen,               "          8  50 

*'  William  J.  Mathes,  carriage  hire •  •  •  •  2  50 

"  Brown  &  McCarty,               "       9  50 

"  Joshua  Seaver,  as  Secretary, 50  00 

Paid  for  SUPPLIES  OUT  OF  THE  HOUSE— 

To  James  B.  Page,          fuel V  678  24 

"  John  Mclnnis,                "   • •  226  10 

«  J.  E.  Adams  &  Co.,     "  •  •  356  87 

«  Allen  Putnam  &  Co.,    "   206  25 

«  Edward  Preston,  «  \       16  00 

«  Horace  Caldwell,          "  2  50 

«  J.  M.  &  G.  H.  Pike,     "  322  12 

"  William  Clark,              «   238  00 

«'  William  Seaver,      groceries 226  50 

"  Zeb.  C.  Perry,                 "      54  00 

"  George  B.  Faunce,         "       5  00 

«  Joyce  &  White,               «       27  00 

Amount  carried  forward^  $2,358  58 

2* 


S5,036  82 


$5,036  82 


18 

Amount  Irouglt  forward,  $2,358  58       S5,03e  82 

To  Nelson  Worthen,     groceries • 27  00 

"  McElroy  &  Co.,               "       • 17  00 

"  James  Nason,                   "       5  00 

"  David  K.  Reed,               "       50  00 

"  Charles  W.  Newell,         "       34  00 

«  Michael  McDonough,      "       2  00 

«  Swain  &  Craft,                "      3  00 

"  Wilder  Beal,                   " 5  00 

"W.  &A.  Bacon,              "      6  00 

"  Joshua  Seaver,  supplies 156  22               , 

"       "            "         services 300  00 

"  Norfolk  County  Journal,  printing •  812 

"  William  Worthen,  making  fires 20  75 

"  Jos.  S.  Waterman,  coffins  46  50 

«  John  Heintz,              "        10  00 

«  John  C.  Seaver,  burials- 208  75 

"  William  Manning,     "     •  •  • 75  00 

"  Robert  J.  Claxton,  stove  •  •  •  • 7  00 


Paid   to   other    CITIES    AND    TOWNS    AND    THE 
STATE  LUNATIC  HOSPITAL. 

To  City  of  Boston, •  •  • 94  20 

«         "      Lynn  •  ■ 29   75 

«        «      Charlestown 10  25 

«  Town  of  Randolph • 14  50 

"           "      Natick, 62  77 

«  Trueworthy  D.  Palmer •  225  00 

"  State  Lunatic  Hospital 400  70 


Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1863,  $430  95. 


HOUSE    OFFAL. 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1862 333  82 

Received  of  Spear  &  Binney,  for  offal 9713 

«       of  Ezra  Young,             "        229  00 

Transferred  from  Contingent  Appropriat'n,  1861-62  100  00 

«              «             «                   «'              1862-63  1,000  00 


$3,338  92 


$837  17 


$9,212  91 
Transferred  to  Contingent  Appropriation,  1862-63  182  71 


$9,395  62 


$1,759  95 


19 


EXPENDITURES. 

To  Miles  Sweeney,  collecting  ofFal *•  •  360  00 

"  Stephen  Edwards,            "         360  00 

"  JohnNavin,                       "          312  00 

«  John  Carey,                       "          258  00 

"  Peter  Mulvey,                   "         48  00 

"  Ezra  Young,  superintending, 92  55 

"  Henry  Dudley,  hay  and  grain 216  31 

"  M.  H.  Webber,  blacksmith's' work 45  62 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1863,  $67  47. 


$1,692  48 


1,618  91 


REPAIES    OF    HIGHWAYS. 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1863 4,446   18 

Received  for  watering  streets 2,206  11 

"          "    edge-stones 2,910  87 

"        of  D.  H.  Bayley,  for  horse 55   75 

"        for  Loan  authorized 5,000  00 

APPROPRIATION 20,000  00 

EXPENDITURES. 
Paid  for  LABOR— 

To  Moses  H.  Webber,  Commissioner 999  96 

"  Robert  Bell,                     labor 432  00 

"  Thomas  M.  Cotton,          "     396  00 

"  Daniel  Dolan,                    »      360  00 

"  John  H.  Randall,              "     ••  408  00 

"  Samuel  A.  Howard,         "     408  00 

"  Silman  Smith,                    "     432  00 

"  Patrick  Surplus,                "      396  00 

"  James  McDermot,             "      25  99 

"  James  Kenney,                 "     1 7  00 

"  Patrick  Cagney,                "      20  00 

"  Nehemiah  Mack,              "     776  00 

"  John  McDonald,               "     86  33 

«  Michael  Kelley,                " 196  00 

"  Jeremiah  Callahan,          "     16  33 

"  Pay  rolls  of  labor  to  sundry  persons 7,241   86 

«  Charles  D.  Bickford,  labor 10  40 

Paid  for   CARTING,  GRAVEL,   STONE  AND  PAV- 
ING— 

To  Owen  Nawn,             carting  and  gravel 3,898  68 

«  Jaffrey  Holland,             «                  «     321  36 

«  James  Carey,                  «                  «     318  42 

Amount  carried  forward^  4,538  46     $12,22187 


12,221  87 


20 

Amount  hrought  forward,  4,538  46     $12,221  87 

To  Michael  Mahoney,  carting  and  gravel 7  00 

"  Michael  Dolari,          carting 17   75 

"  Michael  Follan,             "       21  00 

"  Andrew  McGettrick,    "        •  •  •  • 18  37 

"  Thomas  S.  Seaver,       "       8  01 

«  B.  F.  Cobb,                   "       50 

"  William  Finneran,  gravel 346  65 

"  Jospeh  N.  Brewer,      " 4  08 

«  Wm.  H.  Mcintosh,      "       7  50 

"  John  Ollis,                    "       266  50 

"  Henry  I.  Binney,         "       190  25 

"  Henry  W.  Wellington,  gravel 17  62 

"  Timothy  McCarty,  stone 3  20 

"  Patrick  Corbett,  stone  work 3  00 

"  E.  P.  Boardman,  edge-stone 603  88 

"  Ham  &  Leighton,         "          and  cement 103   78 

"  Moses   H.   Libbey,   edge-stone,    paving-stone 

and  paving 4,703  50 

"  Gore,  Rose  &  Co.,  paving-stone  and  paving  •  •  174  80 


Paid  for  SUNDRIES  not  otherwise  enumerated 

To  Joseph  Hou<ihton,  grain   

"  John  McElroy,  "     

"  Henrj'  Dudley,  hay 

"  Benjamin  Burrell,  wheelwright's  work 

"  Eben  Chamberlain,  oak  plank 

"  James  Dillon,  "  

«'  Johnson  &  Leavitt,  carpenter's  work 

"  Jarvis  W.  Dean,  "         

"  True  Russell,  "         

"  John  M.  Marston,  "  

"  Alvin  M.  Bobbins,  "  

"  John  Gilbert,  "  

"  Samuel  S.  Chase,  tree  guards 

"  George  Curtis,  lumber,  

"  Hiram  Carleton,    harness  work 

"  E.  R.  Wood,  "  

«'  Kurtz,  Swallow  &  Coffin,  "  

«  Hugh  Smyth,  "  

"  James  Boyd  &  Son,  collars 

«  Andrew  W.  Newman,  blacksmith's  work-  •  • 
"  William  Brock,  " 

"  Dodge,  Gilbert  &  Co.,  iron  work 

"  Ellis,  Newell  &  Co.,  sheet  iron 

"  Lothrop  &  Moseley,  iron 

"  Whiting  &  Clapp,  castings ■ 

"  F.  W.  Fuller,  hardware 

««  Oliver  Ames  &  Sons,  shovels,  &c. 

"  Charles  H.  Hudson,  hardware ■ 

"  Calvin  Bird  &  Co.,  ladles 

Amount  carried  forward,  2,730  79      $23,257  72 


d— 

•w^^j"""  ^" 

247 

60 

247 

46 

614 

46 

132 

50 

14 

28 

2 

50 

2 

00 

38 

90 

10 

91 

17 

66 

160 

48 

3 

40 

298 

53 

301 

76 

17 

74 

60 

23 

63 

38 

83 

3 

50 

2 

10 

44 

81 

167 

81 

15 

73 

204 

05 

12 

99 

71 

65 

19 

00 

12 

01 

4 

00 

21 


Amount  hrouglt  forward,  2,730  79     S23,257  72 

To  Dan  Cummings,  pick  handles 13  75 

"  Moses  H.  Webber,  steel 4  48 

«  R.  H.  Wiswall,        painting 28  28 

"  W.  A.  M.  Fillebrown,  "       2  64 

"  John  C.  Palfrey,            " 18  50 

"  Thomas  S.  Hodge,        "       14  52 

"  Henry  W.  Smith,          "       20  50 

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

"  Luke  Jewett,  horse 150  00 

"  George  Onion,  horse  liniment 75 

"  Edward  Riddle,  buflFalo  robe 10  25 

"  Brown  &  McCarty,  horse  hire 2  00 

«  G.  W.  &  H.  W.  Pierce,  salt 6  87 

«  Swain  &  Craft,          salt,  &c. 27  54 

"  Townsend  &  Stone,    "           3  60 

"  Day  Cordage  Co.,  rope 5  89 

«'  William  Dove,  rent 25  37 

«  Eben  C.  Thaxter,  keys 50 

<'  Fillebrown  &  Holbrook,  fluid  can 2  82 

"  J.  B.  Young,  rubber  boots 7  50 

*'  Lawrence  &  Co.,  leggins 3  00 

"  Norfolk  County  Journal,  printing 4  00 

"  W^ilHam  Seaver,  drain  pipe 229  65 

"  Solomon  Sanborn,  mason's  work 68  50 

«  Daniel  Tiffany,  charcoal 2  00 

''  Rockwell  &  Moseley,  powder 39  75 

«  E.  W.  Whittemore,  brooms 6  00 

"  T.  B.  Moses,  surveying 6  50 

"  Anna  E.  Marsh,  damage 13  48 

«  W.  D.  Cook,  collecting 30  00 

"  George  A.  Simmons  and  others,  building  street  500  00 

"  Thomas  Dolan,  watering  streets 1,091  00 

"  OwenNawn,                   «             2,503  93 


$7,575  11 
$30,832  83 


Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1863,  S3,786  08. 


WIDENING    STREETS. 


Balance  undrawn  February  1,1862 881  20 

Transferred     from     Contingent     Appropriation, 

1862-63     1,000  00 


$1,881   20 


22 


EXPENDITURES. 

To  E.  D.  Knower  and  others,  Washington  Street 
"  Edward  Sumner,  " 

"  Abigail  Seaver  and  others  " 

"  Dennis  Mullane,  Plymouth  Street 

"  Francis  W.  Welch,  Lambert  Avenue 

"  George  Watson  and  others,  Warren  Street-  • 
•'  Andrew  S.  March's  heirs,  Walnut  Street  •  •  •  • 


213 

19 

27 

00 

158 

65 

500 

00 

396 

19 

75 

75 

126 

00 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1863,  $384  42. 


MADISON    SQUARE. 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1862 3,420  82 

LOAN  authorized  April  1,  1862 6,000  00 


EXPENDITURES. 

To  Pay  Roll  of  labor,  carting  and  filling   8,61 7  00 

"  Roger  Drury,  filling 100  00 

"  Daniel  Cummings  &  Co.,  pick  handles 4  50 

"  Dodge  &  Gilbert,  picks ■ 12  00 

"  William  Seaver,  paid  for  gravel  tickets 7  98 

«  Joseph  W.  Dudley,    "                "            63  00 

"  John  M.  Marston,  carpenter's  work 4  75 

"  Samuel  S.  Chase,                    "          29  20 

"  Rockwell  &  Moseley,  powder 116  25 

"  Timothy  McCarty,           "        12  75 

Balanee  undrawn  February  1,  1863,  $453  39. 


NEW    WHARF. 

Balance  undrawn  February  1, 1862 241  18 

Transferred     from     Contingent     Appropriation, 

1862-63 8  82 


1,496  78 


),420  82 


3,967  43 


$250  00 


EXPENDITURES. 

To  Owen  Nawn,  carting  gravel $250  00 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1863,  nothing. 


SEWERS. 


Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1862 •  •  •         187  61 

Transferred     from     Contingent     Appropriation, 

1861-62 •. 1,000  00 

Keceived  of  sundry  individuals,  Dudley  St.  sewer      1,908  72 
"                "              "            Eustis  St.         " 
«                «              «            Davis  St.         " 
"                 "               «            Plymouth  St.  " 
"        of  Dana  &  Sanborn,  for  brick, 


2,129 

23 

301 

58 

16 

60 

552 

00 

5,095   74 


EXPENDITURES. 
To  Dana  &  Sanborn,  bricks, ,S1,326  84 

SEWER,   PLYMOUTH    STREET. 

To  Pay  Roll  of  labor 964  39 

"  L.  H.  Wever,             mason's  work 75  00 

"  Solomon  Sanborn,                  "          16  50 

"J.F.Greenwood,                    "          47  24 

"  Patrick  Brawley,                     "          23  62 

"  William  Pratt,                          "          28  42 

"  John  McLaughlin,                  "         10  50 

"  Isaac  Mclntire,                        "         28  87 

"  Patrick  Curley,                      "         7  00 

"  Moses  H.  Webber,  paid  for  labor-  • 6  66 

"  Dana  &  Sanborn,  carting  brick 115  02 

"  Thomas  Dolan,  sand 33  75 

"  Owen  Nawn,  carting 7  00 

"  Wm.  Byrnes,       "        32  81 

"  Alvin  M.  Robbins,  carpenter's  work 90  06 

"  George  Curtis,  lumber 432  12 

"  William  Seaver,  nails 20  64 

"  Francis  W.  Fuller,  hardware 12  15 

"  Fillebrown  6c  Holbrook,  lanterns 1167 

"  Williams  &  Eaton,  blacksmith's  work 7  75 

"  Phineas  D.  Allen,  repairs 6  68 

"  T.  B.  Moses,  surveying 15  00 

"  Moses  H.  Webber,  Superintendent 100  00 

SEWER,   WINSLOW   STREET. 

To  Pay  Roll  of  labor 289  71 

"  L.  H.  Wever,  mason's  work 20  00 

''J.F.Greenwood,        "        9  62 

«  Patrick  Brawley,        "         4  37 

"  William  Pratt,              "         17  50 

"  Isaac  Mclntire,            "         8  75 

"  Dana  &  Sanborn,  carting  bricks 32  40 

"  Alvin  M.  Robbins,  carpenter's  work 2712 

"  (ireorge  Curtis,  lumber 54  00 

Amount  carried  forward  463  47       $3,419  59 


$2,092  75 


4 


24 

Amount  hrougfit  forward,  463  47       $3,419  69 

To  William  Byrnes,  carting 7  00 

<'  Owen  Nawn,  "       7  00 

"  T.  B.  Moses,  surveying 11  00 

$488  47 

SEWER,  SUMNER  SKREET. 

To  Pay  Roll  of  labor 224  78 

"  L.  H.  Wever,  mason's  work 32  60 

•'J.F.Greenwood,       "         17  50 

■  "  William  Pratt,              "         7  00 

"  Dana  &  Sanborn,  carting  bricks 4  86 

"  A.  M.  Bobbins,  carpenter's  work 25  83 

"  George  Curtis,  lumber-  •  •  •    39  15 

"  F.  W.  Fuller,  hardware 4  09 

"  Patrick  Finneran,  carting 5  25 

"  Swain  &  Craft,  fluid 5   70 

"  T.  B.  Moses,  surveying 7  50 

$374  16 

SEWER,   DUDLEY  STREET. 

To  John  F.  Davis $20  00 

$4,302  22 
Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1862,  $1,793  52. 


FIRE    DEPARTMENT. 

Balance  undrawn  February  1, 1862 2,971  83 

Sundry  transfers,  April  1,  1862 500  00 

APPROPRIATION 13,912  00 

— $17,383  83 

EXPENDITURES. 

Paid  to  ENGINEERS— 

To  James  Munroe,  Chief  Engineer 

"  Gilbert  S.  May,  Assistant  Engineer- 

"  Amory  F.  Sherman,  " 

"  Robert  Simpson,  " 

"  John  Culligin,  " 

"  Phineas  D.  Allen,  " 

"  John  Brooks,  " 

5747  50 

Aviou7it  carried  forward,  $747  60 


412 

50 

20 

00 

23 

75 

80 

00 

91 

25 

60 

00 

60 

00 

25 

Amount  brought  forwai'd,  $747  50 

Paid  to  FIREMEN— 

To  Officers  and  Members  of  Engine  Co.  No.  1  ■  •  •  1,652  00 

"        »                     "                          "         No.  6-  •  •  1,652  00 

a        "                      "                           "          No.  7-  ••  1,652  00 

"        "                     "         of  Hook  &  Ladder  Co.- ■  912  00 

"        "                     "         of  Hose  Co.  No.  1 594  00 

«■        "                     "         of  Steam  Fire  Engine- •  2,729  00 


Paid  for  SUNDRIES  for  the  several  Companies- 

ENGINE  No.  1. 

To  Hunneman  &  Co.,  repairs 

*'  William  Seaver,  oil 

"  Francis  Freeman,  oil,  &c. • 

"  George  R.  Slader,  gas  fixtures • 

"  James  Johnson,  carpenter's  work-  -  • -  • 

«'  William  Morse,  "         •  • 

*'  Roxbury  Gas  Light  Co.,  gas 

"  Williams  &  Eaton,  blacksmith's  work 

"  John  A.  Scott,  "  

"  Fillebrown  &  Holbrook,  stove  work 

"   Solomon  Sanborn,  mason's  work  •  • 

"  E.  A.  Hovey,  repairs 

"  Chester  M.  Gay,   "     • 

"  Libbey  &  Dolan,  wood  and  bark 

"  Thomas  Hurley,  sawing  wood 

"  Phineas  D.  Allen,  repairs 

"  Jamaica  Pond  Aqueduct  Co.,  water 

"  Boston  Belting  Co.,  hose 

"  John  A.  Scott,  ringing  bell 

"  Owen  Nawn,  drawing  engine 

ENGINE  No.  6. 

T©  Hunneman  &  Co.,  repairs 

"  James  J.  Farrell,  ringing  bell 

"  Frank  W.  Munroe,  "       

"  Jarvis  W.  Dean,  repairs 

"  Fillebrown  &  Holbrook,  stove  work 

"  Williams  &  Eaton,  repairs 

"  Jamaica  Pond  Aqueduct  Co.,  water 

«'  J.  E.  Adams  &  Co.,  coal 

"  Libbey  &  Dolan,  bark • 

"  Boston  Belting  Co.,  hose 

"  Roxbury  Gas  Light  Co.,  gas ■ 

"  Charles  W.  Newell,  brooms,  &c. 

"  P.  W.  Fuller,  hardware 

"  A.  L.  Litchfield,  painting,  &c.   

"  Owen  Nawn,  drawing  engine 

*'  Alexander  Stuart,  stationery 

Amount  carried  forward, 
3 


),191  00 


16  50 

11  37 

21  86 

7  20 

18  00 

13  00 

27  00 

3  00 

2  91 

21  56 

24  50 

2  22 

1  25 

4  50 

1  50 

4  15 

15  00 

11  62 

18  75 

8  50 

$234  39 

25  55 

25  00 

25  00 

5  50 

9  41 

17  25 

30  00 

4  95 

4  50 

16  00 

17  10 

3  15 

3  87 

7  75 

8  50 

10  81 

$214  34 

$10,387  23 

26 

Amount  hrovght  forward, 

ENGINE  No.  7. 

To  Hunneman  &  Co.,  repairs 

"  William  Seaver,  oil,  &c. 

"  Williams  &  Eaton,  repairs 

"  Thomas  P.  Sweat,  carpenter's  work 

"  Henry  W.  Smith,  painting;  •  •  • 

"  Jamaica  Pond  Aqueduct  Co.,  water 

"  Phineas  D.  Colburn,  ringing  bell 

"  James  H.  Carley,  "       

"  George  R.  Slader,  lamps 

"  William  Clark,  carting  ■ 

"  Joseph  W.  Sweat,  repairs 

"  Hiram  Carleton,  covering  pipe 

"  J.  E.  Adams  &  Co.,  coal 

"  William  Clark,  "    •  • 

"  Libbey  &  Dolan,  bark 


HOOK  AND  LADDER  COMPANY. 

To  Chauncy  Woodward,  wood 9  87 

"  Thomas  Hurley,  sawing  wood 1   50 

<'  Williams  &  Eaton,  repairs 34  46 

"  E.  T.  Northend,  horse  hire •  •  22.5  00 

"  Roxbury  Gas  Light  Co.,  gas 12  30 

"  Thomas  Jennings,  extra  work 20  00 

"  Henry  W.  Smith,  painting 57  .65 

"  Phineas  D.  Allen,  repairs • 33  30 

«  William  Morse,  carpenter's  work-  • 13  00 

"  Charles  W.  Newell,  sundries 153 


HOSE  COMPANY  No.  1. 

To  Thomas  A.  Scott,  oil,  &c.   

"  Hunneman  &  Co.,  repairs 

"  Fillebrown  &  Holbrook,  stove  work 

"  George  R.  Slader,  gas  fixtures 

"  Boston  Belting  Co.,  hose 

"  Roxbury  Gas  Light  Co.,  gas 

"  Williams  &  Eaton,  blacksmith's  work 

"  T.  P.  Sweat,  carpenter's  work 

"  Hiram  Carleton,  spanner  straps  ■  • 

«  Jamaica  Pond  Aqueduct  Co.,  water 

"  Henry  W.  Smith,  painting 

"  J.  E.  Adams  &  Co.,  coal 

"'  Libbey  &  Dolan,  bark 


tl0,387  23 

29 

00 

80 

54 

20 

10 

4 

55 

38 

50 

30 

00 

12 

50 

25 

00 

8 

60 

25 

92 

14 

00 

3 

00 

5 

29 

20 

63 

4 

50 

5 

73 

3 

95 

2 

62 

11 

55 

2 

50 

8 

89 

8 

92 

15 

00 

11 

30 

15 

00 

44 

50 

6 

10 

5 

00 

$408  61 


S141  06 


Amount  carried  forward^  11,259  03 


2T 


Araount  brought  forward, 


STEAM  FIRE  ENGINE. 


To  John  TIrrell,  coal 

J.  E.  Adams  &  Co.,  " 

William  Clark,  "    

Chauncy  Woodward,  wood 

James  Munroe,  paid  for  sawing  wood 

Owen  Nawn,  horse  hire 

Wm.  J.  Mathes,      "       

Hiram  Carleton,  harness  work 

Hunneman  &  Co.,  repairs 

Campbell,  Whittier  &  Co.,  "     

Fillebrown  &  Holbrook,       "     

Patrick  Lally,  "     

Phineas  D.  Allen,  "     , 

Williams  &  Eaton,  "     , 

William  Seaver,  supplies 

Thomas  P.  Sweat,  carpenter's  work 

John  C.  Hubbard,  chairs 

Josiah  P.  Hall,  ringing  bell 

Joseph  Hougliton,  hay  and  grain 

Oliver  Ames  &  Son,  hay  cutter , 

Mrs.  Murphy,  washing 

Mrs.  Worcester,     "       , 

Francis  W.  Fuller,  hardware 

Michael  Wrin,  repairs , 

W.  &  A.  Bacon,  blankets , 

William  Brock,  shoeing  horses 

H.  N.  Hooper  &  Co.,  bell  wheel 

L.  D.  Davenport,  rollers 

James  McMann,  repairing  slating 

Solomon  Sanborn,  mason's  work 

John  Brooks,  whitening 

Francis  Freeman,  oil,  &c 

B.  F.  &  G.  H.  Wiggin,  painting  and  glazing. 

Roxbury  Gas  Light  Co.,  gas 

E.  M.  Stoddard  &  Co.,  ice 

Boston  Belting  Co.,  hose 


$11 

,259  03 

56 

00 

5 

17 

32 

02 

12 

12 

6 

00 

61 

50 

1 

50 

89 

72 

19 

20 

196 

33 

5 

49 

7 

50 

29 

76 

5 

89 

19 

73 

69 

74 

12 

00 

75 

00 

303 

02 

10 

00 

18 

89 

14 

71 

8 

81 
79 

7 

75 

41 

52 

6 

00 

14 

00 

2 

80   ' 

1 

50 

15 

00 

18 

56 

14 

19 

63 

90 

5 

00 

• 

1,098 

22 

Paid  for  SUNDRIES  not  otherwise  enumerated- 
To  William  Morse,  care  of  engine  "  Relief,"  .... 


A.  D.  Williams,  rent  of  building. 

'  Francis  Jones,  carting 

'  Matthews  &  Co.,  "       

'  B.  Franklin,  horse  hire 

'  Wm.  J.  Mathes,    "       

'  Walter  M.  Bills,  filling  reservoirs. 
'  James  T.  Cole,  " 

'  Owen  Nawn,  " 

'  Frank  W.  Munroe,      " 


100  00 
50  00 

1  00 

2  50 

8  00 

3  00 
22  00 

9  00 
38  25 

5  00 


2,349  33 


Amount  carried  forward, 


238  75     $13,608  36 


S 


28 

Amount  irougJit  forward, 

To  Thomas  Simmons,  fluid 

Williams  &  Eaton,  repairs 

James  Munroe,  paid  for  badges 

Boston  Belting  Co.,  hose 

William  Morse,  reservoir  covers 

Solomon  Sanborn,  repairs 

Edwin  Ray,  paid  for     "     

Henry  A.  Hall  &  Co.,  rubber  coats  . . . 

William  F.  Shaw,  lanterns 

Henry  Pratt,  keys 

Lawrence  &  Co.,  rubber  coats 

Joseph  W.  Winslow,  grease 

Hunneman  &  Co.,  repairs  on  "  Relief 

George  Curtis,  lumber 

S.  Chubbuck  &  Sons,  iron  work 

Williams  &  Everett,  picture  frames  •  •  • 

E.  A.  G.  Roulstone,  caps 

Francis  Freeman,  ringing  bell 

Joseph  Hastings,  "  

Walter  H.  Cook,  "         

Henry  W.  Smith,  painting 

Swain  &  Craft,  chamois  skins 

Alexander  Stuart,  stationery 

Norfolk  County  Journal,  printing 

Joseph  W.  Sweat,  labor 

Francis  Swift,  "     

Chas.  D.  Sampson,  "     

Joseph  H.  Cole,         "     

James  T.  Cole,  "     

Gridley  J.  F.  Bryant,  plan 

Pay  Roll  of  labor,  digging  well 


238  75 

$13,608  86 

25  30 

14  50 

7  00 

3  50 

12  00 

9  00 

5  50 

10  50 

15  00 

15  60 

3  87 

7  56 

2  GO 

1  40 

4  50 

7  50 

129  45 

50  00 

50  00 

62  50 

14  25 

3  00 

5  56 

5  50 

3  00 

3  00 

3  00 

3  00 

3  00 

75  00 

146  91 

$941  25 

$14,549  61 

173  65 

Transferred  to  Contingent  Appropriation,  1862-63 

$14,723  26 
Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1863,  $2,660  57. 

RESERVOIRS. 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1862 42  52 

APPROPRIATION 2,000  00 

$2,042  52 

EXPENDITURES. 

To>  James  H.  Collins,  for  building  reservoir $1,200  00 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1863,  $842  52. 


29 


WATCH    AND    POLICE 


Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1862 4,616  01 

Received  of  A.  1.  Cummings,  for  officers'  fees  .  . .  545  63 

of  P.  B.  Smith,  Jr.,              "           "...  1,654  08 

APPROPRIATION 13,000  00 

EXPENDITURES. 

To  Benjamin  Meriam,  City  Marshal 989  00 

*'  Joseph  Hubbard,              police  and  ■watchman  730  00 

«  William  D.  Cook,                 »                    "  730  00 

«  Hawley  Folsom,                     "                     "  730  00 

»  Hiram  A.  Campbell,             "                    "  821  25 

"  Samuel  Mcintosh,                  "                     «  730  00 

«  Matthew  Clark,                     "                    "  730  00 

"  Jeremiah  M.  Swett,               "                     "  730  00 

"  William  E.  Hicks,                 "                     "  730  00 

"  Edward  F.  Mecuen,              "                    "  730  00 

"  E.  G.  Cobb,                           "                    "  730  00 

"  Joseph  Parker,                       «                     "  730  00 

"  Joseph  Hastings,                    "                     "  730  00 

"  Thomas  CuUigin                   "                    «  730  00 

"  James  Staniels,                       "                     "  730  00 

«  George  R.  Matthews,            "                    "  730  00 

«  Henry  Morse,                         "                     "  730  00 

"  George  H.  Bills,                    "                    "  730  00 

"  Ebenezer  T.  Hitchcock,       "                    "  730  00 

"  James  D.  Loker,                   "                    "  396  00 

»  Moses  N.  Hubbard,               "                    "  420  00 

"  Sylvester  E.  Partridge,         "                    "  85  00 

"  James  Munroe,                       "                     "  67  00 

"  Silas  Dole,                             "                    "  6  00 

"  Henry  L.  Ford,                     «                    «  11  00 

"  Datus  A.  Ambrose,               "                    "  4  00 

"  Joseph  Wiggin,                      "                     "  2  00 

"  Christopher  C.  Dow,             "                     "  24  00 

"  Thomas  M.  Lewis,                 "                    "  2  00 

«  William  N.  Hastings,            "                    "  2  00 

"  Thomas  Carroll,  burying  offal 360  85 

"  Benjamin  Meriam,  railroad  fares,  &c 112  99 

"  Hiram  A.  Campbell,  supplies  for  prisoners. . .  39  13 

"  E.  S.  Jordan,  crackers ...  3  50 

"  W.  &  A.  Bacon,  blankets  and  cloth 43  84 

"  Henry  White,  medicine 5  40 

"  Calvin  Bird  &  Co.,  mattresses 33  40 

"  Joseph  Hubbard,  paid  for  cleaning 10  08 

"  John  McCaughey,                       "       2  00 

"  Patrick  Reaney,  whitewashing 16  00 

"  I.  &  H.  M.  Harmon,  mason's  work 16  70 

"  William  Seaver,  horse  hire 7  94 

«  William  J.  Mathes,       "       11125 


19,815   72 


Amount  carried  forward, 
2* 


16,002  33 


30 

Amount  brought  forward, 

To  Benjamin  Franklin,  horse  hire 

Brown  &  McCarty,  " 

Thomas  S.  Hodge,  repairs 

Cyrus  M.  Littlefield,    "     

Swain  &  Craft,  matches. 

