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DATE  DUE 

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UNIVERSITY  OF  MASSACHUSETTS 
LIBRARY 

S 

74 

N83N8 
1873-75 


TRANSACTIONS 


Norfolk  Agricultural  Society 


18  t  8. 


PUBLISHBD    BY    XHE    aOCircT-Y. 


LIBRARY_ 

UNlVERSilYOF 
MASSACHUSEnS 

AMHERST.  MASS. 


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1873-7^ 


CONTEISTTS. 


PAGE. 

Address,  bj'  Robert  Morris  Copelaiul, 5 

Report  of  the  President  and  Secretary, 14 

on  Horses, ^^ 

on  Plowing, ^^ 

on  Bulls, 1^ 


on  Cows,. 


19 


on  Heifers, ^^ 

on  Swine "^ 

on  Poultry 20 

on  Vegetables, 23 


on  Pears, 


24 


on  Apples  and  other  Fruits, 27 


on  Flowers,. 


28 


on  Dairy, 29 

on  Bread, '^^ 

on  Jellies,  Preserves;^  &c., 30 

on  Seeds, ^^ 

on  Straw  Goods, ^^ 

on  Carriages,  Wagons,  Carts,  &c., 31 

on  Manufactures, 31 

on  Ladies'  Work, 32 

on  Cabinets  of  Birds  and  Insects, 34 

on  Special  Committee, 34 

Recapitulation  of  premiums, 3o 

Report  of  the  Treasurer, 38 

Proceedings  of  the  Twenty-Fifth  Anniversary 39 

Officers  of  the  Society ^^ 

Names  of  Members, ^^ 


A^DD  RE  S  S. 


BY  ROBERT    MORRIS    COPELAND. 


Ladies  and  Gentlemen:  —  So  very  cordial  an  introduc- 
tion rather  takes  away  my  breath.  Being  a  Norfolk  County 
boy,  and  coming  here  to-day,  twenty-five  years  after  your  So- 
ciety is  founded,  it  is  hard  to  believe  that  within  these  twenty- 
five  years,  I  can  see  so  great  a  change  as  that  which  presents 
itself  to-day.  If  it  is  so  great  to  me,  what  must  it  be  with 
Mr.  Wilder,  who  has  been  identified  with  the  Society  from 
the  very  beginning .-'  When  we  say  twenty-five  years  it  seems 
but  a  small  time  ;  but  when  we  say  a  quarter  of  a  century,  it 
seems  a  long  time ;  and  it  happens  to-day  that  we  have 
reached  one  of  those  distinguishing  boundaries  in  our  pro- 
gress, which  mark  an  important  step  gained  —  that  we  have 
passed  one  of  the  heats  in  which  this  Society  has  made  good 
time.  It  has  got  now  far  beyond  the  hopes  of  those  who 
founded  it.  If  those  gentlemen  could  have  foreseen  even  but 
a  part  of  what  has  been  accomplished  they  would  have  been 
amply  satisfied.  One  looks  now  at  the  Society  and  the 
County  with  a  good  deal  of  honest  pride.  Look  at  the 
County  compared  with  what  it  was  twenty-five  years  ago. 


We  have,  indeed,  the  same  landscape  and  the  same  natural 
beauties  of  the  earth  as  before,  yet  in  those  days  the  farms 
crept  up  to  the  very  feet  of  Boston,  Where  boys  who  are 
now  men  gathered  nuts  and  stole  apples,  are  now  to  be  seen 
solid  streets  of  stores  and  manufactories.  You  find  that  in 
Dedham,  and  Canton,  and  Hyde  Park  and  neighboring  towns, 
the  requirements  for  building  and  manufacturing  have  raised 
the  land  in  value  far  beyond  its  worth  for  farming  purposes. 
Go  back  a  few  miles  to  the  land  that  was  so  poor  that  it  was 
once  considered  to  be  worthless,  and  there  now  you  will  find 
Hyde  Park,  which  has  grown  up  to  be  a  handsome  rural  city. 
We  see  what  has  been  done  during  the  past  twenty-five  years  ; 
what  will  be  done  during  the  next  twenty-five .-' 

We  talk  of  the  progress  which  the  world  at  large  has  made, 
and  often-times  overlook  what  has  been  going  on  around  our 
own  homes.  We  all  understand  and  appreciate  what  has  been 
done  in  the  business  and  manufacturing  interests  ;  yet  in  the 
domain  of  agriculture  there  have  been  improvements,  which 
are  greater  in  the  aggregate  than  all  that  have  been  accom- 
plished in  other  fields  of  effort,  and  yet  we  find  that  they  pass 
almost  unnoticed.  Twenty-five  years  ago  an  ordinary  cow,  of 
the  native  breed,  only  brought  about  ^25,  and  perhaps  an 
extraordinary  animal  might  have  cost  $75.  How  little  did 
the  people  of  those  days  imagine  that  a  cow  would  ever  bring 
the  enormous  price  which  one  was  sold  for  the  other  day,  for 
the  sum  of  $40,600  !  Such  a  thing,  even  now,  will  almost  take 
away  one's  breath.  Such  things  as  these  have  taught  the  most 
reluctant  men  among  the  farmers  the  worth  of  improved 
breeds  of  stock  and  of  scientific  farming.  Years  ago  they  would 
not  believe  that  foreign  cattle  could  ever  become  acclimated  in 
this  country,  or  secure  the  high  prices  which  they  cost,  but 