George  Curtis,  lumber 

W.  G.  Huse,  cushions 

Michael  Wrin,  stove  work 

Aaron  R.  Gay,  stationery 

John  Backup,  "  ,...-•••. 
Norfolk  County  Journal,  printing. . . 
Frank  W.  Munroe,  posting 


,002 

SB 

50 

1 

00 

2 

00 

2 

00 

1 

19 

1 

15 

12 

40 

7 

79 

16 

20 

14 

30 

23 

25 

4 

50 

$ie,088  61 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1863,  $3,727  II. 


LAMPS. 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1862 4,186  72 

Received  of  Metropolitan  Rail  Road 852 

APPROPRIATION 12,000  00 

EXPENDITURES. 

To  Roxbury  Gas  Light  Co.,  gas 5,655  57 

«         «                "             "    lighting 3,202  50 

"         "                »             "    repairs 333  95 

"  Thomas  Simmons,  fluid 1,199  8& 

"  John  W.  Lord,  lanterns  and  repairs 207  00 

"  Michael  Wrin,              repairs 7  80 

"  Nathan  Stone,  Jr.,            "      71  26 

"  Henry  H.  Bowditch,         " 8  50 

«  Fillebrown  &  Holbrook,   "      8  87 

«  Thomas  S.  Hodge,            "      75  01 

«  Calvin  Bird,                        «       2  75 

"  Eliot  Trask,                       »       2  50 

«  Silas  M.  Littlefield,           »      12  28 

"  Ivory  Skillings,                  "       9  25 

«  John  M.  Marston,              "      4  00 

"  George  W.  Buss,  iron  work 6  74 

"  Whiting  &  Clapp,  lamp  posts 162  50 

"  Wm.  N.  Felton,  measuring  fluid 12  50 

"  Swain  &  Craft,  matches 2  41 

"  Norfolk  County  Journal,  printing 26  00 

"  Daniel  T.  Pond,  lighting 229  92 

«  David  Howe,            "       243  30 

"  Joseph  Parker,         "       1 74  75 

"  James  Hanson,         "       65  04 

«  Henry  N.  Ford,        "       28  45 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1863,  $4,452  76 


[6,195  24 


$11,752  68 


81 

STATE    TAX. 
APPROPRIATION  •  • » S45,882  00 

EXPENDITURE. 

To  H.  K.  Oliver,  Treasurer  of  Commonwealth  •  •  $45,882  00 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1863,  nothing. 


COUNTY    TAX. 

APPROPRIATION S19,972  32 

EXPENDITURE. 

To  C.  C.  Churchill,  County  Treasurer $19,972  32 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1863,  nothing. 


-*- 


DISCOUNT    ON    TAXES. 

APPROPRIATION 7,000  00 

Transferred     from      Contingent     Appropriation, 

1862^63 • 1,100  00 

$8,100  00 

EXPENDITURE. 

To  Discount  on  Taxes  paid  prior  to  Oct.  1,  1862  $8,093  62 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1863,  $6,38. 


ABATEMENT    OF    TAXES. 

APPROPRIATION  •  •  •  • 2,500  00 

Transferred    from     Contingent     Appropriation, 

1862-63 1,000  00 

•       $3,500  00 

EXPENDITURE. 

To  Abatements  allowed  by  Assessors $3,258  11 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1863,  $241  89. 


32 


MILITARY    SERVICES. 

Transferred     from     Contingent     Appropriation, 

1862-63 $950  00 

EXPENDITURE. 

To  Koxbury  City  Guard S950  00 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1863,  nothing. 


AID    TO    FAMILIES    OF    VOLUNTEERS 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1862 3,362  92 

Received  of  the  Commonwealth 9,145  39 

"        of  Rufus  Wy man,  for  money  refunded- •  228  59 

"        for  Loans  authorized 5,000  00 


EXPENDITURES. 

To  Amount  paid  families  of  volunteeers,  per  pay 

rolls 

"  Isaac  S.  Burrell,  services 

"  William  Seaver,  supplies 

"  Rufus  Wyman,  aid  and  fares 

"  Matthew  Clark,  fares 

"  Adams  Express  Co.,  transportation 

"  John  C.  Seaver,  funeral  expenses 

"  Phineas  Bates,  "  

"  Frank  W.  Munroe,  posting   

"  L.  Foster  Morse,  services 


Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1863,  $3,874  00. 


57,861 

14 

80 

00 

20 

76 

600 

00 

14 

00 

80 

25 

68 

25 

12 

00 

31 

50 

105 

00 

)2,736  90 


$58,862  90 


BOUNTY    TO    VOLUNTEERS. 

LOANS  authorized 52,000  00 

Bounty  refunded  by  E.  R.  Jones 100  00 

$52,100  00 

EXPENDITURES. 

To  Bounty  paid  to  487  volunteers 48,700  00 

"  Edward  Wyman,  paid  bounty  to  volunteers-  •         997  41 

Amount  carried  forward,  49,697  41 


33 


Amount  hrougTit  forward,  49,697  41 

To  Brigade  Band,    music 42  00 

»  Hall's  Brass  Band,  "     234  10 

"  Boston    "         "       "     ; 480  00 

"  House  of  Angel  Guardian,  music 205  00 

«'  Germania  Band,                        "      36  00 

"  Miller's  Brass  Band,                "     48  00 

«'  Chelsea          "                           "     49  60 

«'  Parker  House,  refreshments 97  40 

"  J.  B.  Smith,                "           100  00 

»  Norfolk  House,           "    _       19  40 

"  Savill's  eating  house,  rations 48  26 

"  Citj  Hotel,                      "       1  50 

"  Jeremiah  M.  Swett,  railroad  fares 11   20 

"  Wm.  Gaston,                        "       35  00 

"  Samuel  Little,  paid              "       18  25 

"  Rufus  Wyman,    "        _          "        166   70 

"  John  Dunn,      recruiting 14  00 

«'  Charles  D.  Frye,     "         15  CO 

"  John  D.  Bradlee,     "        40  00 

"  James  P.  Ford,        "         29  50 

"  Wm.  H.  Mcintosh,  copying  &  making  returns  16  50 

«  Edward  Wise,                "                       "  6  00 

«  Asa  Wyman,                  "                       "  15  00 

*'  J.  D.  F.  Wilcox,            "                       "  16  50 

«  M.  P.  Berry,                   «                        "  21   00 

«  Eliot  Trask,                    "                       «  21  00 

«  L.  F.  Morse,                   «                       "  21  00 

»  Joseph  Hastings,            "                       "  2  00 

«  Hawley  Folsom,             "                       "  6  20 

«  Swain  &  Crafts,  tubs,  &c. 25  50 

"  Frederic  Rocjers,          posters 32  50 

«  J.  H.  &  F.  F.  Farwell,     "       66  62 

"  Alexander  Stuart,             "       19  00 

"  F.  W.  Munroe,  posting •  •  •  21  50 

«  Peter  Kelley,         "       24  62 

"  W.  H.  Hutchinson,        advertising 9  00 

"  Worthington  &  Flanders,       "         6   75 

"  Norfolk  Countv  Journal,        "         1 7  25 

"  Whiton  Brothers  &  Co.,  flag 21  00 

"  Ward  &  Co.,  horse  hire 2  52 

"  Abner  W.  Pollard,  furnishing  marshals 41  42 

«  Samuel  W.  Creech,  fireworks 6  50 

"  Wm.  Manning,  funeral  expenses 6  00 

«  E.  B.  Rumrill,  care  of  hall 58  00 

"  Henry  White,  sundries 2  87 

"  Mechanics  Institute,  rent  of  hall 62  50 


$51,937  17 


Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1862,  $162  83. 


34 


CITY    DEBT    AND    INTEREST. 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1862 11,233  98 

Received  for  Stony  Brook  land 4,333  66 

"         "    Brook  Farm     "      2,158  20 

"         "    Munroe  "      1,044  44 

«         "    LOANS  authorized 121,034  06 

APPROPRIATION 42,000  00 


EXPENDITURES. 

To  Rockland  Bank,  principal  and  interest 
"  Peoples  "  «  " 
«  Suffolk  Savings  Bank,  «  " 
"  Boston  Prov.  Inst,  for  Savings,  "  " 
"  Inst,  for  Savings,  Roxbury,  "  " 
"  City  Treasurer,  or  order,  "  " 
«  Samuel  Kendall,  "  " 
"  Commonwealth  of  Massachusetts,  interest 
«  Charles  M.  Ellis,  " 
"  Heirs  of  Elijah  Lewis,  " 
"  Joseph  W.  Dudley,  " 
"  Catherine  Crane,  " 
"  Elizabeth  D.  Brigham,  " 
"  Trustees  of  Comins  School  Fund,  " 
"  Interest  warrants  on  City  Debt,  " 
"  Commissioners  of  Forest  Hills  Cemetery,  " 
"  David  W.  Williams,  thirty-third  payment  on 
Alms-house  land 


Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1863,  $18,102  38. 


$181,804  34 

63,232 

09 

25,343 

75 

14,430 

00 

9,540 

00 

9,710 

00 

7,382 

50 

4,120 

00 

1,200 

00 

720 

00 

240 

00 

60 

00 

60 

00 

120 

00 

30 

00 

27,215 

00 

148 

62 

150 

00 

$163,701  96 

SALARIES    OF    CITY    OFFICERS 


Balance  undrawn,  February  1,  1862' 
APPROPRIATION 


EXPENDITURES. 


To  William  Gaston,  Mayor • 

"  Joseph  W.  Tucker,  City  Clerk-    _ 

"  Joshua  Seaver,  Clerk  of  Common  Council-  • 
"  Joseph  W.  Dudley,  Treasurer  and  Collector- 

«  Paul  Willard,  City  Solicitor 

"  Franklin  Winchester,  Harbor  Master 

"  William  N.  Felton,  City  Messenger 


1,600 

00 

7,500 

00 

1,500 

00 

1,200 

00 

200 

00 

1,800 

00 

575 

00 

100 

00 

600 

00 

$9,100  00 


Amount  carried  forward^  6,975  00 


85 


Amount  hrouglit  forward,  5,975  00 

To  Joseph  H.  Streeter,  City  Physician 200  00 

"  John  S.  Sleeper,      Assessor 400  00 

"  Wm.  H.  Mcintosh,         "        • 400  00 

"  Joshua  Seaver,               "        and  Clerk 600  00 

"  Jarvis  W.  Dean,  Assistant  Assessor 20  00 

"  William  Seaver,                 "               20  00 

"  Uriah  T.  Brownell,            "               20  00 

"  Daniel  W.  Glidden,          "              20  00 

"  John  J.  Merrill,                 "               20  00 


(7,575  00 


Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1863,  $1,525  00. 


GENERAL    CONTINGENT  EXPENSES  AND  MISCEL- 
LANEOUS  CLAIMS. 

Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1862 13,032  04 

APPROPRIATION 6,000  00 

Sundry  Transfers 356  36 

Overplus  in  casting  taxes     8,5  74  88 

Received  of  Nehemiah  Mack,  for  rent 1 75  00 

"             J.  A.  McCullum,       "        145  02 

"       for  rent  of  house,  Tremont  Place 20  30 

"        of  J.  E.  Adams,  rent  of  wharf 525  00 

"             Geo.  Curtis,       "            "       165  00 

"  Commonwealth  of  Massachusetts,  rent 

of  Armory 1 75  00 

•'  County  of  Norfolk,   rent  of  Court 

Room 225  00 

"            Joseph  W.  Tucker,  office  fees 215  00 

"                 "         "           "        dog  licenses 356  00 

"             Goodwin  &  Wilder,  license 25  00 

"             Commonwealth  of  Massachusetts,  in- 
come of  School  Fund 1,085  84 

"        for  Interest  on  taxes 945  88 

$32,021  32 


EXPENDITURES. 

Paid  for  PRINTING,  ADVERTISING,  SURVEYING, 
STATIONERY  AND  BOOKS— 

To  Norfolk  County  Journal,  printing 661   78 

"  John  M.  Hewes,                     "         842  87 

"  Wm.  H.  Hutchinson,             "         13100 

"  Joseph  G.  Torrey,                  "         60  00 

"  John  H.  Bufford,                    "        10150 

"  Edwin  C.  Bailey,          advertising 2  25 

Amount  carried  forward,  1,799  40 


€ 


Amount  brought  forward,  1,799  40 

To  H.  W.  Button  &  Son,  advertising 7  25 

"  Beals,  Greene  &  Co.,               "       9  75 

"  Charles  O.  Rogers,                    "        14  50 

"  Worthinn;ton,  Flanders  &  Co. "        24  49 

"  J.  H.  &  F.  F.  Farwell,            "       3100 

"  Boston  Daily  Advertiser          "       6  13 

"  Aaron  R.  Gay,            stationery      365  16 

"  Aaron  R.  Gay  &  Co.,          "             60  13 

"  T.  B.  Moses,  surveying,     "             163  40 

"  Horace  H.  Moses,               "             24  00 

"  W.  A.  Garbett,                   "             5  00 

"  Alexander  Stuart,       books             4  70 

"  Adams,  Sampson  &  Co.,  "                 50  00 

"  Sanborn  &  Parker,  binding             36  15 


Paid  for  NOTIFYING  &  ATTENDING  MEETINGS, 
USE  OF  ROOMS,  COPYING  AND  INDEXING 
RECORDS— 

To  Pay  Roll  of  Ward  Officers, ; 285  50 

"  M.  P.  Berry,  notifying  and  attending  Ward 

Meetings 67  25 

"  S.  E.  Partridge,              "           "           "           "  4  50 

"  H.  L.  Ford,                      "           "           "           "  42  50 

"  E.  G.  Cobb,                     "          "           "          "  5  50 

»  Joseph  Parker,                »          »          "          "  6  50 

"  Ed.  F.  Mecup.n,               "           "           "          "  6  50 

"  Tremont  Baptist  Society,  use  of  room    50  00 

"  Joshua  Seaver,  copying, 25  00 

"  Joseph  Hastings,      "         4  00 

"  Henry  H.  Page,       "         1   50 

"  W.  S.  Shurtleff,       "         10  63 

"  Jos.  W.  Tucker,  paid  for  copying    37  50 

"  Charles  K.  Dillaway,  indexing 220  00 

"  James  Foord,  recording  deeds 20  1 2 

"  John  W.  Parker,  clerk  hire 886  00 


^2,601  06 


,673  00 


Paid  for  SUNDRIES,  NOT   OTHERWISE  ENUME- 
RATED— 

To  J.  E.  Adams  &  Co.,  for  coal 37  70 

"  Wm.  Clark,                    "        216   13 

"  Daniel  Tiffany,  charcoal 23  83 

"  Roxbury  (ias  Light  Co.,  gas 831   08 

"  Geo.  R.  Slader,  gas  fixtures 56  27 

"  R.  I.  Nourse,            "             1  00 

"  Alvin  M.  Robbins,  carpenter's  work 75  71 

"  Samuel  S.  Chase,           "              "       •  68  49 

"  James  Cassady,              "              "       1135 

"  Jarvis  W.  Dean,             "              "       3  83 

"  True  Russell,                  »              '*       9  72 

Amount  carried  forward,  838  11        $4,274  06 


37 

Amount  brought  forward,  838  11        $4,274  06 

To  Chris.  Tilden,        carpenter's  work    3  59 

"  Tho.  M.  Lewis,              "              "       2  15 

»  Eben  B.  Riimrell,          "              "       114  29 

"  Johnson  &  Leavitt         "              "       •  ■  • 28  69 

"  I.  &  H.   M.   Hai-mon,  mason  work    27  66 

"  George  Curtis,  lumber 27  80 

"  Wm.  R.  Huston,     "      22  81 

"  Bernice  Richardson,  painting  and  glazing- ••  •  27   75 

"  B.  F.  &  G.  H.  Wiggin,    "                  "       58  83 

"  U.  T.  Brownell,                 "                   "        9   79 

"  John  McGreevey,             "                   "        3  00 

"  True  Russell,  building  hay  scales 483  00 

"  Moses  H.  Libbey,  stone  work  "      49   25 

"  Whiting  &  Clapp,  castings  for  "      2  50 

"  A.  W.  Newman,  blacksmith's  work  for  scales  5  08 

"  S.  W.  Wilson,  painting  for                             "  33   25 

"  David  Simpson,  plan  for                                 "  20  00 

"  Owen  Nawn,  gravel  and  carting  for  wharf-  •  •  718  00 

"  Thomas  Dolan,  "                    "                 "...  19  50 

"  Edward  Wise,  superintending               "      •  •  •  64  00 

"  James  Guild,  rent  of  armory 300  00 

"  Isaac  S.  Burrell,  firing  salute 56  34 

"  Moses  H.  Webber,       "          63  46 

"  Geo.  Shereive,             "           75  00 

"  John  McCaughe)^  cleaning  cannon 12  00 

"  Hartley  C.  Woodbridge,  cleaning  guns 7  00 

"  E.  S.  MuUiken,  ringing  bell 7  00 

"  John  Culligin,               "        6  00 

"  James  M.  Barton,         "        7  00 

"  Thomas  Culligin,          "       2  00 

"  Thomas  Coan,   '           "       6  00 

"  James  J.  Farrell,          »       2  67 

"  Joseph  W.  Sweat,        "       3  00 

"  R.  M.  Yale,  trimming  hall,  &c. 76   13 

"  J.  D.  &  W.  H.  Fowle,  repairing  eagle  on  flag- 

staflF 8  50 

"  Brigade  Band,  music 63  00 

"  Germania  "          "     •  • 48  00 

"  Charles  A.  Jones,  refreshments 100  00 

"  John  Backup,  postage 49  72 

"  Joseph  W.  Dudley,  paid  for  revenue  stamps-  •  53  10 

"  James  W.  Stone,                                "            ■  •  52  00 

"  City  Mutual  Fire  Insurance  Co.,  insurance- •  •  23  63 

.     "  Norfolk  Co.  Mutual  Fire  Ins.  Co.,      "        •  •  •  27  50 

"  Paul  Willard,  witness  fees 39  45 

"  B.  S.  Farrington,         "       34  42 

"  Wm.  Gaston,  fares  of  Committees 293  26 

«  J.  M.  Swett,  fare 1  50 

"  William  J.  Mathes,     hack  hire,  &c. 99  75 

"  Brown  &  McCarty,             «                35  00 

"  Wrightington  &  Riedel,     «               12  00 

«  Mason  G.  Field,                 «              3  00 


Amount  carried  forward,  4,126  48       $4,274  06 

4 


38 

Amount  hrougM  forward,  4,126  48       S4,274  06 

To  J.  R.  Simmons,             hack  hire 4  00 

"  Luke  Jewett,                      "         89  25 

"  E.  T.  Northend,          ^       "         64  75 

"  Francis  Jones,       carting 75 

"  Colburn's  Express,     "     9  89 

"  Adams's        "             "     • 18  00 

"  Benjamin  Meriam,  iron  hoops 6  84 

"  American  Telegraph  Co.,  telegraphing 3  26 

"  Trustees  of  Institute  Hall,  rent 30  OO 

"  Moses  Gragg,  taking  census  of  children  and 

military 225  00 

"  George  Bowdlear,  repairing  pump 3  00 

"  Day  Cordage  Co.,  rope 6  77 

"  Frank  W.  Munroe,  posting  bills 7   75 

"H.W.Littleton,                  "        10  OO 

"  Andrew  W.  Newman,  weighing 55  04 

"  Melzar  Waterman,  sealing  scales  and  rent  •  •  •  12  50 

"  Nelson  Worthen,  rent  of  room 100  00 

"  Gardner  Chilson,  stove 29  00 

"  Fillebrown  &  Holbrook,  stove  work 9  06 

"  John  W.  Lord,                           "           3  50 

"  Calvin  Bird,  tin  ware 1  12 

"  Henry  R.  Taylor,  repairs,  &c. 23  37 

"  Henry  Pratt,  repairing  locks 3  74 

"  Charles  A.  Beal,  chair 1   75 

"  J.  J.  Munroe,  painting  sign 1   00 

"  David  K.  Reed,  matches 77 

"  Francis  W.  Fuller,  hardware 5  48 

"  Francis  C.  Head,  boundary  post 3  00 

"  S.  A.  Britton,  costs  in  suit 60  40 

"  Patrick  Garrity,  damages •  •  •  •  300  00 

"  Mary  E.  A.  Hall,  gratuity 250  00 

"  J.  S.  Sleeper,  extra  services  as  Assessor,  1861  150  00 

"  Wra.  Rumrill,           "                          "           "  150  00 

"  Joshua  Seaver,         "                        _  "           "  200  00 

"  Joseph  W.  Dudley,  paid  for  cleaning  rooms-  •  53  04 

"  Jonas  Pierce,  Jr.,                                  "  52  43 

"  Mary  Kelley,                                        "  12  00 

"  John  Mullany,  labor 12  12 

"  James  McMann,  repairing  slating 2  06 

"  Pa^'ker  Fowle  &  Son,  mats 9  00 

"   Swain  &  Craft,  brooms,  &c. 10  72 

'•  Wiggin  &  Chapman,  cloth 4  50 

"  Job®  C.  Seaver,     returns  of  deaths 21   77 

"  Joseph  S.  Waterman,   "              "     &c. 20  24 

•»  Wm.  Manning,              "              "     42  80 

"  Henry  A.  Martin,  medical  attendance 8  00 

"  Heirs  of  Reuben  Winslow,  ground  rent 12  00 

"  David  Simpson,  plans 63  00 

"  W.  H.  H.  Young,  cleaning  vaults 17  00 

■*'  Solomon  Sanborn,  work  on  engine-house  •  •  •  •  500  00 

S6,806  15 

$11,080  21 


39 

Amount  hrouglit  forward,  Sll,080  21 

TRANSFERS— 

To  Contingent  Expenses  of  Fire  Department 400  00 

"  House  OfFal  1,100  00 

"  Pay  of  Firemen 100  00 

«  Sewers 1,000  00 

»  Pay  of  Militia 950  00 

"  Widening  Streets 1,000  00 

"  Discount  on  Taxes 1,100  00 

"  Abatement  of  Taxes 1,000  00 

''  New  Wharf 8  82 


3,658  82 


$17,739  03 
Balance  undrawn  February  1,  1863,  $14,282  29. 


40 


APPROPRIATIONS,  EXPENDITURES,  TRANSFERS,  &c. 

1862-63. 


Appropriations. 


Appropriated. 


Expended. 


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

Koxbury  Grammar  School, 

Support  of  Poor,  .... 

House  Offal, 

Repairs  of  Highways,    .     . 

Widening  Washington  Street 
"         Plymouth  Street, 
"        Lambert  Avenue, 
"         Warren  Street, 
"        Walnut  Street, 

Madison  Square,  .     .     . 

New  Wharf,     .... 

Sewers, 

Sewer,  Plymouth  Street, 

Sewer,  Winslow  Street, 

Sewer,  Sumner  Street,  . 

Sewer,  Dudley  Street,  . 

Pay  of  Firemen,  and  Contin 
gent  Expenses  of  Fire  De 
partment,      .     .     .     , 

Eeservoirs,  .... 

Watch  and  Police,    .     , 

Lamps, 

State  Tax,  .     .    .     .     , 

County  Tax, 

Discount  on  Taxes   ... 

Abatement  of  Taxes,     .     . 

Military  Services,      ... 

Aid  to  Families  of  Volunteers 

Bounty  to  Volunteers,  .     . 

City  Debt  and  Interest, 

Salaries  of  City  Officers,    . 

Contingent  Expenses,   .     . 


?60,.504  60 

625  00 

9,826  57 

1,759  95 

34,618  91 


1,881  20 


9,420  82 
250  00 


6,095  74 


17,383  83 

2,042  52 

19,815  72 

16,195  24 

45,882  00 

19,972  32 

8,100  00 

3,500  00 

950  00 

62,736  90 

.52,100  00 

181,804  34 

9,100  00 

32,021  32 


$45,421  47 

500  00 

9,212  91 

1,692  48 

30,832  83 

398  84 

500  00 

396  19 

75  75 

126  00 

8,967  43 

250  00 

1,326  84 

2,092  75 

488  47 

374  16 

20  00 


14,549  61 

1,200  00 

16,088  61 

11,752  68 

45,882  00 

19,972  32 

8,093  62 

3,258  11 

950  00 

58,862  90 

51,937  17 

163,701  96 

7,575  00 

11,080  21 


$182  71 


173  65 


6,658  82 


$15,083  13 

125  00 

430  95 

67  47 

3,786  08 


384  42 


453  39 


1,793  52 


2,660  57 

842  52 

3,727  11 

4,442  56 


6  38 
241   89 

3,874  00 

162  83 

18,102  38 

1,525  00 
14,282  29 


,586  98  $517,580  31,$7,015  IS'  $71,991  49 


41 


AMOUNT    OF    CITY    DEBT. 


Dates  of  Notes. 


Jan.      31,  1861 


Jan.  20 
March  17 
Jan.  14 
Sept.       1 

Nov, 


Aug. 

JNfov. 

Nov. 

Nov 

Dec. 

Jan. 

Oct. 

Dec. 

Nov. 

No\. 

Nov. 

I\ov.      1 

Nov.     2 

May 

Jan.       2 

June 

July      2 

Nov. 


Nov.     23 


Jan.  1 

Jan.  29 

April  15 

April  14 

May  5 

May  9 
May 


July 

July 

Oct. 

Nov. 

Dec. 

Dec. 

Dec, 

Jan. 

Feb. 

April 

July 

Sept.      8 

Aug.       2 

Nov.     12 

Feb.      13 

Feb.      20 

Feb.      22 

Feb.      28 

March  23 


To  whom  Payable. 


Commissioners  of  Forest    Hills 

Cemetery, 

1862       do.        do.        do.        do. 

1862  do.         do.        do.         do. 

1863  do.        do.        do.        do. 

1855  City  Treasurer,  or  order      .     . 

1856  Commonwealth    of   Massachu- 

setts,       

1858  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 
1854  City  Treasurer,  or  order      .     . 

1854  Cynthia  Stiilings 

1856  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 

1859  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 

1855  Ciiy  Treasurer,  or  order  .     .     . 
1855  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxburji 

1855  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 

1856  Klijah  Lewis       .... 

1856  Joseph  VV.  Dudley  .  . 
1356  Catherine  Crane  .  .  . 
1356  City  Treasurer,  or  order  . 
1356  Cit}'  Treasurer?  or  order 

1857  Elizabeth  D.  Brigham,  . 
1856  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 

1858  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 

1358  Suffolk  Savings  Bank      .     .     . 
1861  Bearer       

1860  Bearer 

1859  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 
1859  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 
1859  Mary  and  Sarah  Jones  . 
1859  City  Treasurer,  or  order 

1359  City  Treasurer,  or  order 
1859  Trustees  of  Comins  Fund 
1359  City  Treasurer,  or  order 
1859  City  Treasurer,  or  order 
1859  City  Treasurer,  or  order 
1859  City  Treasurer,  or  order 
18.39  City  Treasurer,  or  order     .     . 
1859  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 
1859  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 

1859  City  Treasurer,  or  order     .     . 

1860  Institution  for  Savings,  Roxbury 
1860  City  Treasurer,  or  order      .     . 
1860  Institution  for  Saviugs,  Roxbury 
1860  Bearer, 
1860  Bearer, 
I860  Bearer, 

1860  Bearer, 

1861  Bearer, 
1861  Bearer, 
1861  Bearer, 
1861  Bearer, 
1861  Bearer, 


Interest, 


percent 

6 
6 
6 
6 
6 

6 
6 
6 
6 
6 

5h 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 


5% 
bt 

6 
5 
5 
5 
5 
5 
5 
5 
5 


When  Payable . 


On  demand. 
On  demand. 
On  demand, 
On  demand, 
Sept.       1,  1863 


Nov. 

Aug. 

Nov. 

Nov. 

Nov. 

Dec. 

Jan. 

Oct. 

Dec. 

Nov. 

Nov. 

Nov. 

Nov. 

Nov. 

May 

Jan. 

June 

July 

Nov. 

Nov. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

April 

April 

tVlay 

May 

May 

July 

July 

Oct. 

Nov. 

Dec. 

Dec. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

Feb. 

April 

June 

June 

Aug, 

July 

Jan. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

Jan. 


17 


186 

1863 

1864 

1864 

1864 

n 

1865 

1865 

1865 

1865 

1865 

1865 

1865 

1865 

1865 

1866 

1866 

1866 

1867 

1868 

1869 

1869 

1869 

1869 

1869 

1! 

1869 

1869 

1869 

1869 

1869 

1! 

1&69 

1870 

1870 

1870 

1870 

1870 

1870 

1870 

1870 

1871 

1871 

1871 

1871 

1871 


Amount. 


,g  1,965  00 

250  00 

350  00 

500  00 

5,000  00 

20,000  00 

5,500  00 

9,000  00 

1,000  00 

12,000  00 

7,000  00 

1,000  00 

11,000  00 

5,000  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 

8,000  00 

8,000  00 

11,000  00 

4,000  00 

2,000  00 

10,000  00 

20,000  00 

500  00 

12,000  00 

10,000  00 

7,000  00 

10,000  00 

20,000  00 

18,000  00. 

12,000  00 

10,000  OQ 

5,000  00 

10,000  00 

3,000  00 

8,000  00 

2  000  00 

12,000  00^ 

3,500  GO" 

7,000  OO 

10,000  00 

10,000  00 

10,000  00'^ 

5,000  00 


Amount  carried  forward, 


4* 


^365,565  00 


42 


CITY  DEBT— Continued, 


Date  of  Notes. 


April 

Nov. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

July 

Nov. 

Oct. 

Oct. 

Jan. 

June 

April 

July 

Sept. 

Aug. 

Oct. 

JSov. 

April 

April 

Oct. 

Dec. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

April 

July 

Sept. 

Jan. 

Nov. 

Dec. 

Dec. 

Aug. 

Aug. 


1861 
1860 
1862 
1862 
1862 
1862 
1861 
1861 
1861 
1861 
1861 
1862 
1862 
1860 
1860 
1860 
1860 
1860 
1861 
1862 
1862 
1862 
1862 
1863 
1863 
1863 
1861 
1860 
1860 
1861 
1860 
1860 
1861 
1862 
1862 


To  whom  Payable. 


Amount  brought  forward 
Bearer, 
Bearer, 

Jeremiah  H.  Wilkins 
Abigail  Seaver 
Abigail  F.  Seaver 
Elizabeth  A.  Seaver 
Bearer, 
Bearer, 
Bearer, 
Bearer, 
Bearer, 
Bearer, 

N.  K.  M.  Life  Ins.  Co 
Bearer, 
Bearer, 
Bearer, 
Bearer, 
Bearer, 
Bearer, 

N.  E.  M.  Life  Ins. 
N.  E.  M.  Life  Ins.  Co. 
J.D.&M.  Williams 
Bearer, 
Bearer, 
Bearer, 
Bearer, 
Bearer, 
Bearer, 
Bearer, 
Bearer, 
Bearer, 
Bearer, 
Bearer, 
Bearer, 
Bearer, 


percent. 


WhenPayable. 


Amount. 


March 

Nov. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

Jan. 

Aug. 

Aug. 

Oct. 

Oct. 

Jan. 

June 

April 

June 

June 

Sept. 

Sept. 

Nov. 

April 

April 

Oct. 

Nov. 

Nov. 

Dec. 

Jan. 

Nov. 

June 

June 

June 

Nov. 

Nov. 

Nov. 

Aug. 

Aug. 


1871 

1872 

1872 

1872 

1872 

1872 

1873 

1873 

1873 

1873 

1873 

1874 

1874 

1875 

1875 

1875 

1875 

1875 

1876 

1876 

1877 

1377 

1878 

1878 

1878 

1879 

IE 

1880 

1880 

1880 

1880 

1880 

1! 

1882 

1882 


^365,565  00 

5,000  00 

6,600  00 

2,000  00 

6,000  00 

1,000  00 

I.OUO  00 

10,000  00 

2,000  00 

13,000  00 

25,000  00 

39,000  00 

16,000  00 

20,000  00 

18,000  00 

14,000  00 

6,000  00 

12,000  00 

8,000  00 

18,000  00 

6,000  00 

4,000  00 

30,000  00 

10,000  00 

27,000  00 

12,000  00 

3,000  00 

25,000  00 

23,000  00 

10,000  00 

7,000  00 

1,000  00 

18,000  00 

25,000  00 

20,000  00 

20,000  00 


,^831, 063  00 


43 


AMOUNT     OF     DEBT* 


rOR  FOREST  HILLS  CEMETERY. 


Date  of  Notes. 

To  whom  Payable. 

Interest. 

When  Payable. 

Amount. 

Dec.      5,  1860 
Dec.       5,  1860 

Edmund  M.  Fowler    .... 
Edmund  M.  Fowler    .... 

per  cent. 
6 

Dec.       1,  1863 
Dec        1,  1864 

3,000  00 
3,000  00 

$6,000  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." 


44 


Dr. 


Joseph  W.  Dudi.ey,  City  Treasurer,  in  Account  Current,  from 


1863 
Feb.  ]. 


To  Balance  in  the  Treasury,  at  last  audit 

Cash  rec'd  of  Ezra  Young,  for  sale  of  articles  at 

Almshouse  .         .  .         .  $150  00 

"         of  Cities  and  Towns,  for  support  of 

Paupers 98  03 

Amount  raised  by  Tax      .... 

Cash  rec'd  of  Nehemiah  Mack,  house  rent        .  175  00 

"          of  Julius  A.  McCullum,  house  rent  145  02 

"          for  rent  of  house,  Tremont  Place     .  20  30 

of  J.  E.  Adams  &  Co.,  rent  of  wharf  525  00 

"          of  George  Curtis,  rent  of  wharf        .  165  00 
"          of  Commonwealth  of  Massachusetts, 

rent  of  Armory     ....  175  00 
"          of  County  of  Norfolk,  rent  of  Court 

Koom 225  00 

"  of  Joseph  W.  Tucker,  fees  received    215  00 

"  of  Joseph  W.  Tucker,  dog  licenses     356  00 

"  of  Goodwin  &  Wilder,  license  .       25  00 

"  of  Ariel  I.  Cummings,  fees  received     545  63 

"  of  Phineas  B,  Smith,  jr.  fees  received  1,654  08 

"  for  watering  streets 

"         for  edge  stone  and  bricks 

"         of  Dudley  H.  Bailey,  horse 

"         for  Stony  Brook  land 

"  for  Brook  Farm  land        .         .  • 

"         for  Munroe  land 

"  for  sewer,  Dudley  Street 

"  for  sewer,  Eastis  Street    . 

"  for  sewer,  Davis  Street    . 

"  for  sewer,  Plymouth  Street 

"  of  Dana  &  Sanborn,  for  bricks 

"  of  Commonwealth,  aid  to  families 

of  Volunteers        .         .         .  9,145  39 

"  of  R.  Wyman,  money  unexpended  .     228  59 

"  of  Evan  R.Jones,  bounty  refunded  .     100  00 


of  Spear  &  Binney,  house  ofFal  .      97  13 
of  Ezra  Young,  house  offal      .  .     229  00 
of  Metropolitan  Railroad   Co.,  re- 
pairs on  lamp        .         .         .  .         8  52 
of  Commonwealth  of  Massachusetts, 

School  Fund         .         .         .  1,085  84 

for  Interest  on  Taxes      .        .  .945  88 


by  Loans  authorized 


2,564  97 


248  03 
257,041  20 


1,430  32 


2,795  71 


5,172  73 


7,536  30 


4,908  13 


9,473  98 


2,366  37 
236,034  06 

$589,571  80 


45 


February  1,  1862,  to  February  1,  1863,  with  the  City  of  Roxbury.      Cr. 


By  cash  paid  Salaries  of  School  Teachei's 

Contingent  Expenses  of  Schools 
Fuel  for  Schools 
Eoxburv  Grammar  School 


Support  of  Poor 
House  Offal 
Repairs  of  Highways 
Madison  Square 
Widening  Washington  Street 
Widening  Plymouth  Street 
Widening  Lambert  Avenue 
Widening  Warren  Street 
Widening  Walnut  Street 


Sewers 

Sewer,  Dudley  Street 
Sewer,  Plymouth  Street 
Sewer,  Winslow  Street 
Sewer,  Sumner  Street 


Pay  of  Piremen 

Contingent  Expenses  of  Fire  Department 

Reservoirs 


Watch  and  Police     . 
Lamps      .... 
City  Debt  and  Interest     . 
Aid  to  Pamilies  of  Volunteers 
Bounty  to  Volunteers 
Salaries  of  City  Officers   . 
Militia      .... 
New  Wharf 
State  Tax 
County  Tax 


Abatement  of  Taxes 
Discount  on  Taxes 

Contingent  Expenses 


$34,308  98 

8,192  23 

2,920  26 

500  00 


398  84 
500  00 
396  19 
75  75 
126  00 


1,326  84 
20  00 

2,092  75 
488  47 
374  16 


9,938 

50 

4,611 

11 

1,200 

00 

45,882  00 
19,972  32 


3,2.58  11 
8,093  62 


By  balance  in  the  Treasury 


H5,921  47 

9,212  91 

1,692  48 

30,832  83 

8,967  43 


1,496  78 


4,302  22 


15,749  61 

16,088  61 

11,752  68 

163,701   96 

58,862  90 

51,937  17 

7,575  00 

950  00 

250  00 


65,854  32 

11,351   73 
11,080  21 

$517,580  31 
71,991  49 


$589,571   80 


JOSEPH  W.  DUDLEY,  City  Treasurer. 


Roxbury,  March  6,  1863. 


CiTT   OF   EOXBTJET,   MaRCH   6,    1863. 

The  undersigned,  Joint  Standing  Committee  on  Accounts,  in  pursuance  of 
the  provisions  of  the  eighth  section  of  the  Ordinance  entitled  "  An  Ordinance 
estabhshing  a  system  of  Accountability  in  the  Expenditures  of  the  City,"  requiring 
themto  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  correctly  cast,  and  all  payments  and  expenditures 
therein  charged  against  the  City,  are  sustained  by  the  necessaiy  vouchers. 

We  find  that  there  has  been  received  into  the  Treasury  at  sundry  times  within 
the  year  ending  January  31,  1863,  the  sum  oifive  hundred  twenty-seven  thousand  six 
and  83-100  dollars,  which,  with  the  balance  on  hand  January  31 ,  1862,  of  sixty -two 
thousand  Jive  hundred  sixty-four  and  97-000  dollars,  makes  a  total  receipt  of  the  year 
of  Jive  hundred  eighty-nine  thousand  Jive  hundred  seventy-one  and  80-100  dollars  ;  and 
there  has  been  paid  out  from  the  Treasury  during  the  same  period,  the  sum  of 
Jive  hundred  seventeen  thousand  Jive  hundred  eighty  and  31-100  dollars ;  leaving  a  bal- 
ance in  the  Treasury,  January  31, 1863,  of  seventy-one  thousand  nine  hundred  ninety- 
one  and  49-100  dollars,  including  in  which  is  the  sum  of  forty-two  thousand  four 
hundred  seventy-two  and  95-100  dollars  of  taxes  unpaid. 


SAMUEL  LITTLE, 
MOSES  H.  DAY, 
FRANKLIN  CURTIS, 
GEORGE  ONION, 
FRANCIS  W.  WELCH, 


Committee 

on 
Accounts. 


In  Common  Council,  Maech  9,  1863. 

Read  and  accepted,  and  sent  up  for  concurrence. 

JOSHUA  SEAVER,  Clerh. 

In  Board  of  Aldermen,  March  9,  1863. 
Concurred. 

JOSEPH  W.  TUCKER,  City  Clerk. 


47 


« 
o 


P^ 

f=^ 

p^ 

b 

p 

« 
H 

cc- 

^ 

-^. 

f^ 

o 

p^ 

CO 

H 

CO 
00 

rl 

w 

;>H 

rH 

H 

H 

/-N 

tH 

P5 

O 

H 
H 
W 
^ 

K-^ 

m 

s 

P 

O 

O 

H 

i 

^ 

02 

'S 

ft 

h^ 

to 

i-^I 

CO 

^ 

I— 1 

1-1 

jT 

^ 

w 

T-( 

H 

>H 

00 

P5 

<! 

t3 

<» 
^ 

^ 

o 

p:3 

a^ 

zni 

fe 

^s^ 

^ 

O 

Ph 

rs 

1-5 

^ 

^ 

O 

P 

O 

C5 

P 

H 

^ 

12; 

w 

P 

P5 

o 

O 

o 

HS 

o 

ft 


»C  35 

•^ 

O  O 

Tti  (>J 

CO 

t-  o 

t^ 

00  05 

t- 

T-H     C^ 

C5 

eo 

CO 

m 

m 

«  o 

&0 


O  tJ  -  S 

a   r  t»   c« 

a   3  a>  -t; 

t«  S  fl  SS 


H 


cq 


(S 


Op. 


0) 


cs 


cc   >%  O  ^ 

^^  4; ""  ^ 

Is  B  ^c 
^  «-S  o 

5=  o  cs    ^ 


H  '4> 


a) 


■^  a 


«SPH   rH 


HH 


Si 

Q 
P 


o 

t-3 


ft? 


CiTT   OF  EOXBORY,  March   6,   1863. 

The  undersigned,  Joint  Standing  Committee  on  Accounts,  in  pursuance  of 
the  provisions  of  tlie  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- 
rer, in  account  with  the  Commissioners  of  Forest  Hills  Cemetery,  and  find  the 
same  con-ectly  cast,  and  all  payments  and  expenditures  therein  charged  against 
the  Commissioners,  are  sustamed  by  the  necessary  vouchers. 

We  find  that  there  has  been  received  into  the  Treasury  on  account  of  the  Cem- 
etery at  sundry  times  within  the  year  ending  Jan.  31,  1863,  the  sum  of  thirty-seven 
thousand  sixty-five  and  55-000  dollars,  which,  with  ihe  balance  on  hand  February 
1,  1862,  of  twenty-seven  hundred  ten  and  59-100  dollars,  makes  a  total  receipt  of  the 
year  of  thirty-7iine  thousand  seven  hundred  seventy-six  and  1 4:-l  00  dollars ;  and  there 
has  been  paid  from  the  Treasury  during  the  same  period  on  the  order  of  the 
Commissioners,  the  sum  of  thirty-one  thousand  eight  hundred  seventy-four  and  5-100 
dollars,  leaving  a  balance  in  the  Treasury  February  1,  1863,  of  seven  thousand  nine 
hundred  two  and  9-100  dollars. 


SAMUEL  LITTLE, 
MOSES  H.  DAY, 
FRANKLIN   CURTIS, 
GEORGE  ONION, 
FRANCIS  W.  WELCH, 


Committee 

on 
Accounts, 


In  Common  Council,  March  9,  1863. 
Read  and  accepted,  and  sent  up  for  concurrence. 

JOSHUA  SEAVER,  aerk. 


In  Board  of  Aldermen,  March  9,  1863. 
Concurred. 


JOSEPH  W.  TUCKER,  City  Clerk. 


REAL   ESTATE   OWKED   BY  THE   CITY. 


5». 


187  feet,     24,000  00 


14,000  00 
30,000  00 
31,000  00 
19,000  00 


The  City  Hull,  (of  brick,)  buildings  adjacent  an. I  land         .         .         .  512,0(0  00 

The  Alnis-house,  (of  brick.)  barn  and  land,  about  il  acres  .         .         .       32,000  00 

The  r3welliiig-h<)use,  (of  wood,)  Highland  Street 3  000  00 

The  City  Wharf  at  Point,  21,471  feel,  .  .^ 1.5,000  00 

Dwelling-house,  (of  wood  )  and  land  on  Washington  Street         .         .         .         2,500  00 
Land,  corner  of  Washiniiton  and  Heath  Streets,  about  8^  acres,         .         .       14,2(i3  70 

Stony  Brook  Lands,  27,702  feet 7.000  00 

Wharf,  Swett  Street,  22,0GO  feet, 12,G27  74 

Land  on  VVinthrop  Street,  28  3  n  feet,  and  Brick  School-House,         .         .       12,000  00 

High  School-house,  (of  stone,)  and  land,  Kenilv.'orth  Street 

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

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

Street    ............. 

Dearborn  School-house,  (of  brick,)  and  24.500  feet  of  land,  near  Davis  St. 
Comins  School-house,  (of  brick,)  and  23,750  feet  of  land.  Gore  Avenue 
School-house,  (of  brick,)  and  18,936  feet  of  land,  George  Street, 
School-house,  (of  wood.)  and  5000  feet  of  land,  Yeoman  Street,  Nos.  1,  2, 

3  and  4 4,000  00 

School-house,  (of  wood,)   and  6396  feet  of  l.'\nd,  Eustis  and   Sumner  Sts., 

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

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

and    Intermediate 6,000  00 

School-house,  (of  wood,)  and  15.000  ft.  land,  Sudbury  St.,  Nos.  1 1,  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.)  Mill  Dam,  No.  17  ...... 

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

and  Grammar  School 

School-house,  (of  wood,)  and  land.  Centre  Street,  Nos.  23  and  24 
School-house,  (of  wood,)  and  1 1,600  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  feel  of  land,  Munroe  Street,  No.  28,  . 
School-house,  (of  wood,)  and  9,512  feet  of  land.  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  Avenue,  134,671  feet,  .... 

Madison  Square,  122,220  feet,  cost 27,250  98 

Orchard  Park,    79,337  feet,  cost 13,393  00 

Walnut  Park,  401,092     "        «  31,373  04 

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

valued 

Cemetery  on  Eustis  Street — not  valued 

Cemetery  on  Warren  Street — not  valued 


GOO  00 
2,600  00 
3,000  00 

4,000  00 
2,000  00 
4,800  00 

3,500  00 
4,000  00 
3,500  00 

10,000  00 

6,000  00 

3,500  00 

2,500  00 

600  00 

12,124  39 


^393,632  85 


EEP  0  RT 

OF   THE 

COMMISSIOME  OF  STREETS. 


In  compliance  with  the  provisions  of  the  fourth  section  of  the  Or- 
dinance concerning  Streets,  the  Street  Commissioner  has  the 
honor  to  submit  to  the  Citj  Council  his  Annual  Report  of  the 
Expenditures  on  the  Streets,  Sidewalks  and  Crossings,  from 
January  1,  1862,  to  December  27,  1862,  inclusive. 

Amount  expended  on  Bartlett  Street $53  87 

"  "  Sidewallks 4137 

$95  24 

"  "  Cedar  Street 86  05 

"  "  Sidewalks 55  90 

S141  95 

«  «  Centre  Street 223  53 

«  «  Sidewalks 94  33 

317  86 

"  "  Cabot  Street 685  01 

«  "  Sidewalks 53  40 

738  41 

"  "  Dudley  Street 482  89 

"  «  Sidewalks    153  75 

636  64 

«  "  Davis  Street 15108 

«  «  Sidewalks    -•  16  13 

167  21 

"  •«  Eustis  Street 70  05 

«'  «  Sidewalks    44  67 

114  72 

«  «  East  Street- • 335  23 

«  «  Sidewalks    188  35 

523  58 

"  «  Elm  Street 62  87 

«  «  Sidewalks    16  85 

79  72 

«  «  Edinboro'  Street 53  75 

«  «  Sidewalks    40  80 

94  55 

«  «'  Eliot  Square 522  50 

«  «  Sidewalks    24  28 

546  78 

»  ««  Francis  Street 20  00 

"  «  Sidewalks    28  57 

48  57 

Amount  carried  forward,  $3,505  23 


51 


Amount  hrought  forioard, 

,  ,mount  expended  on  Grove  Hall  Avenue 956  42 

"  "  Sidewalks    47  51 

«  «  Gay  Street 190  10 

"  "  Sidewalks    106  94 

«  «  Heath  Street 248  00 

«  "  Sidewalks    12  00 

«  «  HigWand  Street 14162 

«  «'  Sidewalks    Ill  07 

"  '<  Linden  Park 156  15 

«  "  Sidewalks    20  54 

«  "  Northampton  Street 64  21 

M  «  Sidewalks    25  00 

"  "  Plymouth  Street 183  37 

«  "  Sidewalks    46  50 

".  "  Rugjrles  Street 1,349  60 

"  »  SideValks    122  00 

«  »  Kussell  Place 66  80 

«  "  Sidewalks    33  12 

««  «  Shawmut  Avenue 1,261  30 

«  «  Sidewalks    396  21 

«  "  Square  at  Post  Office 263  59 

«  "  Sidewalks    35  70 

"  "  School  Street 82  00 

«'  "  Sidewalks    16  30 

"  "  Tremont  Street 202  41 

"  "  Sidewalks    107  15 

"  "  Washington  Street 1,495  63 

«  "  Sidewalks    241  32 

• 

"  "  Warren  Street 829  54 

»  »  Sidewalks    258  95 

«  "  Winslow  Street 112  28 

»  "  Sidewalks    24  90 

«                "  Yeoman  Street 137  50 

«                "  Sidewalks    28  12 


1,505 

23 

,003 

93 

297 

04 

260 

00 

252 

69 

176 

69 

89  21 


Amount  carried  forward, 


229 

87 

1,471 

60 

99 

92 

1,657 

51 

299 

29 

98 

30 

309 

56 

1,736 

95 

1,088 

49 

145 

18 

165 

62 

$12,887 

08 

52 

Amount  lirouglit  forward,  $12,887  08 

Amount  expended  on  Zeigler  Street 168  51 

"  "  Sidewalks    15  11 


183  62 

"                 "              Adams  Street 367 

«                 "              Mall  Street • 17  60 

«                «              Moreland  Street 68  71 

"                 "              Norfolk  Street 91  91 

"                 "              Parker  Street 1 18  38 

"                 «               Swett  Street 328  43 

"                 «               Avon  Place 14  40 

"                 "               Longwood  Bridge 431   69 

"                 "               Hawthorn,  Sidewalk 15  85 

"          s       "               Cunard  Street 132  87 

"                "              Gore  Avenue 1190 

"                 «               Clay  Street 373  17 

"                 "               Orange  Street 80  45 

"                 "              Norfolk  Avenue 185  24 

"                 "              Proctor  Street 1131 

"                 "               Cross  Street 7   75 

«                 "              Vine  Street,  Sidewalk 5  12 

«                "              Dale  Street  37  50 

"                 "              Repairing  and  building  new  cesspools  993   79 

"                 "              Removing  ice  and  snow  from  gutters  •  •  1,472  98 

"                 "               Cleaning  streets,  crossings  and  gutters  1,223  37 

"                 «              Watering  streets "^ 3,569  93 

«                 "              Running  ash  carts 1,695  00 

"                "              Repairs  on  stables 52  60 

"                 "              Hay,  grain  and  bedding 1,051  52 

"                "              Harnesses,  blankets  and  repairs 71  07 

"                 "              Repairing  and  building  newcarts----  145  27 

«                 «              Blacksmith's  work 1,127  62 

"                 "              Thomas  M.  Gottin,  hostler 396  00 

"                 «              Hardware,  shovels,  &c. 308  21 

*'                 "               Commissioner's  salary 999  96 

"                 "               Setting  out  trees,  and  building  guards  404   77 

"                 "              Iron  and  steel 399  40 

*'                 "              Labor  on  ledge,  Shawmut  Avenue-  ■  •  359  84 

"                «              One  horse 150  00 

*  S29,327  98 
There  is  due  the  City,  for  edge-stones  furnished  during  the 

year, • $608  73 

Also  for  watering  streets,   1,914  11 

$2,522  84 

Which  makes  the  cost  on  the  Highways  for  the  year, \  •  $26,805  14 

5,629  feet  of  edge-stones  have  been  set,  at  a  cost  of $450  32 

2,434  yards  of  cobble  paving  have  been  laid,  at  a  cost  of  1,373  98 
1,214  yards  of  granite  blocks,  for  crossings,  have  been  laid, 

at  a  cost  of 1,669  37 

460  yards  of  brick  paving,  for  sidewalks,  have  been  laid, 

at  a  cost  of 72  33 

1,284  feet  of  North  River  flagging,  or  bridge  stone,  have 

been  laid,  at  a  cost  of 552  12 


53 


Schedule  of  City  Property  in  charge  of  Commissioner. 


10  horses, 

9  cart  harnesses, 
4  chain  harnesses, 

2  carriage  harnesses, 

3  double  carts, 

4  single  carts, 
2  ash  carts, 

1  stone  waggon, 

2  ash  sleds, 

1  covered  waggon, 

1  open  waggon, 

1  pung, 

1  handcart  and  sled  for  tools, 

1  robe, 

12  horse  blankets, 

11  halters, 

1  wheel  jack, 

7  currycombs  and  brushes, 

I  hay  cutter, 

1  large  derrick, 
35  steel  jumpers, 

17  crowbars, 

25  striking  hammers, 
19  sledge  hammers, 

13  spoons  for  drillers, 
121  picks  and  handles, 

24  cracking  hammers, 

62  shovels,  (old  and  new,) 

25  snow  shovels, 

3  iron  rakes, 

5  steel  wedges, 

2  tamping  bars, 

4  chains  for  derrick, 
1  sand  screen, 

3  wrenches, 

18  street  lanterns, 

1  beetle  and  wedge. 


1  broom  press, 

1  sidewalk  snow  scraper, 

2  tackle  and  falls, 
4  cesspool  covers, 

7  set  cesspool  stones, 
2  tool  chests, 

1  powder  chest, 

2  ladders,  (14  feet  and  32  feet,) 
12  street  hoes, 

4  street  watering  pots, 

1  iron  roll  for  sidewalks, 
Lot  of  carpenter's  tools, 

2  fluid  cans  and  2  feeders, 
37  stone  monuments, 

10  tons  block  stone, 
50  feet  edge-stones, 
30  tons  hay,  in  stable, 
22  tree  guards,  in  sheds, 
4  long  runners  for  drillers, 

3  powder  cans, 

1  powder  cannister  and  tunnel, 
150  feet  of  fuse, 
7  kegs  powder, 

1  wheelbarrow, 

2  four-tin  ed  forks, 
2  bushel  baskets, 

1  post  spoon, 

1  iron  square, 

1  level, 

1  stone  hammer, 

1  set  (six)  steel  points, 

1  trowel, 

2  snow  plows, 

2  whiffletrees, 

3  dippers  for  cesspools, 
2  paving  hammers. 


blacksmith's  tools. 


2  pair  of  bellows, 

2  anvils, 

2  vices, 

1  large  tire  bender, 

1  drill  press, 

1  stone  platform  for  tires 
52  pair  of  tongs 

40  steel  punches, 

2  flatters, 

2  set  of  hammers, 
13  chisels, 
4  top  fullers, 

5* 


4  bottom  fullers, 
10  top  s wedges, 

10  bottom  s wedges, 

1  hollow  anvil, 

2  sledges, 

11  small  hammers, 

4  counter  set  swedges  and  4  bot- 
tom swedges, 
17  drills, 
4  counter  sinks, 

3  screw  wrenches, 
3  fork  wrenches, 


54 


1  rivet  cutter, 

1  drawing  knife, 

2  screw  plates,  with  taps  and  dies, 

5  tap  wrenches, 

2  leather  washer  cutters, 
1  bit  stock, 

10  bits; 

6  chisels, 

3  gouges, 


2  screw  drivers, 
2  herding  tools, 
1  set  horse-shoeing  tools, 
406  new  horse-shoes, 
215  lbs.  cast  steel, 
583  lbs.  iron. 

About    2,000   lbs.    blacksmith's 
coal. 


Respectfully  submitted, 

MOSES  H.  WEBBER, 

Commissioner  of  Streets. 


Schedule  of  City  Property  iu  charge  «>f  SuperintcndeMt  ©f  Sewers. 


34  picks  and  handles, 
98  old  shovels, 
1  spade, 

1  cask  of  10-8  nails, 

2  hammers, 

8  mason  hammers, 

1  iron  bar, 

3  cast-iron  sledges, 

2  hoisting  gins, 

1  fluid  can  and  feeder, 
8  hoisting  ropes,  with  hooks, 
15  feet  of  rubber  pipe, 

1  copper  pump  and  rubber  pipe, 

2  pair  of  rubber  boots, 
12  wheelbarrows,  (old,) 

4  lanterns, 

2  water  pails  and  1  dipper, 


7  oak  iron-bound  buckets, 
4  mortar  hoes, 

4  brick  hods, 

5  hoisting  tubs, 

2  ladders,  (2U  ft.  and  23  ft.) 
20  paving  rammers, 
4  mortar  beds, 
2  half  hogsheads, 
1  sand  screen, 

1  tool  crate,  ^ 

2  tool  chests, 

3  padlocks  and  keys  for  same, 

1  tire  engine,  hose  carriage  and 
hose  centres,  for  Davis,  Eus- 
tis,  Plymouth,  Elm,  Winslow 
and  kjumner  Street  sewers. 


Respectfully  submitted, 

MOSES  H.  WEBBER, 

Superintendent  of  Sewers. 


In  Board  of  Aldermen,  Jan.  12,  1863. 
Report  accepted  and  placed  on  file. 
Sent  down.  JOSEPH  W.  TUCKER,  City  Clerk. 


Concurred. 


In  Common  Council,  Jan.  12,  1863. 
JOSHUA  SEAVER,  Clerk. 


E  E  P  0  R  T 


OF    THE 


OVERSEERS  OF  THE  POOR. 


City  of  Roxbury,  Jan.  26,  1863. 

To  the  Board  of  Overseers  of  the  Poor  : 

Gentlemen — I  transmit  herewith  the  Report  of  the  Superin- 
tendent of  the  Alms-house,  the  Report  of  the  Agent  of  the  Over- 
seers of  the  Poor,  and  the  Report  of  the  Physician  to  the 
Alms-house,  and  recommend  that  the  same  be  printed  with  the 
Annual  Report  of  the  Receipts  and  Expenditures  of  the  Citj. 

GEORGE  LEWIS, 

Chairman  of  the  Overseers  of  the  Poor. 


In  Board  of  Overseers  of  the  Poor,  Jan.  26,  1863. 

Referred  to  the  Mayor  with  a  request  to  cause  the  whole  or  such  portion 
to  be  printed  as  he  deems  expedient,  with  the  Annual  Report  of  the 
Overseers  of  the  Poor,  in  connection  with  the  Receipts  and  Expenditures 
of  the  City. 

JOSHUA  SEAVER,  Secretary. 


56 


EEPORT    OF   THE   SUPERINTENDENT    OF   THE 
ALMS-HOUSE. 

RoxBURY  Alms-house,  Jajst.  26,  1863. 
To  the  Board  of  Overseers  of  the  Poor  of  the  City  of  Roxbury  : 

Gentlemen — The  time  having  again  arrived  for  me  to  present 
to  you  my  Annual  Report  relating  to  the  inmates  and  condition 
t)f  the  Almshouse,  I  beg  leave  to  present  the  following  state- 
jnents  : — 

The  number  of  inmates  in  the  house  Feb.  1,  1862,  .    37 
Admitted  having  settlement  in  this  City,  .         .18 

—  b5 
Discharged  and  absconded,  .         .         .         .         .11 

Present  number  belonging,  .         .         .         .44 

—  55 
The  number  of  paupers  sent  to  State  Alms-house,    .    72 
Number  of  travellers  provided  with  food  and  lodging,  250 

The  health  of  the  inmates  the  past  year  has  been  unusually 
good.  There  has  not  a  death  occurred  among  the  regular  in- 
mates of  the  house  during  the  year. 

There  have  been  several  State  paupers  admitted  to  the  house 
too  sick  to  be  moved  to  the  State  Alms-house.  Two  of  these  died, 
— one  was  an  insane  woman,  who  died  the  second  day  after  being 
admitted ;  the  other,  was  a  little  child  admitted  to  the  pest-house 
with  small-pox,  and  lived  but  a  few  days.  There  were  two  other 
cases  at  the  same  time. 

The  Physician,  Dr.  Flint,  has  been  faithful  to  the  trust  con- 
fided to  him.  His  professional  duties  have  been  discharged  in  a 
gentlemanly  and  highly  satisfactory  manner,  and  I  again,  with 
much  pleasure,  recommend  him  to  the  kind  consideration  of  the 
present  Board  of  Overseers.  For  a  fuller  statement  of  the  medi- 
cal department,  you  are  referred  to  the  Physician's  Report. 

The  class  of  inmates  now  occupying  the  house  are  mostly 
old  men  and  children,  and  are  not  able  to  perform  much  of  any 
kind  of  labor,  and  are  here  only  from  accidental  causes  entirely 


57 

beyond  their  control,  and  the  most  of  them  are  not  insensible  to 
the  many  favors  they  have  received  through  the  kind  home  that 
has  been  provided  for  them  at  the  Alms-house.  The  general  de- 
portment of  most  of  them  during  the  year  has  been  good.  The 
■whole  expense  for  the  support  of  the  Alms-house  the  past  year 
has  been  $4,440  10. 

The  City  have  belonging  to  the  Alms-house  about  the  same 
amount  of  stock  as  in  years  previous.  There  are  two  cows,  one 
horse,  four  hogs,  three  waggons,  one  horse-cart,  one  sleigh,  two 
harnesses,  and  farming  utensils  necessary  to  carry  on  and  culti- 
vate the  land  belonging  to  the  establishment.  There  are  also  two 
horses,  with  waggons  and  harnesses,  for  collection  of  house  offal, 
neither  of  wiiich  belongs  to  the  Alms-house  property.  The  ex- 
pense of  keeping  them  is  charged  to  the  house  offal  account. 

The  land  cultivated  the  past  year  has  produced  very  well ; 
sufficient  vegetables  of  all  kinds  have  been  raised  for  the  use  of 
the  house  the  present  year.  There  were  3,500  lbs.  of  pork  raised 
during  the  year. 

Gentlemen :  in  conclusion  we  say,  that  the  house  and  out-build- 
ings are  in  good  condition,  and  through  the  vigilance  of  the  seve- 
ral members  of  the  Board  of  Overseers  for  the  past  five  years, 
the  house  has  been  made  a  model  house,  for  convenience  and  com- 
fort not  to  be  surpassed  in  this  Commonwealth.  The  house  is 
furnished  with  sufficient  furniture,  beds  and  bedding  for  the  com- 
fort of  the  present  occupants,  and  I  know  of  no  additional  expense 
that  need  be  incurred  the  coming  year  for  repairs. 

I  remain,  gentlemen,  very  respectfully,  your  obedient  servant, 

Ezra  Young, 
Superintendent  of  Alms-house. 

N.  B.  The  only  birth  which  occurred  in  the  house  during  the 
year  took  place  on  Saturday  last.  An  Irish  woman,  giving  the 
name  of  Ellen  Pope,  made  her  way  into  the  Police  Station  about 
8  o'clock,  A.  M.,  and  was  immediately  brought  to  the  house,  and 
at  1  o'clock,  P.  M.  gave  birth  to  an  heir  to  the  Commonwealth 
of  Massachusetts. 


58 


REPORT  OF  THE  AGENT  OF  THE  OVERSEERS 
OF  THE  POOR. 

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

Gentlemen — Herewith  I  present  a  brief  report  of  mj  proceed- 
ings, as  your  Agent,  for  the  year  commencing  the  1st  of  Febru- 
ary, 1862.  The  precise  amount  expended  for  those  having  no 
settlement^  I  have  not  made  up,  but  will  hazard  the  opinion  that 
about  three-fourths  of  the  entire  amount  is  dispensed  to  that  class. 
I  had  supposed  the  calls  this  winter  would  be  less  than  in  win- 
ters gone  by,  for  various  reasons.  One,  that  mechanical  labor 
has  never  been  in  such  demand  in  any  winter  since  I  have  filled 
this  position.  Another,  that,  thus  far,  we  have  had  a  milder  win- 
ter than  for  many  years.  But  the  calls  are  about  the  same  as  in 
winters  past.  In  many  cases,  with  the  approval  of  the  Overseers 
of  the  Ward,  I  say,  no.  I  am  also  fully  satisfied,  that,  in  some 
of  the  cases,  where  the  710  is  not  given,  that  it  would  be  more  for 
the  interest  of  the  City,  the  giver,  and  for  the  recipient  to  have  it 
given,  emphatically,  because  the  class  that  I  speak  of  should  go 
where  they  can  be  provided  for  by  the  State,  whose  duty  it  is, 
and  not  ours,  instead  of  remaining  here  in  idleness,  and  depend- 
ent upon  public  and  private  charity.  But  little  has  been  given  by 
your  Agent  in  the  six  months  from  last  March,  except  in  cases  of 
extreme  want  and  settlement  cases.  Since  the  first  of  December, 
and  including  this  month,  a  large  amount  has  been  given,  say 
about  one  thousand  dollars,  of  which,  about  one  fifth  has  been 
given  to  persons  having  a  legal  settlement  here  or  elsewhere  in 
the  State,  and,  therefore,  chargeable  to  the  town  or  city  liable  by 
law  to  pay  it.  I  have  prepared  a  table  for  this  month,  which  will 
probably  indicate  about  the  proportions  with  which  these  amounts 
are  distributed. 


69 


Settlement  cases,  .... 

No  settlement,  Ward  1,  68  families,  about 


a 

u 

a 

2,  15 

a 

a 

(( 

a 

u 

3,  58 

li 

u 

(( 

li 

ic 

4,    4 

a 

li 

(( 

u 

it 

5,    3 
Making 

in  all, 

li 

$185 

00 

190 

00 

60 

00 

190 

00 

13 

00 

10 

00 

$598  00 


Of  those  having  no  settlement,  many  are  the  wives  and  parents 
of  soldiers,  who,  it  is  true,  get  the  State  and  City's  liberal  allow- 
ance, some  of  them  $18  per  month,  but  none  from  the  soldiers, 
they  not  having  received  any  pay  from  the  U.  S.  Government  for 
months.  With  the  approval  of  the  Overseer  for  the  Ward,  I 
have  given  in  such  cases  a  considerable  amount.  The  amount 
expended  is  greater  than  the  previous  year  ;  one  reason  of  which 
is,  that  fuel,  the  article  mostly  given,  is  50  per  cent,  higher  than 
last  year,  $9  per  ton,  for  coal,  against  $6  last  year.  Much  less 
was  done  in  December  last,  in  the  way  of  transient  aid,  than  in 
the  corresponding  month  of  1861.  Applicants  were  put  off  until 
January,  and  that  accounts  for  the  increase  in  a  great  degree. 

Respectfully  submitted. 


Joshua  Seaver,  Agent. 


Roxhury,  Jan.  26,  1863. 


60 


REPOPvT   OF   THE   PHYSICIAN  TO   THE   ALMS- 
HOUSE. 

RoxBURY,  Jan.  26,  1883. 
To  the  Overseers  of  the  Poor  of  the  City  of  Roxhury  : 

Gentlemen — -The  health  of  the  inmates  the  past  j^ear  has 
been  unusually  good.  The  sickness  that  has  prevailed,  for  the 
most  part,  has  been  of  such  a  nature  as  we  might  expect  in  a 
class  of  persons,  many  of  whom  are  life-long  invalids.  At  the 
beginning  of  the  year  the  number  was  thirty-seven,  and  at  the 
present  time  forty-six,  of  whom  one  half  are  under  twenty  years 
of  age. 

Fewer  cases  than  ever  before  have  been  admitted,  either  of 
acute  disease,  accident,  or  insanity.  During  the  last  spring,  a 
family  consisting  of  mother  and  three  children  under  seven  years 
of  age,  were  brought  here,  with  one  child  in  the  advanced  stage 
of  small-pox,  which  very  briefly  was  fatal.  Just  prior  to  admis- 
sion, the  other  two  children  had  been  vaccinated,  but  this,  after 
a  few  days,  proving  to  be  without  success,  they  were  re-vaccina- 
ted, in  season  to  modify  the  severity  of  the  disease,  and  exhibit, 
in  a  marked  degree,  the  protective  power  of  vaccination.  Both 
had,  varioloid,  and  both  were  speedily  convalescent.  In  October 
a  woman  was  brought  here  in  a  state  of  active  delirium^,  resulting 
from  typhoid  fever.  She  soon  became  comatose,  and  Avithin  about 
thirty-six  hours  was  dead.  These  two  deaths  comprise  all  that 
have  occurred  among  the  inmates  during  the  year. 

In  August  the  Institution  suffered  a  serious  loss  in  the  sudden 
decease  of  its  most  excellent  and  efficient  matron.  She  had  been 
for  a  long  time  connected  with  the  establishment  in  some  capa- 
city, was  well  versed  in  the  requisite  duties  of  the  place,  and 
seemed  by  nature  eminently  fitted  for  the  position  in  which  she 


61 


was  placed.  With  a  heart  keenly  sensitive  to  the  sufferings  of 
those  around  her,  and  a  hand  ever  open  to  extend  every  possible 
relief,  with  the  prompt  word  of  encouragement  for  all  in  des- 
pondency or  affliction,  and  the  ready  excuse  at  command  in  ex- 
tenuation of  fault,  her  kindly  sympathies  here  found  ample  scope, 
and  her  life,  quiet  and  unobtrusive,  was  spent  in  doing  good  to 
all  within  her  sphere.  While  we  mourn  her  untimely  death,  and 
extend  to  those  in  bereavement  this  brief  tribute  of  our  sympathy, 
we  will  ever  remember,  with  feelings  of  cordial  respect,  her  many 
admirable  traits  of  character,  and  the  record  of  her  blameless  life. 

The  condition  of  the  house  is  every  thing  that  could  be  de- 
sired ;  if  deficiency  exist  in  any  respect,  it  has  escaped  my  obser- 
vation. The  inmates  feel,  for  the  most  part,  I  think,  that  every 
needed  provision  for  their  comfort  is  liberally  supplied,  and  only 
such  restrictions  are  placed  on  their  liberty  as  seem  most  likely 
to  promote  their  personal  well  being  and  the  common  good  of  all. 

And,  finally,  to  every  one  concerned  in  the  management  of 
this  Institution  is  due  much  of  commendation,  for  successful  effort 
to  make  it  a  model  of  its  kind,  a  home  for  the  destitute,  a  credit 
to  the  City. 

Respectfully  submitted, 

John  S.  Flint, 
Physician  to  the  Alms-house. 


REPORT 


ON 


BIRTHS,  MARRIAGES  AND  DEATHS, 

1862. 


To  the  Monorahle  Mayor  and  City  Council : 

Gentlemen — The  following  tabular  statement  in  relation  to  the 
Registration  of  Births,  Marriages  and  Deaths  in  the  Cit  j  of  Rox- 
bury  for  the  year  1862,  is  respectfully  submitted. 

JOSEPH  W.  TUCKER,  City  Registrar. 

Taljie  'SSo.  1. 

BIRTHS  REGISTERED  IN  THE  CITY  OF  EOXBURY  IN  THE  YEAR  1862. 

Males 425 

Females • 361 

Total 786 

Both  parents  native  born 200 

Both  parents  foreigners 514 

One  parent  native  born 72 

Total • 786 

Born  in  each  month  as  folloics  : 

January,  February,  March,  April,  May,  June, 

■   50  49  63  64  52  49 

July,      August,       September,       October,       November,      December, 
59  73  90  58  84  95 

MARRIAGES  REGISTERED  IN  THE  CITY  OF  ROXBURY  IN  THE  YEAR  1862. 

American  parents  both 68 

Foreign  parents  both 142 

American  one — foreign  one 24 

Total 234 

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

22  "  17  16  15  18  22 

July,      August,       September,       October,      November,      December, 
17  21  23  23  28  12 


63 


MORTUARY     STATISTICS. 
Xable  ]Vo.  2. 

Diseases  and  Causes  of  Death  in  Roxbury  in  1862. 


DISEASES. 

s 

CS 

i-s 

O 

a 

< 

c 
s 

O 

o 

ft 

3 
o 
H 

Accidents 

1 

3 

1 

1 
6 

8 

1 

1 
2 

4 

1 

1 

2 

4 

1. 

2 

1 
1 

4 
45 

2 
1 

1 
4 

1 
2 

1 
2 
1 
1 
1 

4 

1 

2 
1 

3 

4 
1 
1 

4 
2 

8 

1 
2 

51 

1 

1 
2 

1 

2 
3 

1 

2 

I 
1 

3 

4 

4 

2 

3 
1 

1 
1 
2 
6 

6 

1 
3 

1 

1 
6 

-    2 

1 

1 
3 

1 
1 

5 

1 
3 

1 
1 

3 

8 
2 
1 
2 
2 

1 
2 

1 
1 

1 

5 

61 

1 

2 

1 
6 
3 
2 

1 
1 

3 

2 

1 
1 
2 

1 

5 
1 

2 

1 

1 
3 

40 

1 

2 

1 
3 

2 

1 
1 

1 
1 

1 

7 
2 

1 
1 

5 
1 

1 
6 

38 

1 

1 
2 

1 

6 
2 

1 
4 
1 
1 

1 

1 

3 

1 
1 

2 

2 

1 
1 
2 

1 

7 
43 

2 

4 

1 
1 
1 
2 
6 

1 

19 

2 

2 
2 

1 

2 

1 
3 

1 

4 

1 
2 

5 

1 

1 
2 

11 

78 

2 

2 

4 

U 

2 

2 

1 

2 
9 
1 

2 

12 

1 

1 
1 
2 

2 

7 

9 

73 

2 

3 
1 

2 
1 

2 

2 

5 

1 

1 

3 

1 

1 

1 

4 

2 
6 

38 

1 
1 

1 

1 

4 
3 

1 

2 

1 
2 

1 
1 

2 

2 

1 

2 
2 

1 

2 

3 

4 

1 

7 

46 

2 
1 

1 
2 

7 
4 

1 

3 

2 

1 

1 
4 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 
1 

1 

1 

10 

47 

7 

Apoplexy 

3 

Abscess 

1 

Bowels,  diseases  of  the 

Brain,  diseases  of  the 

Bronchitis 

10 

20 

5 

Burnt  by  fire 

-S 

Canker 

2 

Cancer  

1 

Childbirth,  diseases  of 

Consumption    

11 

58 

Convulsions 

20 

Croup    

13 

Cholera  Infantum    

Dropsy 

37 
12 

Drowning 

4 

Dysentery 

1^ 

Diptheria 

4 

Debility 

10 

Erysipelas 

9. 

Fever,  Lunp: 

18 

"       Typhoid   

21 

"       Typhus 

« 

"       Scarlet 

2fi 

Fits    

S 

Heart,  diseases  of  the 
Hooping  Cough  

12 
11 

Insanity 

2 

Infantile  diseases 

S3 

Intemperance    

3 

Killed  in  battle 

IS 

Liver,  diseases  of  the 

Marasmus 

3 

18 
2 

19 

Old  Age   

19 

Pneumonia    

7 

Paralysis   

8 

Phthisis 

23 

Scarletina 

fi 

Stillborn    

34 

Suffocation   

2 

2 

"  Small-pox 

1 

Spine  Complaint 

2 

Teething    

17 

Ulcer 

2 

Other  causes 

76 

608 

REPORT 


CITY     MAKSHAL. 


To  the  Mayor  and  Aldermen  of  the  City  of  Roxbury  : 
Gentlemen — I  herewith  present  the  Annual  Report  of  the 

Police  Department  for  the  year  1862,  viz  : 

There  have  been  1252  arrests,  13  of  which  were  for  offences 

committed  without  the  city ;  leaving  1239  in  the  city  alone,  being 

100  less  than  the  year  previous. 


le  arrests  were  for  the  following  causes,  v 

iz  : 

Drunkenness, 

592 

Assault  and  battery,     . 

154 

Larceny,     .... 

103 

Violation  of  city  ordinances, 

95 

Common  drunkards, 

75 

Disturbing  the  peace,    . 

46 

Vagrancy,  . 

46 

Desertion, 

17 

Stubbornness, 

16 

Threatening  bodily  harm. 

15 

Violation  of  the  Sunday  law. 

13 

Fruit  pilfering,     . 

13 

Malicious  mischief, 

7 

Truancy,     .... 

6 

Breaking  and  entering, 

5 

Lewdness, 

5 

65 


Assault  on  officers, 

4 

Fugitives  from  justice,           .          .          .          . 

4 

Larceny  in  a  building,           .         .         .         . 

4 

Larceny  from  the  person,      .         .         .         . 

3 

Insanity,     ....... 

3 

Burglary,    ....... 

2 

Fast  driving, 

2 

Assault,  with  intent  to  commite  a  rape, 

2 

Attempt  at  rescue,       .         .         .         .         . 

2 

Assault  with  a  dangerous  weapon. 

2 

Attempt  at  larceny  from  the  person. 

2 

Idle  and  disorderly  persons. 

1 

Night-walking,     ...... 

1 

Violation  of  the  Bird  law,      ... 

1 

Forgery, 

1 

Perjury, 

1 

Passing  counterfeit  money,    .         .         .         . 

1 

Receiving  stolen  goods, 

1 

Indecent  exposure,       .         .         .         .         . 

1 

Surrendered  by  bail,    .         .         .         .         . 

1 

Common  begging,          .... 

1 

Interfering  with  officers. 

1 

Refusing  to  give  information  to  the  Assessors, 

1 

Runaway  boy,      ..... 

1 

Attempt  to  pass  worthless  bills. 

1 

Total, 

.      1252 

Disposed  of  as  follows,  viz.  : — 

Discharged  without  complaint. 

664 

Fined  and  paid,  ..... 

185 

Sentenced  to  the  House  of  Correction,    . 

181 

Committed  for  non-payment  of  fine, 

82 

Placed  on  file, 

68 

Discharged  by  Court,  .... 

54 

Put  on  probation,          .... 

27 

Sentence  postponed,     .... 

24 

6* 


66 


Bound  over  to  the  Superior  Court, 
Appealed,  ..... 

Transferred  to  Judge  of  Probate,  and  sent  to 

.  State  Reform  School, 
Committed  for  want  of  bail, 
Put  under  bonds  to  keep  the  peace  and  fined. 
Put  under  bonds  to  keep  the  peace  without  fine 
Ordered  to  paj  costs, 
Allowed  to  leave  the  city. 
Allowed  to  enhst,         .... 

Total, 


18 
15 

14 
9 
6 
2 
1 
1 
1 

1252 


Of  the  13  arrests,  for  offences  committed  without  the  city, 
5  were  for  breaking  and  entering, — 4  for  assault  and  battery, — 
2  for  malicious  mischief, — 1  for  larceny,  and  1  for  fruit  pilfering. 

One  thousand  and  eight  of  the  arrests  were  of  persons  of  foreign 
birth,  and,  of  the  remainder,  79  were  born  in  Roxbury, — 219 
were  minors,  and  279  were  females. 

Four  hundred  and  thirty-nine  persons  have  been  provided  with 
lodgings  in  the  lock-up,  of  which  346  were  foreigners, — 77  were 
females,  and  44  were  minors. 

The  regular  force  of  the  department  consists  of  the  Marshal, 
7  day  men,  11  watchmen,  and  the  keeper  of  the  lock-up,  who  acts 
as  ofiicer  of  the  Court. 

The  expenses  have  amounted  to  $16,052  35,  being  about 
$200  less  than  the  year  previous. 

The  fees  of  the  police  are  mostly  drawn  by  the  Clerk  of  the 
Police  Court,  and  by  him  paid  over  to  the  City  Treasurer,  and, 
as  far  as  can  now  be  ascertained,  are  about  $500  less  than  in  the 
year  1861.  This  diminution  is  owing  to  the  smaller  number  of 
complaints  and  commitments,  and  to  the  reduction  of  fees  by  an 
Act  passed  by  our  Legislature  during  the  session  of  1862. 

The  amount  paid  for  special  poHce  service  has  been  $232, 
while  in  1861  it  was  $571,  and  in  1860  it  was  $1,310. 

I  have  paid  out  $120  99  for  arresting  and  securing  prisoners, 
conveying  them  to  Dedham,  &c.,  and  have  received  for  fees  and 
service  of  the  police,  $51  80. 


67 

Our  City  has  been  quiet  and  orderly  during  the  past  year,  not- 
withstanding the  excitement  attending  upon  enlisting.  In  conse- 
quence of  recruiting,  a  large  amount  of  extra  labor  was  required 
of  the  police.  These  extra  services  were  all  rendered  cheerfully 
and  without  pay. 

Intemperance  still  exists  in  our  City,  yet  it  does  not  seem  to 
have  increased  during  the  year.  I  have,  as  yet,  seen  no  reason  for 
changing  my  opinion,  that  a  judicious  license  law  presents  the 
only  practical  way  for  mitigating  the  evil. 

Our  City  has  not  suffered  much  from  robberies  during  the 
year,  and  the  number  of  incendiary  fires  has  been  comparatively 
small,  and  had  not  the  Fire  Inquest  law  been  abolished,  perhaps 
the  number  would  have  been  still  less. 

The  early  re-establishment  of  the  Truant  School  would,  I  am 
fully  convinced,  be  highly  conducive  to  the  welfare  of  the  City, 
as  a  large  number  of  idle  and  mischievous  boys  might  then  be 
taken  care  of,  and  kept  from  the  commission  of  crime. 

Many  rebellious  dogs  have  met  their  just  doom  within  the  past 
year,  and  the  canine  undertaker  still  goes  the  rounds,  with  hook 
and  spade,  performing  his  useful  labors,  and  has  buried  during 
the  year,  753  dogs  ;  116  hogs  ;  61  goats ;  1,025  cats,  and  1 
skunk — 1,956  bodies  in  all.  These  were  found  in  the  creeks, 
vacant  lots,  and  -public  streets.  Though  the  undertaker  is  con- 
sidered honest,  yet,  it  must  be  confessed,  that  he  hooked  quite  a 
large  number  of  these  dead  bodies  before  burying  them. 

The  Roxbury  Police  still  maintains  its  character  for  usefulness 
and  efficiency,  its  members  continuing  faithful  and  prompt  in  the 
discharge  of  duty. 

Since  Roxbury  became  a  City,  nearly  every  man  who  has  re- 
ceived an  appointment  as  a  regular  police  officer,  whether  in  the 
department  now  or  not,  is  still  living,  with  the  exception  of  Mr. 
James  D.  Loker,  who,  conceiving  it  to  be  his  duty  to  leave  the 
service  of  the  City  for  that  of  his  country,  enhsted  as  a  soldier  in 
Capt.  Graham's  Company  in  August  last.  He  went  to  the  seat 
of  war,  and  died  in  the  service  of  his  country.  He  was  an  honest 
man,  a  faithful  and  vigilant  police  officer,  and  stood  high  as  a  sol- 


68 

dier.  His  death  is  a  loss  to  the  Citj,  and  to  the  company  and 
regiment  to  which  he  was  attached. 

Six  of  the  police  have  sent  their  sons  to  the  war, — one  sending 
three,  another  two,  and  four  one  each.  But  one  member  of  the 
department  has  a  son  old  enough  who  has  not  gone,  he  being 
lame.  This  fact  I  cannot  but  regard  as  an  honor  to  the  depart- 
ment and  to  the  Citj,  as  well  as  to  those  whose  sons  have  become 
soldiers  in  the  service  of  their  country. 

The  subject  of  uniforming  the  police  has  once  been  before  a 
former  City  Government,  which  did  not  then  deem  the  measure 
expedient.  I  am  aware  that  objections  are  offered  to  a  uniform  ; 
but  I  have  never  heard  of  but  one  worthy  of  any  consideration  ; 
and  that  is,  that  a  police  officer  in  uniform  may  be  more  easily  seen 
by  rogues  and  thieves.  No  doubt  such  would  be  the  case.  So, 
too,  could  honest  men  see  him  better,  when  they  wished  to  call  on 
him  for  help. 

Complaint  is  often  made  that  a  police  officer  can  never  be  seen 
where  he  is  wanted,  when,  perhaps,  he  is  often  near,  but  cannot 
be  distinguished  from  other  citizens.  The  known  presence  of  a 
police  officer  in  a  crowd,  will,  in  most  cases,  prevent  a  breach  of 
the  peace  ;  and  in  case  of  a  row,  an  officer  in  uniform  is  not  so 
liable  to  personal  assaults,  as  one  in  citizen's  dress.  A  former 
Deputy  Chief  of  the  Boston  Police  informed  me  that  after  their 
men  were  uniformed,  the  assaults  on  officers  diminished  one  half. 

One  of  the  great  objects  of  a  police  organization  is  the  preven- 
tion of  crime,  as  well  as  the  detection  of  the  criminal.  I  feel 
fully  convinced  that  the  uniforming  of  the  most  of  the  police  would 
add  much  to  their  efficiency  in  the  way  of  prevention,  and  detract 
nothing  in  the  way  of  detection  ;  and  I  would,  therefore,  recom- 
mend the  subject  for  your  consideration. 

Before  our  Police  Court,  wealth  and  poverty  meet  on  equal 
terms,  and  mercy  is  never  lost  sight  of. 

The  regular  Clerk  of  the  Police  Court  went  to  the  seat  of  war 
as  a  surgeon  ;  and  the  Clerk  pro  tern.,  who  took  his  place,  is  also 
gone.  They  both  left,  follo^^^ed  by  the  good  wishes  of  those  with 
whom  they  were  officially  associated,  who  cheerfully  bear  testi- 
mony to  the  faithfulness  with  which  they  performed  tlieir  duties 


69 

here.  The  present  Clerk  pro  tem.  is  believed  to  be  fully  compe- 
tent, and  gives  entire  satisfaction  to  all  who  have  business  with 
our  Police  Court. 

The  City  Physician  has  always  been  prompt  and  attentive 
whenever  he  has  been  called  upon  by  the  police  to  attend  to  such 
prisoners  as  required  medical  assistance  ;  and  the  demands  upon 
him  have  been  quite  frequent. 

My  thanks  are  due  to  the  Government  of  last  year  for  the  con- 
fidence reposed  in  me  ;    to  the  several  members  of  the  Police 
Department,  for  their  cheerful  co-operation  ;  and  to  all  who  have 
given  me  their  countenance  and  support  in  the  discharge  of  duty. 
Respectfully  submitted, 

BENJAMIN  MERIAM, 

City  Marshal. 

Roxhury,  January,  1863. 


In  Board  of  Aldermen,  Jan.  26,  1863. 
Referred  to  the  Committee  on  Accounts,  with  instructions  to  cause  the 
same  to  be  printed  with  the  Annual  Report  of  Receipts  and  Expenditures. 
Sent  down  for  concurrence. 

JOSEPH  W.  TUCKER,  City  Clerk. 

In  Common  Council,  Jan.  26,  1863. 
Concurred. 

JOSHUA  SEAVER,  Clerk. 


REPORT 


dt^^ief  ^ngmeer  of  %  Jfire  Jepartntent. 


To  the  Honorable  Mayor ^  Aldermen  and  Common  Council : 

Gentlemen, — I  herewith  submit  my  Annual  Report  of  the 
condition  of  the  Fire  Department  of  the  City  of  Roxbury. 

The  number  of  hand  Engines  in  active  use  is  three,  the  same 
as  last  year,  retaining  their  old  numbers,  viz  :  No.'s  one,  six  and 
seven. 

Also  one  Steam  Fire  Engine,  and  Hose  carriage  connected ; 
one  Hose  carriage,  and  one  Hook  and  Ladder  carriage,  which 
constitute  the  entire  force  of  the  apparatus  now  in  service. 

During  the  past  year,  there  have  not  been  any  fires  of  great 
magnitude  ;  the  most  serious  being  the  burning  of  Capt.  Welsh's 
house  on  Lambert  Avenue  and  an  establishment  on  Pine  Island  ; 
and  we  have  been  able  to  get  along  without  assistance  from 
abroad. 

The  discipline  of  the  department  has  been  perfect,  not  a  case 
of  insubordination  having  been  reported,  thus  relieving  the  Board 
of  Aldermen  of  an  annoyance  which  in  many  previous  years  has 
been  serious. 

During  the  past  year  two  reservoirs  have  been  constructed  in 
much  needed  parts  of  the  city,  and  I  recommend  the  same  num- 
ber be  built  this  year. 


i 


71 

The  Hand  Engines,  Hose,  and  Hook  and  Ladder  carnages  are 
in  good  working  condition,  care  being  taken  to  have  them  alwajs 
in  good  repair,  believing  it  to  be  better  economy  to  make  little 
repairs  when  needed,  than  to  postpone  till  a  large  outlay  would 
be  inevitable. 

The  working  of  the  Steamer  is  very  satisfactory  and  reliable. 
When  it  was  first  put  in  use,  it  often  disappointed,  and  would 
sometimes  fail  just  when  its  service  was  almost  indispensable. 
But  a  radical  defect  in  its  suction  has  been  discovered  and  reme- 
died, and  now  it  works  quick  and  never  fails. 

I  would  respectfully  recommend  that  another  Steamer  be  pur- 
chased by  the  city.  The  experience  of  other  cities  has  fully 
tested  their  utility,  and  in  many  places  the  hand  engines  have 
given  way  entirely  to  steam.. 

The  cost  of  running  a  steamer  with  the  hose  carnage  is  about 
one-third  more  than  that  of  a  hand  engine,  but  should  a  new 
steamer  be  purchased,  two  of  those  now  in  use  could  be  dispensed 
with  and  a  large  annual  saving  made.  The  old  spirit  of  rivalry, 
and  love  of  excitement,  which  formerly  distinguished  firemen  is 
fast  subsiding,  much,  we  believe,  to  the  welfare  and  benefit  of  the 
community  ;  but  it  is  followed  by  a  great  reluctance  on  the  part 
of  our  well  disposed  and  orderly  citizens  to  join  the  department, 
from  the  severe  physical  labor  and  exposure  incident  thereto. 

Other  evils  M^hich  in  the  past  have  been  apparent,  ^yould  also 
be  avoided,  and,  we  are  firm  in  the  belief,  if  we  had  an  entire 
steam  apparatus  for  extinguishing  fires,  it  would  become  strictly  a 
matter  of  business,  and  the  city  would  be  efiectually  guarded 
against  the  calamities  of  fire. 

The  hose  purchased  last  year  of  the  Belting  Co.  has  fully 
answered  expectations.  It  is  durable,  easily  kept  clean,  and 
needs  no  oiling. 

The  engine  houses  are  in  good  repair,  except  the  house  of  No. 
seven,  where  quite  a  large  sum  will  be  necessary  to  put  it  in  good 
order ;  and  even  after  this  is  done,  it  is  not  so  large  as  is  desirable. 

The  whole  number  of  alarms  was  fifteen  less  than  that  of  1861, 
and  there  was  but  one  false  alarm. 


72 


Whole  number  of  alarms  last  year,  . 

. 

Actual  Fires, 

83 

Alarms  out  of  the  City,  . 

7 

False  Alarm, 

1 

Struck  by  lightning, 

1 

42 


42 
Total  Amount  of  Loss,  $41,235.     Insurance,  $34,450. 

It  gives  me  pleasure  to  acknowledge  the  harmonious  action  of 
my  associates  in  the  Board  of  Engineers,  and  their  zealous  devo- 
tion to  the  interests  of  the  city. 

The  accompanying  documents  give  a  full  report  of  the  members 
of  the  department,  condition  of  the  engines  and  apparatus,  list  of 
hydrants  and  reservoirs,  and  the  general  condition  of  the  depart- 
ment. 

Kespectfully  submitted, 

JAMES  MUNROE, 

Chief  Engineer. 


In  Common  Council,  Eeb.  24,  1863. 

Report  accqsted  and  referred  to  the  Committee  on  Accounts,  with  instructions 
to  print  with  the  Annual  Report  of  Receipts  and  Expenditures. 
Sent  up  for  <x>ncurrence. 

JOSHUA  SEAVER,  aerh. 


Concurred. 


In  Board  op  Aldermen,  Eeb.  24,  1863. 
JOSEPH  W.  TUCKER,  CUy  Clerk. 


73 


<^ 

<I 
I— I 

P5 

P? 

<5 
o 

p 
ft 
< 
}^ 

p 

<1 

M 
o 
o 

M 

P 

to 

o 
W 

I— I 


O     O     O     O     C3     O     O 


a- "8 

GO      - 

si 
^^ 

1*  on 
-.  « 
tn   Q^ 

S  o 

•    >>  M 

■^  =  <! 

o    -©< 


E 


hLl 

m 

tB~ 

m" 

oT 

O  tSiS 

0) 

a 
^ 

0) 

■SCQ  ^ 

o 

o 

o 

o 

3 

d 

s 

rri 

:a 

CQ 

CQ 

i:q 

<n 

e^ 

<£) 

<£) 

to 

a:^«^» 

cT 

oT 

aT 

£o  «- 

M 

bD 

to 

tD 
C5 

ImI 

£  S  " 

o 

u 

u 

u 

U 

S-^'o 

4) 

0! 

o 

2    O    (D 

m 

o 

o 

O 

o 

o 

X 

K 

E 

S 

K 

-1^  o 
(U  o 
OS* 


o  o 

=  32 


CO       j3 


i;      OQ 


(U  0-        WJ  CO 


c«    '-a 


W     '^     Bi 


Q    z;    z;'  2;    a    a    K 


•-  c 

0)  "O 


r^    ^    V  "r: 
S   o   e)  C/3 


•2   O   O   o 


£5  o; 


S  o  —  u  i; 

.  O  S  J5     ■  >  3 
®  o  O  ^,  o 

C-' t-'C-'  a;  o  „ 

E  H°  °  °  t- "~  — 

S  (J~  a^  ar"D  S  eq 
(D  m  m  m  nJ     -^ 

o  0)  (u  (u  *  bC  ° 
■2.S  =  S-^  0)^ 

n  bO  So  bii  o   <n  ■- 
OJ  =  c  c  o  °  aJ 

Q  y  a  y  H!  33  =2 

'■  s 


74 


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 
38 
39 
40 
41 


Location. 


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         ...... 

Corner  of  Washington  and  Ruggles  Streets 

Corner  of  Vernon  and  Auburn  Streets 

Corner  of  Dudley  and  Kenilworth  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,  junction  of  Warren 
Pearl  Street  ..... 

Eustis,  corner  of  East  Street    . 

Copeland  Square 

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  Alleg^hany  Streets 

East  Street,  opposite  Norfolk  Avenue 

Washington  Street,  opposite  City  Holel, 

Swell  Street,  near  Lead  Factory, 

Shawmut  Avenue,  .... 

Walnut  Street,  .... 

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

Wellin  Samuel  Guild's  yard,  near  Bartlett  Street 

Well  in  Patent  Leather  Works  yard,  Water  Street 

Reservoir  corner  of  Highland  and  Cedar  Street 

Reservoir  corner  of  Grove  Hall  Avenue  &  Winthrop  St 


No.  of 
Gallons. 


25,000 
30,000 
16,000 
25,000 
15,000 
15,000 
15,000 
18,000 
18,000 
18,000 
18,000 
18,000 
18,000 
18.000 
18,000 
18,000 
18,000 
18,000 
18,000 
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 

30,000 


45,000 
45,000 


Condition. 


Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Not  Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 
Good. 


75 


HYDRANTS, 


PROM  MOUNT  WARREN,  COCHITUATE  AND  JAMAICA  POND  PIPES. 


No. 

Location. 

Source. 

Condition. 

1 

St.  James  Street 

Mt.  W. 

Good. 

2 

Alpine  Street 

u 

Good. 

3 

Near  St,  James  Street           .... 

l( 

Good. 

4 

Dale  Street 

" 

Good. 

6 

Tremont  Street,  corner  ofB'ranklin  Place    . 

Cochit. 

Good. 

5 

'rremoiit  Street,  corner  of  Sudbury  Street 

" 

Good. 

7 

Tremont  Street,  corner  of  Ruggles  Street 

ti 

Good. 

8 

Tremont  Street,  opposite  Carpet  Works 

" 

Good. 

9 

iSidewalkj  Texas  Avenue,      .... 

" 

Good. 

10 

Washington  Street,  corner  of  Phillips  Place      . 

It 

Good. 

11 

Washington  Street,  opposite  Isaac  Davis's    . 

" 

Good. 

12 

Ruggles  Street,  opposite  the  late  Catholic  Church 

J.  Pond. 

Good. 

13 

Vernon  Street,  corner  of  Belmont  Street 

" 

Good. 

14 

Vernon  Street,  corner  of  Washington  Street 

u 

Good. 

15 

Davis  Street,  corner  of  Webber  Street 

u 

Good. 

16 

East  Street,  opposite  Stubb's  shop 

" 

Good. 

17 

East  Street,  corner  of  Davis  Street 

" 

Good. 

18 

Swett  Street,  near  Curtis  &  Blake's  Mill, 

It 

Good. 

19 

Corner  of  Orchard  and  Eustis  Streets,  . 

tl 

Good. 

19 

Orchard  Street,  corner  of  Eustis, 

" 

Good. 

20 

Washington  Street,  opposite  Bacon's  Block, 

It 

Good. 

21 

Ruggles  Street,  corner  of  Parker  St. 

" 

Good. 

22 

Western  Avenue,  near  Francis  Street 

Cocliit. 

Good. 

23 

Western  Avenue,  Appleion  Place,    . 

, 

" 

Good. 

24 

Tiemont  Street,  corner  of  Benton, 

" 

Good. 

25 

"             "             "           Coventr3% 

(( 

Good. 

26 

Circuit        "        near  Catholic  Church, 

Mt.  W. 

Good. 

27 

"            "           "  "Shawmut  avenue, 

" 

Good. 

28 

Corner  of  Hunneman  st.  and  Harrison  avenue, 

Cochit. 

Good. 

29 

Harrison  avenue,  opposite  Webber, . 

" 

Good. 

30 

"             "        corner  of  Eustis, 

II 

Good. 

76 


C   _  r^ 

P-   03   CD 


o  a 


S  03 


a  x>. 


a  g:    .      ^ 


PQt2 


.2 .5  f3  S 


■2^  <»  "^  ,1^  fl 
a  fl  g  o 


b   S  n  e   £;  ^ 

--    O    03    03   J3  '—J 


cS 


.   ™  ®  C  -S 


O 


©■5 
pq  o 


§     O 


CO  Xl 
O   O 

bcPH 
'H   O 


©    CD 
"<5 


^^ 


11 


gS' 


^  o 


"o        2  C 


M 


S.5  s 


02 


g  o  o  p 


^  u  ii 

O   bCrf 


S  S 

oi  oj 


C0S<1<!<^ 


jW  p»     CO 


CO  r— 


o  o 
^2 

O  cj3 

.s  -^ 

O     CD 

o     . 

o  £ 

o3    o 
1—1   m 

;>> 

o 
o 


i  ^ 
g  ^^  I 

_  o 

I         °^^ 

""       o  n  .5 

CO  CO  "-^  ^ 

c-     . "   feCTS 

fl  fi  «  §  ■? 
p  c  S  ^  «= 

2  g  d  M  a 

'"■■-"  fcc.2 

S  S  S  .5 .2 

^^  §J  o 


>n  o  o  m 

(>)  O  O  <N 


o  to 

o  ^ 

CO  OS 


<U    O    <D 


!» 


02  02 


(U  !-  a? 

pq02W 


o  ==! 
O 


O  '^         Si 

a        H 


p^ 


pH02fS 


f> 


..s 


■3     4J 


^ 


fiH 


o 


w 


^^03 

§  S  S  S 

.S  .3 .2  S 

111^ 


e 

• 

o 

1^ 

* 

81 

(=( 

P3 

• 

^ 

2 

tS 

^ 

S 

LJ 

6 

O 

<D 

fe 

w 

<D 

n-t 

CO 

P 

-*  00 


00  j3 


OOt^f-iir)r-i,-ir- 


77 


O 


r--  -? 


MS 


o  o 
o  o 

05   O 


^  o 


3-^ 


AS 


§     fi 


o 

I— I   tx  " 


o  "■ 


us 
ft 


o 
O 


CL, 


S-S 


5D  ;r3 

a  <i> 

1  I 

2  k! 


^1    ^s-a 


■^s§ 


Mo 


-  & 


J  s 


^  '^  „■  a  !-  «! 

=  siag^s 


""  ill 


P  ^   o    — 

HP 


S      -I    M 

<5    a<<f^ 


•  <c   13 
C    to    O) 

§6'§ 


hC  KO 


o  o 
o  »n 

(?4  00 


bJD  a 


&C 


£0  c   p, 

o  B  .S  ■" 


Ml  O 
W  O 
<M  O 


o  o  o 

CO  o  o 
1—1  o 


►^      o  .a     .a 


CO  i3 


OS   03 

NO 


Ji;  B  « 

Ph  oi: 

E    o 


;-a  fee 


CD   ci   is 


•s    •  f^t^  • 

S.   Sarg 
cCarty 
mas  Kel 
L.  Brad 
eath 
.  Beeche 

.^M^-^'^ 

:^   H^  ^ 

00          (M   C^           IT; 

00 

-t 

.    r-H             C><    fH             i-H 

rH 

(M 

CT 

00  Ml     -    "a,     . 

-^  s       -     fe'     - 

^ 

^ 

002 


g^? 


3     O 


O 


O     M     »< 

U  an 


2  s  ;-;  a- 


7* 


REPORT 


OF   THE 


illilOllRS  OF  FOMST  ffllLS  CEMETERY. 


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

FIFTEENTH  ANNUAL  REPORT. 

The  interest  the  public  take  in  Forest  Hills  Cemetery  continues 
to  increase ;  our  receipts  have  been  larger  the  past  than  any 
previous  year. 

Monuments.  Twenty  monuments  have  been  erected  the  past 
year. 

Avenues.  Seventeen  hundred  feet  have  been  excavated  and 
filled  with  stone  and  gravel. 

Paths.  Eight  hundred  and  fifty-five  feet  of  paths  have -been 
excavated  and  filled  with  stone  and  gravel. 

Lots  finished.  One  hundred  and  twelve  lots  and  sixty-five 
graves  are  now  ready  for  sale. 

Fences.  Four  lots  have  been  enclosed  with  iron  fences,  and 
ten  with  granite  and  three  with  hedges. 

Interments.  Five  hundred  and  eighty-nine  interments,  in 
private  lots  and  in  the  field  of  Ephron,  have  been  made  the  past 
year. 

The  fund  for  the  perpetual  care  of  lots  now  amounts  to  three 
thousand  and  sixty-five  dollars.  The  importance  of  this  arrange- 
ment has  been  stated  in  previous  reports. 


80 

The  late  Horatio  Davis  has  bequeathed  to  the  Commissioners, 
in  trust,  five  hundred  dollars,  the  interest  to  be  devoted  to  the 
care  of  his  lot. 

The  late  Nathaniel  Snow  has  bequeathed  to  the  Commissioners, 
in  trust,  two  thousand  dollars,  one  half  the  interest  to  be  devoted 
to  the  care  of  his  lot,  the  other  half  for  the  purpose  of  general 
ornament. 

Fifteen  thousand  dollars  have  been  invested  in  United  States 
Bonds  ;  it  having  been  ascertained  that  this  amount  would  not  be 
expended  at  present,  we  thought  it  best  to  have  it  placed  on 
interest,  in  view  of  a  large  expenditure  in  the  renewal  of  the 
present  gate-way  in  granite,  and  in  laying  permanent  walls  where 
the  Cemetery  is  bounded  by  the  highway. 

Receipts. 
Balance  unexpended  February  1,  1862,  .         .    $2,710  59 

Received  for  143  graves, 1,390  00 

"         "  110  lots  of  land,        .         ...         .     15,420  50 
"  "  grading  lots,  stone  posts,  rent,  hay  and 

brickwork,  ....     19,679  38 

"  "  interest  from  City  of  Roxbury,  accrued 

on  deposit  money  for  permanent  care 
of  lots,  .         .         .         •         .         148  62 

"  "  interest  on  Treasury  Notes,         .         .  427  05 


JExpenditures. 
Paid  for  labor  on  lots  and  avenues, 
"     Ten  Treasury  Notes,  $1,000  each,  7.30  per  ct, 
"     Interest  accrued  at  the  time  of  purchase, 
"     Five  U.  S.  Certificates  of  Indebtedness,  $1,000 

each,  6  per  ct., 
"     Interest  accrued  at  the  time  of  purchase, 
"     Edmund  M.  Fowler's  note,    . 
"     Interest  on  notes,  .... 


Amount  carried  forward,  $26,404  58 


$39,776  14 

.   $9,621 

04 

.    10,339 

80 

142 

00 

,      4,895 

00 

11 

74 

,      1,000 

00 

395 

00 

81 


Amount  Iroughtforivard, 

Paid  A.  Kittredge,  stone  posts, 

"  P.  R.  Page,  " 

"  P.  McDonnell,        " 

"  D.  G.  Corliss  &  Co.,  stone  work,    . 

"  J.  Clement,  collecting  small  bills,  1861, 

"  Richard  Barrj,  marble  work, 

"  West  Castleton  R.  R.  Slate  Co.,  grave  covers 

"  John  Runey,  flower  pots, 

"  Oliver  Moulton,  services  as  Superintendent, 

"  Joseph  Houghton,  grain  and  meal, 

"  Insurance, 

"  J.  Martin,  trees  and  shrubs, 

"  W.  C.  Strong,  shrubs,  &c., 

"  Andrew  G.  Day, 

"  J.  Clement,  collecting  small  bills,  1862, 

"  A.  P.  Hodgdon,  blacksmith's  bill, 

"  Perkins  &  Sampson,  iron  railing, 

"  Levi  BoUes,  sashes  and  glass, 

"  0.  Moulton,  sundry  small  bills, 

"  J.  M.  Hewes,  printing  Reports, 

"  Norfolk  County  Journal  Ofl&ce,  printing, 

"  S.  P.  Blake,  exchange  of  land, 

"  Parker,  Gannett  &  Osgood,  tools, 

"  James  Boyd  &  Sons,  harness, 

"  James  &  Pope,  lumber, 

"  George  Curtis,  cement,  lumber,  &c. 

"  Nathan  Pratt,  powder  and  carting, 

"  A.  D.  Williams,  manure, 

"  Joseph  Wilhams,      " 

"  Boston  Lead  Co.,  lead,  &c._ 

"  Aaron  R.  Gay,  stationery, 

"  George  C.  Rand  &  Avery,     . 

"  West  Roxbury,  tax  bill, 

"  J.  M.  &  G.  H.  Pike,  coal,     . 

Amount  carried  forward, 


$26,404  58 

33 

75 

110  00 

78  50 

284 

53 

150 

00 

11 

50 

172 

92 

23 

50 

1,000 

00 

683 

15 

8 

90 

205 

03 

80 

11 

10 

32 

175 

00 

362 

10 

75 

00 

23 

00 

82 

28 

78 

50 

27 

30 

27 

00 

75 

39 

21 

50 

21 

11 

98 

11 

92 

75 

60 

00 

59  54 

192 

86 

2 

70 

18  25 

76 

34 

48 

00 

$30,823 

52 

82 


Amount  brought  forward, 
Paid  John  Backup,  envelopes,         .         . 
"     Duncan  Welch,  flowers  and  bulbs,  . 
"     William  J.  Mathes,  carriage  hire,    . 
"     E.  T.  Northend,  " 

"     John  E.  Wilhams,  mending  harness, 
«     E.  A.  Hovey,  " 

"     Clarke  &  Shaw,  professional  services, 
"     C.  Hardwick  &  Co.,  labor  at  Cemetery, 
"     Revenue  stamps,  .... 

"     Joseph  W.  Tucker,  keeping  books  and  collecting 
"     Robert  Seaver,     .         . 
"     John  Fottler,  teaming,  &c.,    . 
"     D.  Hardacker,  wheelwright's  work, 
"     Houghton  &  Mayo,        .... 
"     J.  D.  Steele,  scrip  for  lot, 
"     Oliver  Moulton,  for  horse, 
Balance  to  new  account,         .... 


$30,823 

52 

27 

50 

14  40 

3 

00 

7 

50 

26 

41 

1 

25 

17 

00 

39 

00 

51 

00 

400 

00 

21 

76 

47 

75 

49 

93 

44 

03 

100 

00 

200 

00 

.   7,902 

09 

,776  14 


One  thousand  dollars  of  the  debt  to  Edmund  M.  Fowler,  has 
been  paid  the  past  year.  Six  thousand  dollars,  the  balance,  will 
be  due,  three  thousand  dollars  next  December,  and  three  thou- 
sand dollars  in  December,  1864. 

FRANCIS  C.  HEAD, 

Secretary  of  the  Commissioners  of  Forest  Hills  Cemetery. 
EoxBURY,  Feb.  23,  1863. 


In  Board  of  Aldeemen,  Feb.  24,  1863. 

Report  accepted  and  referred  to  the  Committee  on  Accounts,  with  instruc- 
tions to  cause  the  same  to  be  printed  with  the  Receipts  and  Expenditures  of  the 
City. 

Sent  down  for  concurrence.  JOSEPH  W.  TUCKER,  City  CMc. 


Concurred. 


In  Common  Council,  Feb.  24,  1863. 
JOSHUA  SEAVER,  Clerh. 


83 


MEMORANDA  FOR  PROPRIETORS. 

The  Records  of  Deeds  are  kept  in  tlie  City  Hall,  under  the  direction 
of  the  City  Clerk,  and  are  the  only  evidence  of  the  title  of  a  Proprietor 
recognized  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 
Cemetery,  in  which  are  entered  all  orders  for  the  care  of  lots.  Pro- 
prietors 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  gard- 
ener, 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  \)Q  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,  $3.  For  digging  a  grave  for 
a  child  under  ten  years  old,  $2. 

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


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  obtainiid 
of  Oliver  Moulton,  Superintendent  at  the  grounds  ;  Joseph  W. 
Tucker,  City  Clerk,  City  Hall,  Roxbury ;  or  either  of  the  Com- 
missioners. 


DIRECTORY 


THE    AVEl^UES    A]^D    PATHS. 


AVENUES. 

ASH  leads  from  Catalpa  to  Maple  avenue. 
ASPEN  leads  from  White  Oak  to  Willow  avenue. 
BEECH  leads  from  Canterbury  street  gate  to  Lake  avenue. 
CATALPA  leads  from  Beech,  in  a  southerly  direction. 
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  leads  from  Chestnut  avenue  near  Consecration  hill. 
CYPRESS  leads  from  Beech  to  Larch  avenue. 
ELM  leads  from  Lake  avenue  to  Beech  avenue. 
FIR  leads  from  Mount  Warren  to  Tupelo  avenue. 
FOUNTAIN  leads  from  Juniper  to  Rock  Maple  and  Willow  avenue. 
HEMLOCK  leads  from  Whitef  Oak  to  Fountain  avenue. 
JUNIPER  leads  from  Cherry  to  Fountain  avenue. 
LAKE  leads  from  Fountain,  round  Lake  Hibiscus  to  Fountain  avenue. 
LARCH  leads  from  Fountain  avenue  to  Cypress  hill. 
LINDEN  leads  from  Mount  Warren  to  Pine  avenue. 
LOCUST  leads  from  Egyptian  gate  to  Mount  Warren  avenue. 
MAGNOLIA  leads  from  Chestnut  avenue  to  the  summit  of  Consecra- 
tion hill. 
MAPLE  leads  from  Beech  in  a  southerly  direction. 
MULBERRY  leads  from  Egyptian  gateway  to  White  Oak  avenue. 
MOUNT  VERNON  leads  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. 


85 

RED  OAK  leads  from  Willow  to  White  Oak  avenue. 

EOCK  MAPLE  leads  from  White  Oak  avenue  to  Consecration, 

SPRUCE  leads  from  the  junction  of  Fountain  and  Juniper  avenues 

past  the  Field  of  Macpelah  to  Lake  avenue. 
TUPELO  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. 


AILANTHUS  leads  from  White  Pine  to  Cherry  avenue. 
ALTHEA  leads  from  Hemlock  to  Fountain  avenue. 
AMARANTH  leads  from  Cherry  to  Hemlock  avenue. 
ANEMONE  leads  from  Hemlock  avenue  to  Eglantine  path. 
ARBUTUS  leads  from  Beech  avenue,  southerly. 
ARETHUSA  leads  from  Lake  to  Cedar  avenue. 
ASPHODEL  leads  from  Fir  to  Mount  Warren  avenue. 
ASTER  leads  from  Hemlock  to  White  Oak  avenite. 
AZALEA  leads  from  Mount  Warren  to  Mount  Warren  avenue. 
BELLFLOWER  leads  from  Hemlock  to  Cherry  avenue. 
BIGNOLIA  leads  from  Spruce  to  Cypress  avenue. 
BROOK  leads  from  Lake  to  Cedar  avenue. 
CHRYSANTHEMUM  leads  from  Fountain  to  Hemlock  avenue. 
CLEMATIS  leads  from  Mulberry  avenue  to  White  Oak. 
COLUMBINE  leads  from  Spruce  avenue  to  Cypress. 
CORNELL  leads  from  Spruce  to  Poplar  avenue. 
COWSLIP  leads  from  White  Oak  avenue  to  junction  of  Sweet  Brier 

and  Violet  paths  on  Mount  Dearborn. 
CROCUS  leads  from  Spruce  to  Poplar  avenue. 
DAISY  leads  from  Catalpa  avenue  to  Maple. 
EGLANTINE  leads  from  Hemlock  to  White  Oak  avenue. 


86 

ELDER  leads  from  Lake  to  Cedar  avenue. 

ELIOT  HILLS  leads  from  White  Oak  to  Nesutati  avenue. 

G-ERANIUM  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. 
HAWTHORN  leads  from  White  Oak  avenue  to  Eliot  Hills  path. 
HAZEL  leads  from  Beech  to  Elm  avenue. 
HELIOTROPE  leads  from  Cherry  to  White  Oak  avenue. 
HOLLY  leads  from  Red  Oak  to  White  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. 
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. 
MAYFLOWER  leads  from  near  the  southern  end  of  White  Oak  to 

Nesutan  avenue. 
MIMOSA  leads  from  Lake  avenue  to  Cedar. 
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  Mistleto  path. 


8T 

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. 
WIGELIA  leads  from  Consecration  to  Tupelo  avenue. 
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  learn- 
ing 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   AT   FOREST   HILLS. 


COMMISSIONERS. 
Alvah  Kittredge,  William  J.  Reynolds, 

Francis  C.  Head,  E.  W.  Bumstead, 

George  Lewis. 

/ 


OATALOGIIE  OP  PEOPEIETOES   OF  LOTS. 

Arranged  according  to  STuinberg. 


Proprietors. 

Sawyer,  Benjamin  F. 
Harlow,  George 
Parker,  Moses 
Sears,  Paul,  Jr. 
Gregerson,  George 
Humphris,  Edward,  Jr. 
Emerson,  John  S. 
Hemmenway,  Benjamin 
Faxon,  Oren 
Blake,  Charles 
Adams,  Adoniram  J. 
Tilden,  Thomas 
Brownell,  Uriah  T. 
Sweat,  Thatcher 
Hersey,  Nathan 
Hanson,  John  L. 
Mayo,  Amy 
Goodnow,  R.  D. 
Pratt,  Henry 
Simpson,  David 
Dudley,  Joseph  W. 
Dudley,  H.  A.  S.  D. 
Dudley,  Sarah  W. 
Bates,  Ruth 
Cowan,  William  H. 
Parmelee,  Asaph 
Wise,  John 
Rand,  Eldred, 
Barnes,  John 
Hall,  Hiram 
Hamblen,  David 
Nute,  Enoch 
Dorr,  Nathaniel 
Albert,  J.  M. 
Curtis,  Francis 


No. 

Situation. 

Feet. 

1 

Bellflower  path 

150 

2 

Bellflower  path 

160 

3 

White  Oak  avenue 

202 

4 

White  Oak  avenue 

5 

White  Oak  avenue 

6 

White  Oak  avenue 

460 

7 

White  Oak  avenue 

8 

White  Oak  avenue 

9 

White  Oak  avenue 

10 

White  Oak  avenue 

11 

White  Oak  avenue 

12 

White  Oak  avenue 

13 

White  Oak  avenue 

14 

White  Oak  avenue 

15 

White  Oak  avenue 

16 

White  Oak  avenue 

17 

White  Oak  avenue 

18 

White  Oak  avenue 

19 

White  Oak  avenue 

20 

White  Oak  avenue 

21 

White  Oak  avenue 

380 

22 

AVhite  Oak  avenue 

380 

23 

White  Oak  avenue 

380 

24 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

25 

Cherry  avenue 

26 

Willow  avenue 

200 

27 

Heliotrope  path 

150 

28 

White  Oak  avenue 

29 

White  Oak  avenue 

30 

Red  Oak  avenue 

31 

Willow  avenue 

32 

Willow  avenue 

33 

Willow  avenue 

34 

White  Oak  avenue 

35 

White  Oak  avenue 

400 

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


89 


Sanborn,  Christopher  P. 

Munroe,  James 

Plummer,  John  L. 

Jones,  John  B. 

Jackson,  Samuel  and  Daniel 

Spear,  Susannah  K. 

Macomber,  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. 

Kingsbury,  William  B. 

Williams,  Aaron  D. 

Williams,  A.  D.,  Jr. 

Whitaker,  William  H. 

Peirce,  Charles  H. 

Scott,  Elbridge  G. 

Patten,  Asa 

Basford,  Henry 

Putnam,  John 

Comins,  Linus  B. 

Guild,  William  H. 

Carter,  Nelson 

Floyd,  Eliza 

Kowell,  Rufus 

Parker,  Jonathan 

8* 


86 

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 

489 

47 

Cherry  avenue 

48 

Cherry  avenue 

49 

Cherry  avenue 

50 

Cherry  avenue 

51 

Cherry  avenue 

52 

Cherry  avenue 

53 

Aster  path 

150 

54 

White  Pine  avenue 

55 

Cherry  avenue 

56 

White  Pine  avenue 

57 

Amaranth  path 

58 

Amaranth  path 

59 

Cherry  avenue 

60 

Cherry  avenue 

660 

61 

Cherry  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 

W^hite  Pine  avenue 

79 

White  Pine  avenue 

80 

W^hite  Pine  avenue 

81 

White  Pine  avenue 

82 

White  Pine  avenue 

83 

Red  Oak  avenue 

84 

Red  Oak  avenue 

85 

Red  Oak  avenue 

837 

86 

W^hite  Oak  avenue 

87 

Heliotrope  path 

240 

88 

Cherry  avenue 

89 

Clematis  path 

90 

Narcissus  path 

90 


Dudley,  Eliza 

91 

Low,  Francis 

92 

Low,  John  J. 

93 

Hennessy,  Richard 

94 

Gregg,  Mary 

95 

Jordan,  John  T. 

96 

Morse,  William 

97 

Smith,  Melancthon 

98 

Swett,  Samuel  W. 

99 

Gorham,  James  L. 

100 

Bachelder,  Josiah  G. 

101 

Fowle,  Isaac 

102 

Lawler,  William 

103 

Bradford,  Charles  F. 

104 

Hickling,  Charles 

105 

Blanchard,  William 

106 

Williams,  Isaac  F. 

107 

Holland,  Thomas  R. 

108 

Tappan,  Amelia  C. 

109 

Whipple,  James 

110 

Hunt,  James 

111 

Manning,  Charles 

112 

Pitman,  John  H. 

113 

Blaney,  Charles  P. 

114 

Clark,  Alexander 

115 

Wyman,  Asa 

116 

Tucker,  Joseph  W. 

117 

Whitmore,  Creighton 

118 

Gwynne,  Samuel 

119 

Krogman,  S.  B. 

120 

Emmes,  Stillman  W. 

121 

Waters,  Ebenezer 

122 

Perry,  Rufus  A. 

123 

Vila,  James 

124 

Sigourney,  Daniel  A. 

125 

Barry,  James 

126 

Ware,  Leonard 

127 

Daniel,  Josiah  N. 

128 

"Wrightington,  B.  T. 

129 

Anderson,  Bufus 

130 

Brown,  James  W.  L. 

131 

Heard,  John  J. 

132 

Molineux,  Robert  W. 

133 

Cunningham,  Andrew 

134 

Wadsworth,  Samuel 

135 

Rogers,  John 

136 

Blake,  Samuel  P. 

137 

Copeland,  Franklin 

138 

Fowler,  Edmund  M. 

139 

Crane,  Samuel  D.,  for  the  heirs 

of  Larra  Crane,  dec. 

140 

White,  Isaac  D. 

141 

Morgan,  Abigail 

142 

Parker,  Caleb 

143 

Whitmore,  G.  D. 

144 

W^hite  Oak  avenue 

Amaranth  path 

Amaranth  path 

Clematis  path 

Hemlock  avenue  500 

Hawthorn  path 

White  Oak  avenue 

Cherry  avenue  360 

Cherry  avenue  360 

Cherry  avenue  360 

White  Oak  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

Willow  avenue  360 

Willow  avenue  360 

Willow  avenue 

Amaranth  path 

Narcissus  path 

Mount  Warren  avenue  195 

White  Oak  avenue 

Red  Oak  avenue 

Red  Oak  avenue  60O 

Red  Oak  avenue 

Narcissus  path  120 

White  Oak  avenue 

Narcissus  path 

Narcissus  path 

Narcissus  path 

White  Oak  avenue 

White  Pine  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue  150 

White  Oak  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

Moss  path 

Narcissus  path 

Narcissus  path  400 

Narcissus  path 

Narcissus  path 

Narcissus  path 

Narcissus  path 

Hawthorn  path  460 

Hawthorn  path 

Hawthorn  path 

Hawthorn  path 

Hawthorn  path 

Hawthorn  path 

Hawthorn  path 

Hawthorn  path 

Green  Brier  path 

Hawthorn  path 

Hawthorn  path 

Eliot  Hills  path  540 

Eliot  Hills  path 


91 


Dunbar,  David  A. 

145 

Aspen  avenue 

Steele,  E.  F. 

146 

Hawthorn  path 

150 

Taft,  Read 

147 

Violet  path 

164 

Taft,  Charles  M. 

148 

Violet  path 

Winslow,  Koland 

149 

Violet  path 

Mann,  N.  P. 

150 

Violet  path 

Russell,  George  R. 

151 

Sweet  Brier  path 

720 

Wbitwell,  William 

152 

Cherry  avenue 

Blake,  Jesse 

153 

Hemlock  avenue 

Brown,  W.  H. 

154 

Aster  path 

150 

Wellman,  Williana  A. 

155 

Holly  path 

Kittredge,  Alvah 

156  and  157 

Holly  path 

600 

Baker,  William  E. 

158 

Holly  path 

Thompson,  A.  C. 

159 

Holly  path 

160 

Red  Oak  avenue 

380 

Blancbard,  A.  R.,  Mrs. 

161 

Red  Oak  avenue 

Dove,  George 

162 

Red  Oak  avenue 

Weld,  Benjamin 

163 

Holly  path 

McKay,  William  P. 

164 

Magnolia  avenue 

Andrews,  Henry  R. 

165 

White  Oak  avenue 

Hill,  David  W. 

166 

White  Oak  avenue 

Hobart,  Mary  W. 

167 

Red  Oak  avenue 

500 

Lee,  W.  Raymond 

168 

Violet  path 

Amory,  Elizabeth 

169 

Violet  path 

Howe,  M.  A.  D'Wolf 

170 

Violet  path 

Head,  Charles  Dudley 

171 

Violet  path 

Head,  Fi-ancis  C. 

172 

Violet  path 

Sherman,  Amory  F. 

173 

Red  Oak  avenue 

Bond,  Sewall  B. 

174 

Myrtle  path 

400 

Scates,  Dodavah 

175 

Myrtle  path 

400 

Chubbuck,  S.  E. 

176 

Red  Oak  avenue 

400 

Campbell,  Benjamin  F. 

177 

Red  Oak  avenue 

400 

Pratt,  Jerabmeel  C. 

178 

Tupelo  avenue 

Parker,  Joseph 

179 

Tupelo  avenue 

Mathes,  Albert  R, 

180 

Haven,  Calvin  W. 

181 

White  Oak  avenue 

250 

Haven,  Calvin  W. 

182 

White  Oak  avenue 

250 

Keith,  William 

183 

Hemlock  avenue 

360 

Lothrop,  Ansel 

184 

White  Oak  avenue 

350 

Pear,  Edward 

185 

White  Oak  avenue 

Bacal,  Thomas 

186 

White  Oak  avenue 

200 

Badger,  George  W- 

187 

Clematis  path 

400 

Allen,  Isaac 

.   188 

White  Pine  avenue 

400 

Walker,  Catherine  R.  ' 

189 

Cherry  avenue 

200 

Vose,  Elijah 

190 

White  Pine  avenue 

Gray,  Alfred  T. 

191 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

400 

Wiswall,  Samuel  S. 

192 

Yew  avenue 

Day,  Moses 

193 

Chrysanthemum  path 

450 

Sewall,  Moses 

194 

Chrysanthemum  path 

450 

Bartlett,  Pliny 

195 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

100 

Sears,  Joseph  H. 

196 

Rosemary  path 

430 

Fuller,  David  S. 

197 

Clematis  path 

Nichols,  William  S. 

198 

Rosemary  path 

Webber,  John,  Jr. 

199 

Willow  avenue 

,Backall,  William  K. 

200 

Willow  avenue 

92 


Felton,  Samuel 

201 

Willow  avenue 

Train,  Samuel  F. 

202 

Aspen  avenue 

Thwinw,  Supply  C. 

203 

Aspen  avenue 

Bartlett,  Henry 

204 

Aspen  avenue 

Kettell,  John  B. 

205 

White  Pine  avenue 

1 

Kettell,  John 

206 

White  Pine  avenue 

Miller,  David 

207 

Willow  avenue 

250 

Miller,  George 

208 

Willow  avenue 

250 

Smith,  George  W. 

209 

Aspen  avenue 

Grossman,  Nathaniel  W. 

210 

Clematis  path 

Jenney,  Nelson 

211 

Aspen  avenue 

Davis,  William  H. 

212 

Pearce,  William 

213 

Aspen  avenue 

Lovell,  Josiah  G. 

214 

Aspen  avenue 

"Wood,  Alexander 

215 

Aspen  avenue 

360 

White,  David,  Jr. 

216 

Aspen  avenue 

400 

Gray,  John  H. 

217 

Cherry  avenue 

Wiley,  Thomas 

218 

White  Oak  avenue 

500 

Wells,  Edward 

219 

Heliotrope  path 

Campbell,  R.  C. 

220 

Heliotrope  path 

Penniman,  Ed.  L. 

221 

White  Pine  avenue 

Packer,  George 

222 

Cherry  avenue 

Rea,  Archelaus 

223 

Cowslip  path 

Arnold,  Elizabeth 

224 

White  Oak  avenue 

Webster,  Albert 

225 

Grape  path 

Holmes,  Richard 

226 

Viburnum  path 

Dudley,  Elbridge  Gerry 

227 

Rosemary  path 

Curtis,  Nelson 

228 

White  Oak  avenue 

Gore,  Watson,  Jr. 

229 

White  Pine  avenue 

Maybin,  D.  Crawford 

230 

White  Pine  avenue 

Sears,  Joseph  H. 

231 

Rosemary  path 

Kramer,  Matthias 

232 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

Sturgis,  Russell 

233 

Magnolia  avenue 

Williams,  Sydney  B. 

234 

Cherry  avenue 

Payson,  Samuel 

235 

Heliotrope  path 

Shales,  Edward 

236 

Aspen  avenue 

Cook,  Betsey 

237 

White  Oak  avenue 

Andrews,  Alonzo 

238 

Aspen  avenue 

Barry,  Charles 

239 

Geranium  path 

Pratt,  Joseph 

240 

White  Oak  avenue 

Clark,  Moses                    241 

and  242 

White  Oak  avenue 

710 

Burbank,  Alonzo 

243 

Geranium  path 

130 

Field,  Alexander  H. 

244 

Cherry  avenue 

Gage,  John 

245 

Geranium  path 

Schmidt,  Henry 

246 

Cherry  avenue 

Osgood,  Martha  B. 

247 

Sweet  Brier  path 

100 

Ryerson,  Ebenezer 

248 

Heliotrope  path 

Wight,  Sylvanus 

249 

Bellflower  path 

200 

Byron,  Joseph 

250 

Aspen  avenue 

Jackson,  J.  B.  S. 

251 

Cherry  avenue 

Lovering,  Nathaniel  P. 

252 

White  Oak  avenue 

400 

Hunter,  William 

253 

Aspen  avenue 

Towle,  Merribah  H. 

254 

Cherry  avenue 

Veazie,  J.  T. 

255 

Aspen  avenue 

Coffin,  Gardner  S. 

256 

Aspen  avenue 

200 

93 


Frost,  William  C.  257 

Dudley,  Ebenezer  258 

Seaver,  John  C.  259 

Seaver,  William  D.  260 

Weld,  Daniel  261 

Weld,  John  D.  262 

Dickson,  Alexander  263 

Huston,  William  K.  264 

Kenney,  John  265 

Minot,  William,  Jr.  266 

Dearborn,  H.  A.  S.  267 

Dearborn,  W.  L.  268 

White,  William  A.  269 

Pierce,  Horace  W.  270 

Davis,  David  P.  271 

Griggs,  George  S.  272 

Houghton,  Joseph  273 

Joyce,  George  F.  274 

Williams,  James  275 
Eeynolds,  William  J.      276  and  277 

Pollock,  George  278 

Pollard,  Abner  W.  279 

Bazin,  George  W.  280 

Rand,  Abraham  W.  281 

Ayres,  John  282 

Elliott,  Charles  E.  283 

Thomas,  Charles  A.  284 

Glines,  Nathan  H.  285 

Sturgis,  James  286 

Dumaresq,  Philip  287 

Gay,  Aaron  R.  288 

Gay,  Samuel  S.  289 

Faunce,  George  B.  290 

Eaton,  William  G.  291 

Groom,  Thomas  292 

Dudley,  Ephraim  M.  293 

Davis,  Horatio  294 

Eobinson,  J.  P.  295 

Torrey,  Joseph  G.  296 
Crane,   Samuel  D.,  for  heirs  of 

Larra  Crane,  dec.  297 

Scott,  George  298 

Fay,  Cyrus  H.  299 

Rogers,  S.  G.  300 

Hunnewell,  Frank  301 

Wentworth,  E.  M.  M.  302 

Felling,  James  303 

Bell,  Amory  304 

Humphrey,  W.  A.  305 

Ellis,  Charles  306 

Ellis,  Charles  M.  307 

Whiting,  William  308 

Eastman,  Sally  309 

Williams,  Col.  Jos.,  heirs  of  310 

Williams,  Stedman  311 


Green  Brier  path  72 

Willow  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

Amaranth  path  645 

Amaranth  path  345 

Amaranth  path 

White  Oak  avenue  345 

White  Oak  avenue  345 

Chrysanthemum  path  400 

Sweet  Brier  path 

Sweet  Brier  path 

Eliot  Hills  path 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

Mount  Warren  avenue  400 

Mount  AVarren  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

Clematis  path 

Clematis  path 

Cowslip  path  600 

Heliotrope  path 

Eliot  Hills  path  233 

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  912 

Linden  avenue  100 

Mount  Warren  avenue 


Green  Brier  path 

180 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

Cherry  avenue 

414 

White  Oak  avenue 

Hemlock  avenue 

460 

Hemlock  avenue 

White  Oak  avenue 

White  Pine  avenue 

Kalmia  path 

340 

Kalmia  path 

490 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

94 


"\Tilliams,  Nehemiab  D. 
Williams,  John 
Richards,  Isaiah  D. 
Hall,  Charles  G. 
Fearing,  Lincoln 
Williams,  Stephen 
Buflinton,  Jonathan 
Weld,  Nancy 
Lewis,  Elijah 
Harrington,  Ephraim 
Fisher,  Warren 
Simmons,  Thomas 
Simmons,  David  A. 
Simmons,  George  A. 
Webber,  John 
Williams,  Thomas 
Browning,  Mary  E. 
French,  Jonathan 
Williams,  Jonathan  T. 
Hazin,  Charles 
Frederick,  Jabez 
Nichols,  Lawrence 
Bray,  Charles  F. 
BraV,  Edgar  W. 
Burnbam,  T.  O.  H.  P. 
Paige,  Charles  E. 
Hammond,  Stephen 
Sawyer,  Alpha 
Pollard,  George 
Billings,  George 
Baker,  John 
Sawyer,  James 
Kittredge,  John  D. 
Eice,  William 
Langley,  Samuel 
Faunce,  Stephen 
March,  Andrew  S. 
Pettes,  George  W. 
Swift,  John  L. 
Pettes,  Henry 
Toung,  Calvin 
Barry,  John  S. 
Litchfield,  Simeon 
Mayo,  John  M. 
Cumston,  William 
Smith,  Daniel  D. 
Ames,  Robert  W. 
Biient,  Mehitebel 
Weld,  Sarah 
Leman,  John 
Newell,  James  M. 
Hinckley,  Thomas  F. 
Hathorne,  J.  H. 
Nunn,  Charles 
Williams,  Henry  H. 


312 

IMount  Warren  avenue 

813 

Laurel  path 

314 

Aspen  avenue 

'- 

315 

Cherry  avenue 

316 

Laurel  path 

317 

Laurel  path 

318 

Cherry  avenue 

319 

Cherry  avenue 

320 

Cherry  avenue 

321 

Grape  path 

480 

322 

Grape  path 

480 

323 

Grape  path 

480 

324 

Grape  path 

480 

325 

Grape  path 

480 

326 

Willow  avenue 

32  7 

Laurel  path 

328 

AVhite  Oak  avenue 

328 

329 

Amaranth  path 

330 

Laurel  path 

331 

Eliot  Hills  path 

332 

White  Oak  avenue 

250 

333 

Clematis  path 

334 

White  Oak  avenue 

250 

335 

White  Oak  avenue 

250 

336 

Cherry  avenue 

337 

White  Oak  avenue 

338 

Hawthorn  path 

339 

Hawthorn  path 

340 

Hawthorn  path 

341 

Hawthorn  path 

342 

White  Oak  avenue 

154 

S43 

Cowslip  path 

344 

Cowslip  path 

345 

Amaranth  path 

346 

Green  Brier  path 

360 

347 

Green  Brier  path 

360 

348 

Holly  path 

480 

349 

White  Oak  avenue 

350 

Hawthorn  path 

351 

White  Oak  avenue 

352 

Jasmine  path 

353 

Jasmine  path 

354 

Green  Brier  path 

355 

White  Oak  avenue 

380 

356 

Sweet  Brier  path 

357 

Hemlock  avenue 

358 

Eliot  Hills  path 

359 

Green  Brier  path 

135 

360 

Aster  path 

361 

White  Oak  avenue 

362 

Rosemary  path 

S63 

Geranium  path 

364 

Amaranth  path 

365 

White  Oak  avenue 

250 

366 

Laurel  path 

360 

95 


Williams,  Dudley 

367 

Laurel  path 

360 

Weld,  James 

368 

Hemlock  avenue 

450 

Bacon,  Jacob 

369 

Hemlock  avenue 

450 

Peters,  Edward  D. 

370 

Pine  avenue 

2000 

E,nmrill,  Nancy 

371 

Rosemary  path 

Bills,  Harriet 

372 

Tupelo  avenue 

Calrow,  John  G. 

373 

ISIount  Warren  avenue 

Plympton,  Jeremiah 

374 

Rosemary  path 

Tupper,  E.  E. 

375 

Clematis  path 

180 

Mcintosh,  George  B. 

376 

Geranium  path 

150 

Dwight,  Edmund 

377 

Walnut  avenue 

3850 

Shaw,  Joseph  P. 

378 

Geranium  path 

Heath,  Margaret 

379 

Geranium  path 

180 

Bacon,  AVilliam,  Roxhury 

380 

Cherry  avenue 

600 

Bacon,  Horace 

381 

Cherry  avenue 

Pearson,  George  W. 

382 

White  Pine  avenue 

Smith,  DanierC. 

383 

Hemlock  avenue 

365 

Newcomb,  James 

384 

Hemlock  avenue 

Bobbins,  Shepard 

385 

Eglantine  path 

Shelton,  Stephen 

386 

Eglantine  path 

Chapin,  David 

387 

Eglantine  path 

Prescott,  Edward 

388 

Eglantine  path 

Severance,  E.  H. 

389 

Rosemary  path 

Gilbert,  Lemuel 

390 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

Leavens,  S.  Davis,  heirs  of 

391 

Narcissus  path 

102 

Peters,  George  H. 

392 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

270 

Osgood,  Samuel 

393 

Azalea  path 

Littlefield,  Samuel  S. 

394 

White  Oak  avenue 

Hue  kins,  James  H.  W. 

395 

Rosemary  path 

Hutchinson,  Andrew  B. 

396 

White  Pine  avenne 

Rogers,  Henry,  Jr. 

397 

Cherry  avenue 

Newman,  Robert 

398 

Cherry  avenue 

Davenport,  Mary  C. 

399 

Aspen  avenue 

190 

Williams,  David  W. 

400 

Cherry  avenue 

700 

Williams,  John  D.  W. 

401 

Cherry  avenue 

700 

French,  Jonathan 

402 

Cherry  avenue 

700 

Williams,  George  F. 

403 

Cherry  avenue 

700 

Lodge,  Giles  H. 

404 

Cherry  avenue 

700 

Austin,  Thomas 

405 

Aster  path 

Bufford,  J.  H. 

406 

Aster  path 

Carter,  Caroline  W. 

407 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

Sargent,  L.  M.,  Jr. 

408 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

340 

Clark,  Helen  M.,  Mrs. 

409 

Geranium  path 

340 

Kennedy,  Thomas  J.  W. 

410 

Geranium  path 

150 

Lee,  Nancy 

411 

Rosemary  path 

Fowle,  Joshua  B. 

412 

Aster  path 

Clark,  Joseph  W. 

413 

White  Pine  avenue 

400 

Austin,  Thomas 

414 

Aster  path 

Barker,  Theodore  T. 

415 

Geranium  path 

By  ram,  Robert  J. 

416 

Aster  path 

Gay,  George,  Mrs. 

417 

Aster  path 

Crichton,  George  H. 

418 

Geranium  path 

160 

Rand,  Isaac  P. 

419 

Cherry  avenue 

440 

Mason,  Ezekiel  F. 

420 

Cherry  avenue 

Lowry,  Maxwell 

421 

Aspen  avenue 

96 


Sands,  Edward  422 

Williams,  Tilson  423 

Flint,  Thomas  424 

Worthington,  Caroline  425 

Patten,  D.  &  G.  426 

Barnes,  James  427 

Smith,  Martha  428 

Sanderson,  John  H.  429 

Hunneweli,  Joseph  W.  430 

Stowe,  Orville  431 

White,  Benjamin  C.  432 

Snow,  Nathaniel  433 

Drew,  William  434 

Jackson,  Jane  435 

Wainwright,  Peter  436 

Hunting,  Reuben  437 

Cooley,  William  438 

Page,  Kilby  439 

Spaulding,  S.  R.  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.  449 

Dean,  Amos  J.  450 

Cunningham,  Lucy  451 

Davis,  Ezra  452 

Sweetser,  George  H.  453 

Sloan,  Charles  F.  454 

Prescott,  Samuel  455 

Ford,  Eliza  456 

Farrington,  Ebenezer  T.  457 

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 

Hardwick,  William  471 

Gaston,  Alexander  472 

Fisk,  Bela  S.  473 

Jenkins,  Wealthy  Ann  474 

Seaverns,  Thomas  W-  475 

Stevens,  Polly  476 


Willow  avenue  400 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

Cherry  avenue 

Mount  Warren  avenue  180 

Rosemary  path 

White  .Pine  avenue 

Geranium  path 

Aspen  avenue  100 

White  Pine  avenue 

White  Pine  avenue 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

Cherry  avenue  440 

Aster  path 

Sweet  Brier  path  100 

Cherry  avenue 

Clematis  path  380 

Viburnum  path 

Geranium  path  340 

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  320 

Cherry  avenue 

Cherry  avenue  200 

Bellflower  path 

Aspen  avenue 

Hyacinth  path 

Clematis  path 

Clematis  path 

Clematis  path 

Hyacinth  path  200 

Hyacinth  path  200 

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  224 

Mount  Warren  avenue  250 

Mount  Warren  avenue  250 


97 


Seaverns,  Abijah 
Taft,  Alonzo 
Dwight,  Thomas 
Appleton,  William,  Jr. 
Warren,  J.  M. 
Warren,  J.  S. 
Lyman,  Charles 
Warren,  John  C. 
Arnold,  Mattron  V. 
Curtis,  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,  Laben 

Nichols,  Charles,  (for  Miss  ) 
Powers,)  ) 

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. 


477 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

310 

478 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

260 

479 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

500 

480 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

481 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

482 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

483 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

500 

484 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

485 

Rosemary  path 

486 

Clematis  path 

250 

487 

Bellflower  path 

488 

Clematis  path 

400 

489 

Aster  path 

315 

490 

W^hite  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                 v 

506 

Cherry  avenue 

400 

507 

Bellflower  path 

508 

Anemone  peth 

360 

509 

Anemone  path 

360 

510 

White  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 

265 

529 

White  Pine  avenue 

365 

530 

White  Pine  avenue 

430 

98 


Getting,  Caroline  M. 
Hunt,  George  H. 
Butler,  Nathaniel 
Weld,  Franklin  534 

Millard,  Charles  J. 
Pierce,  Jonathan 
Cragin,  Daniel 
Burchstead,  Benjamin 
Leavitt,  David 
Poland,  William  C. 
Foster,  William  Hammond 
Perkins,  Christine 
Willard,  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. 

Hinkley,  James  H. 

Hayes,  Ephraim 

Bodge,  Mary  L. 

Brown,  Abigail 

Bowdlear,  Samuel 

Gates,  Martin  L. 

Brewer,  Otis 

Richardson,  John 

Otis,  Theodore 

Winslow,  Isaac 

Win  slow,  Edward 

Winslow,  George 

Spence,  John 

Hemmenway,  Henry  C. 

Hanson,  John  A. 

Foster,  Henrietta 

Pearce,  Robert 

Learock,  John  B. 

Gardner,  Robert 

Fowle,  Parker 


531 

White  Pine  avenue 

290 

532 

Bellflower  path 

633 

Clematis  path 

250 

and  535 

White  Pine  avenue 

730 

536 

Eglantine  path 

537 

White  P>ine  avenue 

538 

Eglantine  path 

539 

Eglantine  path 

540 

Eglantine  path 

541 

Aster  path 

542 

Laurel  path 

543 

Pine  avenue 

2130 

544 

Woodbine  path 

545 

Bellflower  path 

350 

646 

Bellflower  path 

547 

Eglantine  path 

220 

548 

Eglantine  path 

220 

549 

Anemone  path 

550 

Anemone  path 

551 

Aster  path 

652 

Laurel  path 

653 

Eglantine  path 

654 

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 

664 

White  Pine  avenue 

565 

Eglantine  path 

566 

Cherry  avenue 

597 

Eglantine  path 

568 

Eglantine  path 

569 

White  Pine  avenue 

570 

Eo;lantine  path 

671 

White  Pine  avenue 

340 

572 

Eliot  Hills  path 

260 

673 

White  Oak  avenue 

400 

674 

Azalea  path 

130 

575 

Ailanthus  path 

700 

576 

Clematis  path 

330 

577 

Clematis  path 

578 

Clematis  path 

340 

679 

White  Pine  avenue 

600 

580 

Azalea  path 

150 

681 

Woodbine  path 

682 

Aster  path 

583 

Aster  path 

584 

White  Oak  avenue 

585 

Chrysanthemum  path 

586 

Woodbine  path 

265 

99 


Fowle,  WilHam  P.       ■ 
Everett,  Oliver  C. 
Bradley,  Sarah  A.  W. 
Durkee,  Silas 
George,  Greenleaf  C. 
Bacon,  John  F. 
Bosworth,  George  W. 
Curtis,  Henry- 
Ripley,  Samuel  W. 
Putnam,  E.  M. 
White,  Warren  L. 
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. 
Taylor,  William,  Jr. 
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 


587 

Woodbine  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 

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 

€20 

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 

Mo'unt  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 

925 

640 

Waboh  path 

950 

641 

Chrysanthemum  path 

642 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

100 


Blanchard,  Charles 
Jordan,  Charles     > 
Wiswall,  Elisha 
Federhen,  John,  Jr. 
Dudley,  James  H. 
Sanfbrd,  Philo 
Pomeroy,  Henry  A.  G. 
Heyer,  William  A. 
Odin,  John 

Copeland,  William  H.  C 
Hyde,  M.  Smith 
Eitchie,  Edward  S. 
Coolidge,  John  T. 
Palmer,  Simeon,  estate  of 
Lord,  Piobert  W. 
Jenkins,  Henry  T. 
Corey,  Barney 
Mair,  (^eorge  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. 
Lowell,  John,  estate  of 
Davis,  William  H.  675,  676 
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 
Ay  res,  Benjamin  F. 
Wheelwright,'  Caroline 
Wheelwright,  Josiah 
Carlisle,  George  W. 
Allen,  Frederick  D. 
Buoncore,  Lewis 
Dupee,  Lewis,  heirs  of 
Blake,  John  H. 
Dorr,  E.  Ritchie 


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 

655 

Chrysanthemum  path 

656 

Chrysanthemum  path 

720 

657 

Azalea  path 

658 

Chrysanthemum  path 

659 

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 

Laurel  path 

483 

and  677 

Woodbine  path 

1333 

678 

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  path 

100 

687 

Cherry  avenue 

200 

688 

Cherry  avenue 

200 

689 

Cherry  avenue 

690 

Juniper  avenue 

200 

691 

Juniper  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 

101 


Kussell,  Lydia  S. 
Dwight,  Mary 
May,  Benjamin 
Hodge,  Thomas  S. 
Fitzgerald,  Stephen 
James,  Elisha 
Calder,  John  W. 
Maxwell,  Charles 
Barnard,  Lucinda 
Parkinson,  John 
Townsend,  Eliza  G. 
Newell,  Willard 
Ellicott,  Joseph  P. 
Fuller,  Albert 
Tolman,  James  P. 
Dexter,  Samuel  A. 
Morey,  George,  for  M.  Newell 
Smith,  James  W. 
Drury,  Gardner  P. 
Wheelwright,  Sarah 
Briggs,  Nathaniel  O. 
Cummings,  Charles 
Dudley,  Charles  H. 
Forbes,  John  M. 
Forbes,  Robert  B. 
Forbes,  Margaret 
Stackpole,  Reuben  M. 
Childs,  Nathaniel  E. 
Childs,  Albert 
Stone,  Baman 
Watson,  Nathan 
Waldron,  John,  heirs  of 
Heath,  Stephen 
Littlefield,  James 
Smith,  Joseph  P. 
Shiverick,  George 
Remick,  Ai 
May,  Samuel 
Blanchard,  Charles  H. 
Stephenson,  George 
Stewart,  Alexander 
Weld,  William  F. 
Weld,  William  G. 
Townsend,  John  P. 
Lemon,  George  E. 
Thompson,  George 
Weir,  Andrew  A. 
Clarke,  John  J. 
Clarke,  Frances  C. 
Loring,  David 
Hastings,  Catherine  E. 
Woodman,  John 
Bicknell,  Joseph 
Clarke,  C.  S. 
Atkinson,  Andrew 

9» 


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 

707 

Hyacinth  path 

708 

White  Oak  avenue 

120 

709 

Lily  path 

710 

Lily  path 

711 

Juniper  avenue 

130 

712 

Linden  avenue 

600 

713 

Hyacinth  path 

714 

Linden  avenue 

715 

Linden  avenue 

Jewell     716 

Linden  avenue 

717 

Linden  avenue 

718 

Woodbine  path 

320 

719 

Chrysanthemum  path 

720 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

144 

721 

Hyacinth  path 

165 

722 

Juniper  avenue 

125 

723 

Magnolia  avenue 

354 

724 

Magnolia  avenue 

354 

725 

Magnolia  avenue 

354 

726 

Juniper  avenue 

340 

727 

Juniper  avenue 

340 

728 

Juniper  avenue 

340 

729 

Juniper  avenue 

340 

730 

Juniper  avenue 

731 

Geranium  path 

732 

Geranium  path 

733 

Clematis  path 

734 

Cherry  avenue 

735 

Geranium  path 

736 

Juniper  avenue 

737 

Walnut  avenue 

2175 

738 

Cherry  avenue 

200 

739 

Cherry  avenue 

200 

740 

Chrysanthemum  path 

741 

Linden  avenue 

630 

742 

Linden  avenue 

580 

743  and  744 

Chrysanthemum  path 

680 

745 

Juniper  avenue 

746 

Cherry  avenue 

747 

Juniper  avenue 

748 

Althea  path 

749 

Althea  path 

750 

Geranium  path 

751 

Geranium  path 

280 

752 

Juniper  avenue 

225 

763 

Juniper  avenue 

225 

754 

Grape  path 

132 

755 

Cherry  avenue 

102 


Kibbee,  Parley  M. 
Robbins,  John  M. 
Whittier,  Eobert  R. 
Stanton,  John  L. 
Hastings,  Joseph 
Brown,  Charlotte  R. 
Ashley,  Ossiaa  D. 
Long,  George  W. 
Hobart,  William  H. 
Hobart,  Peter,  Jr. 
Page,  Willard 
Jaquith,  Augustus  D. 
Tarr,  Daniel  W. 
Stevens,  Benjamin  F. 
Trueman,  Jedediah  L. 
Milton,  Homan,  Jr. 
Lothrop,  Elias  C. 
Eodgers,  Ammon 
Defrees,  William  H. 

Swallow,  Daniel  W. 

Seward,  Joshua 

Callahan,  Hannah  W. 

Deblols,  M.  and  C. 

Elbridge,  John  S. 

Marshall,  Lucretia  S. 

Hamilton,  Edward 

Stanford,  Joanna  A. 

Pope,  Holly  K. 

Trescott,  Elijah,  Jr. 

Kingman,  Abner 

Woodman,  George 

Hill,  Charles  H. 

Welch,  Charles  W. 

Peddar,  James 

Shepherd,  Betsey 

Nightingale,  John  F. 

Moorhead,  William 

Varnum,  William 

Perbam,  Charlotte  G. 

Hovey,  John 

Haste,  Eliza 

Howe,  B.  Miles 

Jackson,  Isaac 

Lovett,  Isabella 

Evans,  Harriet  F. 
Field,  Pearson  H. 

Preston,  Elisha  H. 
Payson,  Edwin 
Chessman,  Nancy  W. 
Campbell,  Jeremiah  R. 
Mathes,  Charles  L. 
Head,  Edward  F. 


Brayton,  John  D. 


756  Cherry  avenue 

757  Grape  path 

758  Juniper  avenue 

759  Juniper  avenue 

760  Juniper  avenue 

761  Geranium  path 

762  Althea  path 

763  Althea  path 

764  Althea  path 

765  Althea  path 

766  Geranium  path 

767  Juniper  avenue 

768  Juniper  avenue 

769  Geranium  path 

770  Geranium  path 

771  Oleander  path 

772  Juniper  avenue 

773  Juniper  avenue 

774  Juniper  avenue 

775  Geranium  path 

776  WHiite  Oak  avenue 

777  Clematis  path 

778  Juniper  avenue 

779  Linden  avenue 

780  Oleander  path 

781  Juniper  avenue 

782  Azalea  path 

783  Linden  avenue 

784  Linden  avenue 

785  Althea  path 

786  Juniper  avenue 

787  Juniper  avenue 

788  Lilac  path 

789  Clematis  path 

790  Althea  path 

791  Juniper  avenue 

792  Juniper  avenue 

793  Linden  avenue 

794  Althea  path 

795  Althea  path 

796  Oleander  path 

797  Oleander  path 

798  Clematis  path 

799  Clematis  path 

800  Linden  avenue 

801  Linden  avenue 

802  Tulip  path 

803  Juniper  avenue 

804  Lilac  path 

805  Lilac  path 

806  Clematis  path 

807  Mount  Warren  avenue 

808  Lilac  path 

809  Lilac  path 

810  Lilac  path 


260 


350 
350 

360 


220 
225 


340 


225 
400 
85 
200 
200 


220 
220 
217 
225 
200 
200 


260 
220 
220 


103 


Anderson,  Robert  P. 
Munroe,  Josiah  J. 
Brigham,  Mary  F. 
Quincy,  Thomas  D. 
Bradford,  William  B. 
Loring,  William 
Adams,  Ashur 
Curtis,  Joseph  H. 
Curtis,  J.  H.  and  George  S. 
Curtis,  George  S. 
Willard,  William  D. 
Hinckley,  Aaron  A. 
Linton,  William 
Gordon,  Robert 
Loveland,  Jennett  L, 
Perkins,  Edward 
Libbey,  Julia 
Green,  Abraham  M. 
Low,  Ariel 
Sargent,  John  T. 
Allison,  John  W. 
Nichols,  Robert  C. 
Parkinson,  James 
Fussell,  John 
Melzar,  Augustus  P. 
Hunting,  Thomas 
Walker,  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. 
Eddy,  James 
Kingsley,  Joseph 


811 

Linden  avenue 

812 

Fountain  avenue 

813 

Fountain  avenue 

814 

Kalmia  path 

315 

815 

Kalmia  path 

816 

Juniper  avenue 

200 

817 

Juniper  avenue 

200 

818 

Pine  avenue 

463 

819 

Pine  avenue 

463 

820 

Pine  avenue 

463 

821 

Lilac  path 

822 

Fountain  avenue 

823 

Fountain  avenue 

824 

Lilac  path 

825 

Fountain  avenue 

280 

826 

Bellflower  path 

140 

827 

Oleander  path 

225 

828 

Oleander  path 

225 

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 

104 


Kendall,  Charles  S.  866 

Perrin,  Augustus  W.  867 

FuUerton,  Alexander  868 

Perrin,  G.  W.  869 

Miller,  Erasmus  D.  870 

Wilder,  Marshall  P.  871 

Adams,  Nathaniel  872 

Lincoln,  Joshua  873 

Richards,  George  H.  874 

Commerais,  Henry  875 

French,  Abram  876 

877 

Hentz,  Frederick  W.  878 

Young,  Calvin,  Dorchester  879 

Park,  Ann  880 
Baldwin,  Luke                881  and  882 

Cook,  William  D.  883 

Pieper,  Louise  884 

Huckins,  Francis  885 

Keith,  James  M.  886 

Palmer,  Ezra,  Jr.  887 

Palmer,  Ezra,  Jr.,  trustee  888 
Bowditch,  Elizabeth  B.    889  and  890 

Alexander,  Ebenezer  891 

Strong,  George  892 

Borrowscale,  ^oha.  893 

Warren,  Eliza  894 

CumminS,  J5^ria  F.  895 

Gushing,  Sarah  P.  896 

Mowe,  George  W.  897 

Cloutman,  John  S.  898 

Watt,  Robert  899 

Smith,  Joel  H.  900 

Hadley,  Jane  901 

Weinz,  Christian  902 

Hale,  Daniel  L.  903 

Fay,  Charles  T.  904 

Wadleigli,  Dexter  E.  905 

Nute,  Clarissa  906 

Bartlett,  Dennis  S.  907 

Wheelock,  Edward  C.  908 

Hilton,  Celeste  J.  909 

Basto,  Mason  910 

Cunningham,  Sarah  E.  911 

Pitman,"David  912 

Eastham,  William  W.  913 

Kettell,  James  914 

Carter,  James  W.  915 

Carter,  John,  Jr.  916 

Currant,  John  F.  917 

Learned,  Isaac  M.  918 

Brimbecom,  Nathaniel  919 

Lethbridge,  Willard  F.  920 

Dexter,  George  N.  921 

Tutein,  Nancy  922 


Lilac  path 

Pine  avenue 

Pine  avenue 

Pine  avenue 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

Lupine  path 

Tulip  path 

Lupine  path 

Moss  path 

Moss  path 

Moss  path 

Lupine  path 

Lupine  path 

Lilac  path 

Linden  avenue 

Juniper  avenue 

Lupine  path 

Tulip  path 

Fountain  avenue 

Tulip  path 

Tulip  path 

Tulip  path 

Lilac  path 

Lupine  path 

Fountain  avenue 

Lupine  path 

Althea  path 

Ivy  path 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

Lupine  path 

Verbena  path 

Tulip  path 

Fountain  avenue 

Lupine  path 

Fountain  avenue 

Lupine  path 

Tulip  path 

Fountain  avenue 

Fountain  avenue 

Lupine  path 

Iris  path 

Tulip  path 

Iris  path 

Iris  path 

Tulip  path 

Tulip  path 

Mayflower  path 

Mayflower  path 

Mayflower  path 

Mayflower  path 

Mayflower  path 

Iris  path 

Tulip  path 

Iris  path 


780 
310 
320 
400 
700 
270 
440 

450 
350 
350 
315 


160 
270 
440 

825 
325 

600 

270 
500 
270 


280 
270 


270 

180 

207 

207 

92 

180 

120 
210 


600 

423 
805 
340 
180 

180 


105 


Harris,  Luther  M.  923 

Tileston,  Edmund  P.  924 

Houghton,  Caleb  C.  925 

Boardman,  Janet  926 

Wilcox,  John  D.  F.  927 

Reed,  David  K.  928 

Barnes,  Loring  B.  929 

French,  Charles  930 

Coffin,  N.  W.  931 

Rowland,  Edward  W.  932 

Cobb,  Francis  A.  933 

Heath,  William  S.  934 

Whiting,  Lewis  F.  935 

Roberts,  Joseph  D.  936 

Turner,  Sarah  L.  937 

Mackintosh,  Roger  S.  938 

Pope,  Thomas  939 

Taylor,  Isaac  940 

Curtis,  Nathaniel  941 

Martin,  Robert  942 

Fish,  Hosea  S.  943 

Walker,  Matthew  944 

Croft,  James  T.  945 

Duncan,  Archibald  946 

Lestrom,  Magnus  947 

Jackson,  Eben  ■  948 

Robbins,  Charles  949 

Cleary,  George  T.  950 

Willet,  William  951 

Child,  Elizabeth  952 

Rogers,  Charles  O.  953 

Allen,  Charles  H.  954 

Hobart,  Charles  G.  955 

Leeds,  Samuel  956 

Littlefield,  Alvah  957 

Mackintosh,  William  H.  958 

Palmer,  William  959 

Palmer,  William  H.  960 

Bixby,  Philip  W.  961 

Sprague,  William  962 

Winsor,  Edward  963 

Hyde,  Jerusha  964 

Hills,  Samuel  965 

Seaver,  Benjamin  966 

Moore,  Emery  N.  967 

Cochrane,  William  A.  968 

Hall,  Henry  A.  969 

Bryant,  Charles  B.  970 

Morse,  Frederick  W.  971 

Hill,  Samuel  972 

Reed,  Samuel  G.  973 

Fletcher,  Robert  974 

Mott,  Joshua  975 
Kupfer,  Charles  F.,  heirs  of         976 

Blake,  William  977 


Larch  avenue 
Cypress  avenue 
Althea  path 
Althea  path 
Verbena  path 
Verbena  path 
Ivy  path 
Larch  avenue 
Cypress  avenue 
Iris  path 
Verbena  path 
Nesutan  avenue 
Larch  avenue 
Larch  avenue 
Fountain  avenue 
Fountain  avenue 
Fountain  avenue 
Ivy  path 
Ivy  path 
Fountain  avenue 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Fountain  avenue 
Fountain  avenue 
Fountain  avenue 
Lupine  path 
Fountain  avenue 
Fountain  avenue 
Fountain  avenue 
White  Oak  avenue 
Fountain  avenue 
Larch  avenue 
Larch  avenue 
Larch  avenue 
Larch  avenue 
Larch  avenue 
Larch  avenue 
Larch  avenue 
Larch  avenue 
Larch  avenue 
Larch  avenue 
Larch  avenue 
Mount  Warren  avenue 
Fountain  avenue 
Larch  avenue 
Hemlock  avenue 
Fountain  avenue 
Iris  path 
Lotus  path 
Larch  avenue 
Ivy  path 

Consecration  avenue 
Ivy  path 
Fountain  avenue 
Sumach  path 
Sumach  path- 


875 
259 
135 
150 
150 
270 

500 
136 
150 
280 


440 
600 

820 


212 


320 

400 
325 

400 
400 

412 

1000 

440 

850 
350 


106 


Paul,  Joseph  F. 

978 

Tulip  path 

218 

McNutt,  John  J. 

979 

Tulip  path 

218 

Heaman,  John,  Mrs. 

980 

Fountain  avenue 

Leavens,  Benjamin  F. 

981 

Lotus  path 

360 

Faxon,  Hannah  M. 

982 

Mayflower  path 

Young,  Catherine  C. 

983 

Iris  path 

Borrowscale,  Jane 

984 

Fountain  avenue 

Bigelow,  D.  Jackson 

985 

Rose  path 

Wallis,  Paul  D. 

986 

Larch  avenue 

Winslow,  Reuben 

987 

White  Oak  avenue 

480 

Mack,  Nehemiah 

988 

Lotus  path 

Gary,  Nathan  C. 

989 

Fountain  avenue 

150 

Taber,  Harriet 

990 

Fountain  avenue 

200 

Elder,  William 

991 

Lotus  path 

Linscott,  Wingate 

992 

Fountain  avenue 

Scott,  Robert 

993 

White  Oak  avenue 

Collyer,  Isaac  J.  P. 

994 

Fountain  avenue 

Briggs,  Andrew  G. 

995 

Sumach  path 

Thayer,  George  L. 

996 

Sumach  path 

Center,  Joseph  H. 

997 

Fountain  avenue 

Smith,  Michael  H. 

998 

Fountain  avenue 

Pope,  Frederick,  Mrs. 

999 

Rosemai'y  path 

Cotting,  Benjamin  E. 

1000 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

1000 

Hutchins,  Simon 

1001 

Lotus  path 

Brown,  Asa 

1002 

Lotus  path 

Wharton,  Robert 

1003 

Fountain  Avenue 

Smith,  Samuel  D. 

1004 

Mayflower  path 

Ewell,  William  S. 

1005 

Mimosa  path 

150 

Scott,  Thomas  A.,  and  Martha 
Drake 

'|l006 
1007 

Fountain  avenue 

Smith,  D  welly  T. 

Geranium  path 

150 

Stockwell,  M.  S. 

1008 

Fountain  avenue 

210 

Sampson,  Charles 

1009 

Lupine  path 

315 

Adams,  Lydia  Ann 

1010 

Beliflower  path 

120 

Sanford,  William  H. 

1011 

Magnolia  avenue 

935 

Morton,  Ebenezer 

1012 

Mayflower  path 

Kingsley,  Julia  Ann 

1013 

Kalmia  path 

Hall,  Richard 

1014 

White  Oak  avenue 

Kennedy,  Donald 

1015 

White  Oak  avenue 

Maguire,  Francis 

1016 

Larch  avenue 

400 

Bradish,  Levi  J. 

1017 

Mayflower  path 

Burt,  Seth  F. 

1018 

Lotus  path 

Rollins,  John  W. 

1019 

Mimosa  path 

150 

Richardson,  Georgianna  W. 

1020 

Lotus  path 

Mash,  Peter 

1021 

Lotus  path 

Balch,  John 

1022 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

400 

Whiting,  Samuel  W. 

1023 

Mimosa  path 

150 

Black,  Jane 

1024 

Mimosa  path 

150 

Chandler,  Henry  H. 

1025 

Lotus  path 

Capen,  Moses  L. 

1026 

Mayflower  path 

Bartlett,  B.  C. 

1027 

Lotus  path 

Carnes,  John 

1028 

Mimosa  path 

150 

Bacon,  Margaret 

1029 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

Grant,  Charles  E. 

1030 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

400 

Weston,  Oliver 

1031 

Larch  avenue 

400 

107 


Atkins,  Simon  P. 

1032 

Barrett,  Gilman 

1033 

Lunt,  James  H. 

1034 

Austin,  Arthur  W. 

1035 

Willard,  Paul 

1036 

Seaver,  George            1037  and  1038 

Wright,  John'M. 

1039 

Hersey,  George  E. 

1040 

Soren,  John  J. 

1041 

McDewell,  William  F. 

1042 

Keynolds,  Cynthia 

1043 

Reynolds,  Grindall 

1044 

Lowd,  Charles  J. 

1045 

Page,  Edward 

1046 

Blackbird,  George 

1047 

Leeds,  Samuel 

1048 

Ames,  Asa 

1049 

Preston,  Elisha 

1050 

Leach,  Eliab 

1051 

Baldwin,  Luke 

1052 

Furber,  Page 

1053 

Furber,  William  H.  H. 

1054 

Child,  Stephen 

1055 

Dudley,  Elbridge  G. 

1056 

Cook,  William  H. 

1057 

Richardson,  George 

1058 

Cheever,  William 

1059 

Curtis,  Hiram 

1060 

Whitney,  Salmon 

1061 

Cordwell,  Robert  H. 

1062 

Pratt,  Samuel  F. 

1063 

Fowle,  John  A. 

1064 

Reed,  Timothy 

1065 

Heyer,  Ellis  J. 

1066 

Hill,  Frederick  S. 

1067 

Sweetser,  Margaret  M. 

1068 

Mosely,  Thomas 

1069 

Hall,  Martin 

1070 

Davis,  Ethan 

1071 

Richardson,  A.  Augustus 

1072 

Ayres,  Frances  E. 

1073 

Boyd,  Francis 

1074 

Stanwood,  Eben  C. 

i075 

Tyler,  John 

1076 

Dudley,  B.  F. 

1077 

Fenno,  William,  Mrs. 

1078 

Chadwick,  Joseph  H. 

1079 

May,  William  B. 

1080 

Hill,  William  H. 

1081 

Turner,  Emeline  F. 

1082 

Rutledge,  James  S. 

1083 

Homer,  Fitzhenry,  heirs  of 

1084 

Ellis,  Freeman 

1085 

Merrill,  Joseph  W. 

1086 

Noyes,  Mary 

1087 

Cypress  avenue 

250 

Cypress  avenue 

250 

Lotus  path 

Walnut  avenue 

360 

Walnut  avenue 

360 

Cypress  avenue 

450 

Walnut  avenue 

360 

Walnut  avenue 

360 

Lotus  path 

Lotus  path 

Sumach  path 

Sumach  path 

352 

Mimosa  path 

150 

Lotus  path 

240 

Lotus  path 

Rose  path 

390 

Mimosa  path 

150 

Rose  path 

455 

Lotus  path 

Kalmia  path 

340 

Sumach  path 

177 

Sumach  path 

177 

Sumach  path 

330 

Sumach  path 

330 

Larch  avenue 

Rose  path 

Rose  path 

Rose  path 

Rose  path 

Lotus  path 

Mimosa  path 

150 

Spruce  avenue 

Lotus  path 

320 

Lotus  path 

Mimosa  path 

150 

Kalmia  path 

Lotus  path 

Mimosa  path 

200 

Lotus  path 

Lotus  path 

Mimosa  path 

150 

Columbine  path 

Columbine  path 

Columbine  path 

Columbine  path 

280 

Lotus  path 

Rose  path 

Rose  path 

Rose  path 

Rose  path 

Hyacinth  path 

142 

Larch  avenue 

Spruce  avenue 

Lotus  path 

Larch  avenue 

108 


Swazey,  Alexander 
Kendrick,  William  W. 
Adams,  Samuel 
Batclielder,  George  A. 
Folsom,  James 
Thorndike,  Eben  B. 
Worthen,  Nelson 
Ager,  Solomon 
Pierce,  Samuel  S. 
Eager,  Edward  K. 
Marquand,  John  P. 
Wood,  Elijah  R. 
Wing,  Benjamin  F. 
Metcalf,  Theodore 
Lewis,  William  K. 
Woodworth,  Robert  N. 
Walker,  Samuel,  Jr. 
Hall,  John 

Waterman,  Dependence  S. 
Waterman,  Isaac 
Parker,  John  D. 
Swinson,  William 
Walker,  Clement  A. 
Walker,  Galen,  Mrs. 
Metcalf,  Thomas 
Farnum,  Henry- 
Patch,  Franklin  F. 
Gilmore,  Addison 
Betton,  George  E. 
Wallace,  Benjamin 
Nightingale,  James  W.,  Mrs. 
Talbot,  Aristides 
Sprague,  Charles  J. 
Sullivan,  James  P. 
Chorley,  John 
White,  George 
Hayden,  Charles  H. 
Burkhardt,  Gotleib  F. 
Stephenson,  Charles  F. 
DeLesdernier,  Emily  P. 
Fowle,  Edwin  M. 
Davis,  Daniel  C. 
Ar  Showe,  Charles 
Morrison,  D.  D. 
Fernald,  William_  M. 
Lecompte,  Francis  D. 
Bacon,  Joseph  V. 
Sleeper,  Hanson  M. 
Sleeper,  Hanson  M. 
Morton,  Josephus 
Spare,  Galen 
Woodbury,  Joseph  P. 
Hlchborn,  George  R. 
Pray,  Amasa 
Brewer,  Charles 


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 

1108 

Spruce  avenue 

1109 

Larch  avenue 

1110 

Rose  path 

240 

1111 

Rose  path 

165 

1112 

Rose  path 

1113 

Larch  avenue 

1114 

Larch  avenue 

1115 

Cypress  avenue 

400 

1116 

Larch  avenue 

1117 

Larch  avenue 

1118 

Spruce  avenue 

240 

1119 

Spruce  avenue 

1120 

Fountain  avenue 

600 

1121 

Kalmia  path 

1122 

Rose  path 

1123 

Rose  path 

1124 

Rose  path 

1125 

Rose  path 

1126 

Fountain  avenue 

1127 

Fountain  avenue 

1128 

Spruce  avenue 

1129 

Rose  path 

1130 

Fountain  avenue 

1131 

Mimosa  path 

210 

1132 

Spruce  avenue 

1133 

Mimosa  path 

150 

1134 

Consecration  avenue 

350 

1135 

Cypress  avenue 

1136 

Cypress  avenue 

1137 

Mayflower  path 

1138 

Spruce  avenue 

1139 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

1140 

Spruce  avenue 

1141 

Cypress  avenue 

260 

1142 

Cypress  avenue 

500 

109 


Garden,  Robert  C,  Mrs.  1143 

James,  Benjamin  F.  1144 

Gilmore,  Eliab,  Mrs.  1145 

Starkweather,  Jos.  B.    1146  and  1147 

Carlton,  Guy  1148 

Barnes,  Thomas  P. 

Morse,  Elijah 

Fullam,  David 

Chandler,  Theophilus  P. 

Chandler,  Peleg  W. 

Pillsbury,  John  C. 

Anderson,  John  W.,  Jr. 

Bradford,  J.  Russell 

Moore,  Ann  M. 

Nutter,  Henry,  heirs  of 

Gavett,  Charles  H. 

Stevens,  Henry  R. 

Rupp,  Francis 

Cushing,  Samuel  T. 

Marsh,  John 

Whytal,  Thomas  G. 

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  7 


1149 
1150 
1151 
1152 
1153 
1154 
1155 
1156 
1157 
1158 
1159 
1160 
1161 
1162 
1163 
1164 
1165 
1166 
1167 
1168 
1169 
1170 
1171 
1172 
1173 
1174 
1175 
1176 
1177 
1178 
1179 
1180 
1181 
1182 


Martha  W.  Cowing 


Wesselhoeft,  William  P. 
Haughton,  James 


Singleton,  John,  heirs  of 
Matthews,  William  B.,  Mrs. 
Lakin,  Louisa 
Way,  John  M. 
Reed,  Loring  W. 
Chapman,  Mary  C. 
Wheeler,  Ward  A. 
Fifield,  Sanborn 
Bartlett,  George  T. 

10 


1184 
1185 
1186 
1187 
1188 
1189 
1190 
1191 
1192 
1193 
1194 
1195 
1196 
1197 


Mimosa  path 
Rose  path 
Rose  path 
Larch  avenue 
Larch  avenue 
Yarrow  path 
Spruce  avenue 
Fountain  avenue 
Magnolia  avenue 
Magnolia  avenue 
Spruce  avenue 
Spruce  avenue 
Rose  path 
Honeysuckle  path 
Spruce  avenue 
Lotus  path 
Columbine  path 
Yarrow  path 
Fountain  avenue 
Mimosa  path 
Spruce  avenue 
Mimosa  path 
Cypress  avenue 
Fountain  avenue 
Fountain  avenue 
Mimosa  path 
Honeysuckle  path 
Lotus  path 
Yarrow  path 
Yarrow  path 
Moss  path 
Honeysuckle  path 
Honeysuckle  path 
Honeysuckle  path 
Rose  path 
Sumach  path 
Spruce  avenue 
Snow  Drop  path 
Snow  Drop  path 


150 


400 


1183     Snow  Drop  path 


Snow  Drop  path 
Sumach  path 
Walnut  avenue 
Walnut  avenue 
Fountain  avenue 
Honeysuckle  path 
Fountain  avenue 
Columbine  path 
Columbine  path 
Fir  avenue 
Spruce  avenue 
Honeysuckle  path 
Yarrow  path 


150 
450 


150 
240 


150 
260 

1000 


660 
1025 
1025 


450 


no 


Sherman,  William  H. 

Sparrell,  E.  Kirkwood 

Clapp,  William 

Worthington,  Wm.  F.,  adm'r, 

Bates,  Henry  M. 

Shute,  William  M. 

Weston,  Ebenezer  H. 

Stetson,  Gushing 

Bowles,  Robert  C.  M. 

Blake,  Mary 

Hall,  Henry  A. 

Stedman,  Francis  F. " 

Mann,  Peleg,  heirs  of 

Swift,  William  A. 

Gerry,  Samuel  L. 

Billiard,  Mrs.  Elizabeth  C. 

Frost,  H.  W.  B. 

Atkins,  Lydia  Ann 

Leman,  Eben  C. 

Todd,  Reuben  J. 

Webster,  John  G. 

Webster,  David  L. 

Brown,  James 

Warnock,  Samuel  L. 

Hepworth,  George  H. 

Brown,  Benjamin  F. 

Vinton,  Elisha 

Seaver,  Susan 

Harrington,  Solomon,  heirs  of 

Barton,  William 

Everett,  William 

Osborn,  John 

Spencer,  William  H. 

Gushing,  Horace 

Gollis,  William  H. 

Wai'd,  Sylvester  L. 

Conant,  Nathan  D. 

Adams,  William  D. 

Saunders,  M.  M. 

Hodges,  Almon  D. 

Vose,  James  W. 

Pope,  George  W. 

Holbrook,  S.  F. 

Hastings,  Sarah  H. 

Mitchell,  Thomas  S. 

Woodward,  Sarah 

Roberts,  Edward 

Bean,  Benjamin  F. 

Hallett,  Lothrop 

Eaton,  William  D. 

Hiler,  Thomas  G. 

Goffin,  George 

Frost,  George,  1st 

Frost,  Charles 

Brown,  Jeremiah 


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 

1220 

Mimosa  path 

150 

1221 

Lake  avenue 

340 

1222 

Lake  avenue 

1223 

Lake  avenue 

1224 

Poplar  avenue 

400 

1225 

Cherry  avenue 

285 

1226 

Lake  avenue 

1227 

Honeysuckle  path 

1228 

Honeysuckle  path 

1229 

Yarrow  path 

1230 

Larch  avenue 

1231 

Poplar  avenue 

400 

1232 

Mimosa  path 

150 

1233 

Spruce  avenue 

225 

1234 

Spruce  avenue 

225 

1235 

Yarrow  path 

1236 

Fir  avenue 

1237 

Cypress  avenue 

450 

1238 

Pink  path 

560 

1239 

Spruce  avenue 

1240 

Honeysuckle  path 

1241 

Mimosa  path 

150 

1242 

Mulberry  avenue 

1243 

Pink  path 

280 

1244 

Mayflower  path 

1245 

Honeysuckle  path 

1246 

Pink  path 

1247 

Spruce  avenue 

1248 

Spruce  avenue 

1249 

Pyrola  path 

156 

1250 

Spruce  avenue 

460 

1251 

Spruce  avenue 

460 

1252 

Lake  avenue 

Ill 


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 

]\Layflower  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 

JMulberry  avenue 

Bragg,  William  M. 

1276 

Honeysuckle  path 

Fisk,  Samuel  C. 

1277 

Columbine  path 

287 

Knights,  Frederick  M. 

1278 

Columbine  path 

287 

Perkins,  Abigail 

1279 

Pyrola  path 

150 

Keating,  John  F. 

1280 

Columbine  path 

Chase,  Samuel  S. 

1281 

Lake  avenue 

Wakefield,  Elizabeth 

1282 

Pyrola  path 

150 

Brooman,  George 

1283 

Pyrola  path 

150 

Wilson,  Lewis  B. 

1284 

Honeysuckle  path 

180 

Hale,  Robert 

1285 

Spruce  avenue 

330 

Paradise,  William  T. 

1286 

Pyrola  path 

150 

Sargent,  Joseph 

1287 

Pink  path 

207 

Sargent,  Henry 

1288 

Pink  path 

207 

Rouse,  Samuel  M.  B. 

1289 

Pyrola  path 

188 

Calrow,  Joseph 

1290 

Pyrola  path 

150 

Damrell,  John  S. 

1291 

Poplar  avenue 

400 

Pierce,  Samuel  B. 

1292 

Rhododendron  path 

450 

Saville,  William  0. 

1293 

Columbine  path 

Lindsley,  Joseph  C. 

1294 

Pink  path 

307 

Gibbs,  Rufus 

1295 

Pink  path 

307 

Loring,  Elisha  T. 

1296 

Pink  path 

King,  Franklin 

1297 

Pink  path 

King,  Edward 

1298 

Pink  path 

Wood,  Ezra  F. 

1299 

Yarrow  path 

380 

Whittington,  Granville  N. 

1300 

Pink  path 

Sargent,  Cyrus 

1301 

Pink  path 

400 

Crockett,  Selden 

1302 

Pink  path 

Richardson,  Isaac  T. 

1303 

Pyrola  path 

150 

Crawford,  .Tames 

1304 

Honeysuckle  path 

180 

O'Brine,  William 

1305 

Pyrola  path 

150 

Fobes,  Horace 

1306 

Columbine  path 

Pastor,  Caroline 

1307 

Arethusa  path 

150 

112 


Clark,  John 

Association,  Boston  Young ' 

Men's  Christian 
Tenney,  Nathaniel  F. 
Toby,  Seth 
Hovey,  Elbridp;e  A. 
D'Wolf,  John  L. 
Hopkins,  Solomon 
Robinson,  John  T. 
Partridge,  Artemas 
Partridge,  Adin 
Walmsley,  Henry 
Porter,  Charles 
May,  John  W. 
Ward,  William  H. 
White,  Charles  G. 
Drury,  Mary  Jane 
Elliott,  James  R. 
Wood,  James  F. 
Wright,  William 
Fowle,  William  B. 
Mcintosh,  Wm.  H. 
Stiles,  Hosea  B. 
Allen,  Thomas  J. 
Acorn,  Jerusha 
Ladd,  William  H. 
Ramsay,  James  S. 
Hoogs,  Stephen  F. 
Kidder,  Henry  P. 
Barrage,  William 
Howes,  Willis 
Brown,  John  N. 
Mansur,  Gilman,  heirs  of 
Putnam,  Silas  S. 
Pope,  William 
Curtis,  John 
Estabrook,  Benjamin 
Waterman,  Melzar 
Sanborn,  Ira  E.,  Jr. 
Tremlitt,  Cordelia 
Frost,  Eben  R. 
Montague,  Samuel  R. 
Nutter";  Charles  C. 
Winchester,  William  H. 
Dudley,  Henry 
Kennard,  Martin  P. 
Chapin,  Nathaniel  G. 
Freeman,  Watson 
Stone,  Ebenezer 
Josselyn,  Alonzo 
Harlow,  William  H. 
Hosley,  Benjamin 
Shepard,  John 
Kendall,  Thomas 
Turner,  Job  A. 


1308 

Honeysuckle  path 

240 

1309 

Pyrola  path 

211 

1310 

Lake  avenue 

1311 

Arethusa  path 

225 

1312 

Pyrola  path 

150 

1313 

Wabon  path 

90 

1314 

Pink  path 

1315 

Pyrola  path 

150 

1316 

Lake  avenue 

1317 

Lake  avenue 

420 

1318 

Pink  path 

1319 

Pyrola  path 

150 

1320 

Columbine  path 

1321 

Pink  path 

1322 

Pyrola  path 

150 

1323 

Pyrola  path 

150 

1324 

Pink  path 

1325 

Arethusa  path 

180 

1326 

Cypress  avenue 

352 

1327 

Asphodel  path 

220 

1328 

Asphodel  path 

220 

1329 

Honeysuckle  path 

240 

1330 

Mulberry  avenue 

1331 

Mulberry  avenue 

1332 

Arethusa  path 

180 

1333 

Honeysuckle  path 

1334 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1335 

Pink  path 

700 

1336 

Rhododendron  patli 

600 

1337 

Columbine  path 

1338 

Lake  avenue 

1339 

Columbine  path 

1340 

Lake  avenue 

1341 

Rhododendron  path 

494 

1342 

Pyrola  path 

150 

1343 

Pyrola  path 

275 

1344 

Crocus  path 

1345 

Pink  path 

1346 

Asphodel  path 

500 

1347 

Spruce  avenue 

1348 

Spruce  avenue 

1349 

Rhododendron  path 

1350 

Columbine  path 

1351 

Lake  avenue 

1352 

Snow  Drop  path 

1353 

Snow  Drop  path 

1354 

Cypress  avenue 

1355 

Pink  path 

1356 

Spruce  avenue 

385 

1357 

Bignonia  path 

1358 

Lake  avenue 

1359 

Lake  avenue 

1360 

Bignonia  path 

200 

1361 

Bignonia  path 

510 

113 


Lewis,  Sarah  B. 
Kent,  Eleanor,  Mrs. 
Prouty,  Dwight 
Pearce,  Nelson 
Gushing,  Lemuel 
Wiggin,  George  H. 
Monks,  John  P.,  heirs  of 
Fauchney,  David 
Quincy,  John  W. 
Clark,  William  D. 
Green,  Capt.  Benjamin  G. 
Lash,  Augustus  F. 
Stevens,  Albert  H. 
Hicks,  Samuel  D. 
Badger,  Erastus  B. 
Bere,  John 
Brown,  Dorcas,  Mrs. 
White,  George 
Barker,  George  T. 
Anderson,  John 
Anderson,  William  S. 
Briggs,  Harrison  O. 
Briggs,  Edvvin 
Powers,  Eliza  A. 
Butler,  David  P. 
Lincoln,  Charles  N.  M. 
Holman,  Henry 

Young,  Edward,  Mrs. 
Bryant,  Nathaniel 
Pierce,  Oliver 
Gage,  Seth 
Janes,  Daniel  W. 
Cutter,  Ezekiel  W. 
Pease,  Giles 

Fitzgerald,  Charles  J.,  Mrs. 
PoUex,  Augustus  E. 
Parker,  George  J.,  estate  of 
Hilton,  Thomas 
Milliken,  Edward  W. 
Tuttle,  Mary  B. 
Hall,  David 
Hadley,  Henry  T. 
Heathheld,  Thomas  D. 
Holden,  Leonard  P. 
Everett,  Eliza  G. 
Kreissman,  Augustus 
Elms,  Cornelius 
Horn,  Andrew 
Hartford,  Benjamin  B. 
Howard,  William  H. 
Dean,  Samuel  B. 
Hayes,  John  C. 
Hayes,  William  C. 
Kingsbury,  Franklin 

10* 


1362 

Fountain  avenue 

1363 

Pyrola  path 

150 

1364 

Columbine  path 

1365 

Columbine  path 

1366 

Cypress  avenue 

450 

1367 

Pyrola  path 

150 

1368 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

600 

1369 

Pyrola  path 

150 

1370 

Mount  Warren  avenue 

600 

1371 

Pyrola  path 

150 

1372 

Pink  path 

1373 

Pyrola  path 

150 

1374 

Lake  avenue 

1375 

Rock  Maple  avenue 

1376 

Rock  Maple  avenue 

1377 

Columbine  path 

200 

1378 

Columbine  path 

200 

1379 

Pyrola  path 

150 

1380 

Asphodel  path 

320 

1381 

Lake  avenue 

180 

1382 

Lake  avenue 

180 

1383 

Pink  path 

360 

1384 

Pink  path 

360 

1385 

Pyrola  path 

150 

1386 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1387 

Yarrow  path 

1388 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1389 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1390 

Rhododendron  path 

34^ 

1391 

Honeysuckle  path 

1392 

Pink  path 

172 

1393 

Pink  path 

172 

1394 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1395 

Crocus  path 

1396 

Rhododendron  path 

1397 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1398 

Pyrola  path 

150 

1399 

Wigelia  path 

1400 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1401 

Crocus  path 

1402 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1403 

Spruce  avenue 

280 

1404 

Pyrola  path 

150 

1405 

Pink  path 

1406 

Pink  path 

1407 

Pink  path 

1408 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1409 

Pyrola  path 

150 

1410 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1411 

Pyrola  path 

150 

1412 

Bignonia  path 

265 

1413 

Bignonia  path 

265 

1414 

Rhododendron  path 

200 

1415 

Rhododendron  path 

20.0 

1416 

Rhododendron  path 

114 


Reynolds,  Edward  B. 
Elms,  James  C. 
Little,  George  B.,  Mrs. 
Gale,  Lydia,  Mrs. 
Gardner,  William  H. 
Lyon,  George 
Bartlett,  Enoch,  estate  of 
Clark,  Timothy  Franklin 
Webster,  Andrew  S. 
Cooper,  Isaac  C. 
Ladd,  Albert  W. 
Kichmond,  Gideon  B. 
Spaulding,  Rufus  H. 
Tarbell,  Eben 
Tarbell,  Eben  R. 
Hancock,  Henry 
Butler,  Joel 
Willis,  Thomas 
Kauffer,  John  T. 
Colburn,  Hiram 
Bradstreet,  Elizabeth 
Mendmn,  John  A. 
Whittemore,  Joel 
Stone,  Nathan 
Watson,  Lucia  M. 
Flint,  John 
Gore,  Watson,  Jr. 
Wells,  Thomas  F. 
Goodrich,  Emily 
Davis,  John  G. 
James,  Benjamin 
Stetson,  Alpheus  M. 
Stetson,  Alpheus 
Rising,  Darius  B. 
Horn,  Benjamin  F. 
Crook,  Henry 
Hawkes,  Benjamin 
Butler,  George 
James,  William  E. 
Dexter,  Anson 
Leeds,  Hannah  W. 
Robinson,  Thomas  W. 
Lovejoy,  Charles  J. 
Burrage,  T.  F. 
Palmer,  Edward  D.  G. 
Gale,  Lydia,  Mrs.,  •2d 
Chamberlain,  A.  G. 
Lyford,  Nathaniel 
Benton,  Austin  W. 
Steele,  Sarah  A.  G.  S. 
Lane,  Charles  L. 
Wallcut,  Robert  F. 
Bailey,  Daniel  S. 
Wright,  Sophia  H. 
Rowell,  Whittemore 


1417 

Honeysuckle  path 

1418 

Rhododendi'on  path 

1419 

Rock  Maple  avenue 

1420 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1421 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1422 

Rhododendron  path 

1423 

Wigelia  path 

360 

1424 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1425 

Pink  path 

1426 

Lake  avenue 

1427 

Lake  avenue 

1428 

Pink  path 

1429 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1430 

Spruce  avenue 

210 

1431 

Spruce  avenue 

210 

1432 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1433 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1434 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1435 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1436 

Ai'ethusa  path 

150 

1437 

Crocus  path 

1438 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1439 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1440 

Arethusa  path 

1441 

Yarrow  path 

1442 

Poplar  avenue 

200 

1443 

Poplar  avenue 

200 

1444 

Wigelia  path 

375 

1445 

Brook  path 

150 

1446 

Pink  path 

1447 

Rhododendron  path 

1448 

Rhododendron  path 

1449 

Rhododendron  path 

1450 

Rhododendron  path 

1451 

Crocus  path 

320 

1452 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1453 

Rhododendron  path 

1454 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1455 

Asphodel  path 

200 

1456 

Asphodel  path 

200 

1457 

Pyrola  path 

150 

1458 

Pink  path 

1459 

Brook  path 

150 

1460 

Crocus  path 

1461 

Rock  Maple  avenue 

225 

1462 

Rock  Maple  avenue 

225 

1463 

Brook  path 

1464 

Crocus  path 

1465 

Crocus  path 

1466 

Crocus  path 

1467 

Crocus  path 

1468 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1469 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1470 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1471 

Rhododendron  path 

115 


Putnam,  Benjamin  W.  1472 

Forsyth,  William  1473 

Ormsbee,  Marcus  1474 

Drew,  George  G.  1475 

Clapp,  Mary  H.,  Mrs.  1476 

Swain,  Charles  D.  1477 

Craft,  Thaddeus  C.  1478 

Blaney,  George  A.  1479 

Baker,  Eliphalet  1480 

Goodwin,  Julia  A.,  Mrs.  1481 

Waldmyer,  Benjamin  1482 

Preseott,  Joseph  O.  1483 

Binney,  Matthew  1484 

Ellis,  Nathan  1485 

Westcott,  Stephen  1486 

Bartlett,  Ann  J.                  .  1487 

Bradford,  Samuel  D.          "  1488 

Williams,  Elijah,  trustee  1489 

Davis,  Joseph  1490 

Haskell,  Thomas  F.  1491 

Meads,  John  B.  1492 

Conant,  Charles  O.  1493 

Lovejoy,  William  B.  1494 

Simon,  Colin  1495 

Bradt,  Herman  D.  1496 

Fowler,  Edmund  B.  1497 

Rice,  Edward  E.  1498 

Jones,  Moses  1499 

Tuckerman,  William  F.  1500 

Hunneman,  John  J.  1501 

Harris,  Thomas  1502 

Jenkins,  Charles  E.  1503 

Ellis,  George  W.  1504 

Goodrich,  Mary  A.,  Mrs.  1505 

Porter,  William  H.  1506 

Taylor,  Henry  1507 

Curtis,  Franklin  1508 

Orbon,  Matthew  1509 

Lemist,  George  H.  1510 

Reed,  Alfred  1511 

Caldwell,  J.  I.  1512 

Bickford,  C.  A.,  Mrs.  1513 

1514 

Brown,  Joel  H.  1515 

Streeter,  Alice  K.  1516 

Hazeltine,  Ellen  B.  1517 

Crespy,  Harriet  J.,  Miss  1518 

Johnson,  John  1519 

Gates,  Stephen  F.  1520 

Neal,  John  W.  1521 

Harmon,  Ivory  1522 

Harmon,  Henry  M.  1523 

Dillon,  James  1524 

Nixon,  Anna  1525 


Wigelia  path 
Arethusa  path 
Brook  path 
Brook  path 
Wigelia  path 
Spruce  avenue 
Spruce  avenue 
Rhododendron  path 
Yarrow  path 
Lake  avenue 
Rhododendron  path 
Crocus  path 
Crocus  path 
Crocus  path 
Rhododendron  path 
Brook  path 
Asphodel  path 
Wigelia  and  Lily  path 
Lake  avenue 
Brook  path 
Cornell  path 
Brook  path 
Rhododendron  path 
Arethusa  path 
Arethusa  path 
Brook  path 
Lake  avenue 
Lake  avenue 
Cornell  path 
Wigelia  path 
Brook  path 
Pink  path 
Brook  path 
Arethusa  path 
Arethusa  path 
Rhododendron  path 
Pink  path 
Brook  path 
Althea  path 
Althea  path 
Cornell  path 
Arethusa  path 

Bignonia  path 
Bignonia  path 
Bignonia  path 
Arethusa  path 
Arethusa  path 
Bignonia  path 
Cornell  path 
Lake  avenue 
Lake  avenue 
Lake  avenue 
Bignonia  path 


150 
200 
150 

460 
460 


310 

310 
520 
150 
500 
2500 
600 
150 
320 
150 

150 
150 
150 


480 
150 

150 
225 
150 


120 
400 
400 

150 


120 
210 
150 
150 
150 


190 


116 


Griffin,  Minnie,  Mrs. 
Townsend,  Solomon  D. 
Harding,  William  C. 
Harding,  Charles  L. 
Harding,  George  W. 
Beard,  Peter 
Phillips,  Lucinda  E. 
Sowdon,  Philip 
Jordan,  Eliza,  Mrs. 
Blakemore,  William 
Potter,  Daniel  A. 
Rumery,  William  M. 
Bray,  Charles  C. 
Page,  Lemuel 
Newman,  Andrew  W. 
Ordway,  John  M. 
Stone,  Enos  J. 
Woodward,  W.  Eliot 
EUieott,  Joseph  P. 
Beal,  Madison 
Bullard,  Francis 
Thaxter,  Levi 
Howard,  Daniel,  Jr. 
Veazie,  William  H. 
Lingham,  William 
Trafton,  Eleanor 
Horkheimer,  Henrich 
Demeritt,  John 
Ireland,  William  H. 
Stevens,  Albert  H. 
Greele,  Samuel,  Mrs. 
Thompson,  William 
Ditson,  Oliver 
Lindall,  Susan 
Crockett,  Levi  S. 
Vose,  George  W. 
Lemist,  Edwin 
Foster,  Francis 
Wheelock,  John  A. 
B,ockwood,  L.  B. 
Rowe,  Solomon  S. 
Smith,  James  M. 
Burtchall,  Peter 
Tirrell,  Jesse 
Thornton,  Josephine  R. 
Newton,  John  F. 
Everett,  Edward  B.,  Mrs. 
Baker,  William  P. 
Hooper,  Robert  C. 
Fessenden,  Caroline  A. 
Mason,  John 
Thompson,  Albert 
Miller,  Charles  H. 
Mason,  Henry 


1526 

Althea  path 

100 

1527 

Lily  path 

1528 

Lake  avenue 

1529 

Lake  avenue 

1530 

Lake  avenue 

1531 

Brook  path 

92 

1532 

Brook  path 

150 

1533 

Pink  path 

1534 

Brook  path 

150 

1535 

Columbine  path 

1536 

Brook  path 

150 

1537 

Bignonia  path 

200 

1538 

Bignonia  path 

200 

1539 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1540 

Crocus  path 

400 

1541 

Mulberry  avenue 

1542 

Lake  aveiiue 

1543 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1544 

Lily  path 

460 

1545 

Brook  path 

150 

1546 

Cornell  path 

1547 

Rhododendron  path 

1548 

Brook  path 

150 

1549 

Rhododendron  path 

1550 

Brook  path 

150 

1551 

Brook  path 

80 

1552 

Brook  path 

150 

1553 

Rhododendron  path 

690 

1554 

Rhododendron  path 

1555 

Bignonia  path 

140 

1556 

Brook  path 

150 

1557 

Wigelia  path 

400 

1558 

Rhododendron  path 

400 

1559 

Cornell  path 

1560 

Rock  Maple  avenue 

1561 

Brook  path 

150 

1562 

Bignonia  path 

234 

1563 

Bignonia  path 

233 

1564 

Bignonia  path 

233 

1565 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1566 

Cypress  avenue 

340 

1567 

Bignonia  path 

1568 

Arethusa  path 

120 

1569 

Lake  avenue 

1570 

Arethusa  path 

150 

1571 

Lake  avenue 

1572 

Brook  path 

150 

1573 

Yarrow  path 

1574 

Asphodel  path 

1050 

1575 

Cornell  path 

1576 

Asphodel  path 

1577 

Pink  path 

1578 

Cypress  avenue 

1579 

Crocus  path 

117 


Cutler,  George 
Chapin,  George  A. 
Davis,  Gilman 
Hart,  Nathaniel  O. 
Robertson,  John  A. 
Page,  William  W. 
Pierce,  William  C. 
Moorhouse,  Isaac 
Holbrook,  Charles  C. 
Hurd,  John  R. 
Codman,  Robert 
Bla,nchard,  John  W. 
Jameson,  Thomas 
Bardwell,  Josiah 
Smith,  Elisha 
Fisher,  Horace  B. 
Sibley,  Lyman  E. 
Eaton,  Richard 
Eayrs,  William 
Gair,  John 
Nay,  Ira  A. 
Smith,  Silman 
Davis,  John  F. 
Laing,  Archibald 
Richards,  Reuben  A. 
Aldrich,  Charles  A. 
Park,  Daniel 
Levanseler,  Mary  E. 
Farnsworth,  Albert 
Fifield,  Osgood,  Mrs. 
Greenough,  Anna  A.,  wife 

D.  S.  G. 
Litchfield,  Howard 
Parker,  Caroline 
Clark,  Matthew 
Staniels,  James 
Woodman,  George  F. 
Churchill,  William  W. 
Clapp,  Lydia  C. 
Kendall,  Charles  S. 
Lincoln,  Joshua 
Wilson,  Mary 
Morse,  Ira 
Decatur,  Cyrus 
Page,  Chauncey 
Abbott,  Lewis  B. 
Bigelow,  Mary  S. 
Fiske,  George  A. 
Smith,  Whitman  B. 
Todd,  Eliel  S. 
Harrington,  Andrew  J. 
Stockman,  John  A. 
Briggs,  Charles 
Dawes,  James  E. 


of 


1580 

Rhododendron  path 

1581 

Lake  avenue 

1582 

Lake  avenue 

1583 

Cypress  avenue 

1584 

Rhododendron  path 

1585 

Asphodel  path 

360 

1586 

Cypress  avenue 

1587 

Cornell  path 

1588 

Bignonia  path 

1589 

Eliot  Hills  path 

1590 

Eliot  Hills  path 

1591 

Rhododendron  path 

1592 

Rhododendron  path 

1593 

Rock  Maple  avenue 

740 

1594 

Elder  path 

180 

1595 

Elder  path 

150 

1596 

Elder  path 

150 

1597 

Elder  path 

150 

1598 

Elder  path 

150 

1599 

Elder  path 

150 

1600 

Elder  path 

150 

1601 

Elder  path 

150 

1602 

Elder  path 

150 

1603 

Elder  path 

150 

1604 

Cypress  avenue 

1605 

Rhododendron  path 

1606 

Rhododendron  path 

1607 

Rock  Maple  avenue 

217 

1608 

Elder  path 

150 

1609 

Elder  path 

150 

1610 

Asphodel  path 

285 

1611 

Elder  path 

150 

1612 

Elder  path 

150 

1613 

Elder  path 

150 

1614 

Elder  path 

150 

1615 

Cypress  avenue 

1616 

Cypress  avenue 

1617 

Arethusa  path 

90 

1618 

Elder  path 

154 

1619 

Elder  path 

154 

1620 

Elder  path 

150 

1621 

Elder  path 

150 

1622 

Bignonia  path 

1623 

Pink  path 

1624 

Elder  path 

150 

1625 

Elder  path 

150 

1626 

Lake  avenue 

1627 

Rhododendron  path 

1628 

Elder  path 

150 

1629 

Crocus  path 

1630 

Elder  path 

150 

1631 

Rhododendron  path 

1632 

Elder  path 

150 

118 


Hopkins,  Samuel  B. 

Slocum,  William  H. 

Huntington,  Edward  B. 

Bartlett,  Daniel,  Jr. 

Brazier,  Anna 

Dix,  Francis  Henry,  Mrs. 

Libby,  Alvah 

Mackintosh,  Charles  G. 

Bainard,  John 

Moore,  Calvin  A. 

French,  Thomas  E. 

Brackett,  Franklin  B. 

Fisk,  George 

Sawyer,  William 

Hogg,  John,  for  Brown,  Hogg 

&  Taylor    ■ 
Wheeler,  Charles  H. 
Tuttle,  Samuel  J. 
Sanderson,  Luther, 
Crafts,  Charles  F. 
Cotter,  Margaret 
Sturgis,  Kussell 
Tuttle,  Gilman 
D  wight,  William 
Hubbard,  John  P. 
Carv,  Isaac  H. 
Haskell,  William  T. 
Laws,  David  Lyman 
Chaffee,  George  A. 
Cobb,  Charles  K. 
Whitten,  Charles  V. 
Wharton,  William  C. 
Perkins,  Edward  N. 
Eay,  Edwin 
Stevens,  Joseph  F. 
Burdett,  Horatio  S. 
Mecuen,  Edward  F. 
Jenkins,  Edmund  R. 
Morrill,  William  B. 
Fottler,  John 
Peterson,  John 
Crosby,  Charles  W. 
Roberts,  William  B. 
Davis,  Charles  S. 
Colburn,  Joseph  W. 
Burrows,  Hamilton  J. 
Grover,  Leonard  A. 
Tripp,  Alonzo 
Parker,  John  W. 
Boyden,  Benjamin 
Sheafe,  William 
Ransom,  Chandler  R. 
Came,  James  E. 
Blackburn,  John 


1633 

Bignonia  path 

, 

1634 

Rhododendron  path 

1635 

Sumach  path 

374 

1636 

Bignonia  path 

1637 

Arethusa  path 

125 

1638 

Elder  path 

150 

1639 

Elder  path 

180 

1640 

Asphodel  path 

1641 

Elder  path 

150 

1642 

Fir  avenue 

120 

1643 

Rhododendron  path 

1644 

Rhododendron  path 

1645 

Yarrow  path 

1646 

Bignonia  path 

1647 

Rhododendron  path 

1648 

Elder  path 

150 

1649 

Fir  avenue 

120 

1650 

Bignonia  path 

1651 

Elder  path 

150 

1652 

Rock  Maple  avenue 

225 

1653 

Wigelia  path 

430 

1654 

Bignonia  path 

1655 

Wigelia  path 

2015 

1656 

Lily  path 

360 

1657 

Lily  path 

1658 

Lily  path 

600 

1659 

Elder  path 

150 

1660 

Bignonia  path 

1661 

Eliot  Hills  path 

1662 

Bignonia  path 

275 

1663 

Asphodel  path 

280 

1664 

Asphodel  path 

720 

1665 

Bignonia  path 

1666 

Rhododendron  path 

1667 

Bignonia  path 

1668 

Elder  path 

150 

1669 

Bignonia  path 

180 

1670 

Bignonia  path 

180 

1671 

Elder  path 

150 

1672 

Elder  path    . 

150 

1673 

Hazel  path 

1674 

Elder  path 

150 

1675 

Yarrow  path 

1676 

Cypress  avenue 

1677 

Elder  path 

150 

1678 

Elder  path 

150 

1679 

Asphodel  path 

1680 

Rhododendron  path 

1681 

Bignonia  path 

285 

1682 

Asphodel  path 

408 

1683 

Elder  path 

150 

1684 

Hazel  path 

1685 

Ash  avenue 

119 


Adams,  Charles  Henry 
Bennighof,  Mary 
Stedman,  Enoch 
Henry,  Sally,  heirs  of 
Sanderson,  William 
Tufts,  William  F. 
Mahan,  Eliza  J. 
Mills,  Eben  U. 
Otis,  Edmund  B. 
Boynton,  George  W. 
Harris,  Theodore  S. 
Hubbard,  Joseph 
Hubbard,  Moses  N. 
Codman,  Catherine  E. 


1686 

Ash  avenue 

340 

1687 

Ash  avenue 

1688 

Arbutus  path 

■ 

1689 

Pink  path 

1690 

Fir  avenue 

234 

1691 

Rock  Maple  avenue 

1692 

Elder  path 

150 

1693 

Elder  path 

150 

1694 

Asphodel  path 

320 

1695 

Rock  Maple  avenue 

1696 

Arbutus  path 

1697 

Elder  path 

150 

1698 

Elder  path 

150 

1699 

Wigelia  path 

270