this  thing  has  been  done.  The  American  farmer  went  to 
Europe  and  bought  some  of  the  best  animals,  and  see  what 
they  have  done  for  the  whole  land  !  Where  is  the  farmer 
now-a-days  who  is  not  pleased  to  sed  a  little  of  the  yellow 
blood  of  the  Alderney  under  the  hair  of  his  cow,  or  to  have  an 
animal  he  happens  to  own  compared  to  the  Jersey  ?  We  find 
animals  now  bringing  prices  which  in  those  old  days  seenled 
fabulous.  It  is  a  very  little  time,  also,  since  a  horse  sold  in 
this  country  has  brought  as  high  a  price  as  a  $1000.  People 
said  it  was  all  very  well  for  those  who  could  afford  it  to  raise 
fine  horses  ;  but  they  were  luxuries  and  subserved  no  useful 
end.  But  what  would  they  say  of  this  great  improvement  in 
cattle  ?  A  gentleman  once  went  to  Europe  and  bought  a 
merino  sheep  at  great  expense,  and  brought  it  to  America. 
The  people  said  it  was  a  foolish  outlay  of  money  ;  that  it  couldn't 
be  acclimated,  etc.;  but  an  arrival  of  this  same  breed,  raised 
in  America,  has  since  been  sent  back  again  to  its  native  land 
in  Silesia,  and  even  carried  away  the  highest  prize  for  excel- 
lence in  that  country.  We  have  also  made  a  vast  improve- 
ment in  agriculture.  Look  at  the  increased  number  of  fruits 
that  your  past  President,  Mr,  Wilder  —  (applause)  —  has 
shown  here,  compared  with  what  he  could  have  shown  twenty- 
five  years  ago.  See  the  fruits  that  have  come  out  of  the  old 
Walker  nursery  ;  they  have  made  an  impression  throughout 
the  country,  way  down  in  Delaware  and  Pennsylvania.  We 
in  New  England  actually  live  on  the  mother  soil  of  the  world. 
When  we  go  out  to  the  farms  in  the  west,  we  are  apt  to  think 
that  that  is  the  only  place  for  the  farmer  ;  but  the  fact  is,  fully 
as  much  can  be  done  in  New  England  by  mechanical  and 
scientific  processes,  and  by  using  all  the  means  which  are 
placed  in  the  hands  of  the  farmer  here.      These  old  pudding- 


8 

stone  rocks  of  New  England,  for  instance,  give  you  all  the 
lime  and  the  manurial  requirements  wanted,  and  with  the  com- 
mon air  you  can  get  all  the  culture  you  need.  I  had  occasion 
to  go  down  to  Delaware  a  few  months  ago  —  a  State  where  men 
get  $5000  for  an  acre  of  strawberberries.  I  saw  one  corn-field 
upon  which  the  man  told  me  he  had  raised  eighty  bushels  to 
the  acre  ;  but  I  told  him  that  in  New  England  they  some- 
times raised  one  hundred  bushels  to  the  acre,  not  including 
the  pumpkins,  squashes,  etc.,  which  were  raised  with  it,  (laugh- 
ter). I  mentioned  that  one  hundred  and  seventeen  bushels 
of  corn  had  been  raised  to  the  acre  in  the  town  of  Pembrook, 
Mass.    (Applause).     This  story  was  very  hard  for  the  man  to 

believe. 

But  it  is  not  these  exceptional  crops,  let  me  say,  that  are 
best  calculated  to  improve  our  agriculture  ;  and  this  leads  me 
to  the  subject  upon  which  I  want  especially  to  speak  to  you, 
viz:— "What  really  should  be. the  objects  and  the  motives  of 
the  agriculturists  of  this  country  ?"    We  are  all  talking  about 
the  science  of  agriculture.     What  we  want  to  know  is  whether 
it  can  be  reduced  to  practical  results.     These  various  experi- 
ments made  by  men  to  get  extraordinary  crops  do  but  little 
to  advance  the  real  science  of  agriculture.     True  science  gets 
all  the  facts,  lumps    them  together,  and  deducts  conclusions 
from  the  whole,  and  not  from  isolated  parts.     The  agricul- 
tural colleges  do  a  vast  deal  of  good,  and  will  do  more  when 
the  people  come  to  understand  what  the  real  value  of  an  agri- 
cultural college  is.     They  teach  that  it  is  better  to  offer  a 
premium  for  crops  which  can  be  easily  raised,  than  for  those 
extraordinary  crops  which  can  only  be  raised  with  difficulty. 
It  is  well  for  the  farmer  to  understand  the  limitations  of  his 
work,  and  to  know  what  he  can  do  and  what  he  cannot  do,  — 


9 

what  ought  to  be  clone  and  what  ought  not.  Crops  are  like 
human  beings,  to  a  certain  extent.  They  have  a  stomach,  and 
require  certain  kinds  of  food.  If  you  treat  a  crop  with  special 
manures,  you  can  soon  find  by  experiment  just  what  that  crop 
likes,  and  precisely  what  ought  to  be  done  for  it  to  get  the 
best  results.  You  all  understand,  after  a  while,  the  import- 
ance of  reducing  the  bulk  of  manures  as  much  as  possible. 
Let  me  refer  again  to  Delaware.  The  soil  of  that  State  is 
made  up  of  the  washings  of  a  great  river.  A  large  portion  of 
the  land  has  been  cropped  and  cropped,  until  some  of  it  will 
now  hardly  bear  sorrel,  it  is  so  poor.  A  man  went  down 
there  some  years  ago  and  bought  some  of  this  land  that  would 
not  pay  taxes.  He  cultivated  it  with  only  superphosphate  of 
lime,  with  a  view  to  raising  crops  of  peaches  and  strawberries. 
It  was  like  taking  a  drowned  man  out  of  the  sea.  By  means  of 
the  proper  manuring,  he  soon  restored  this  land  to  a  state  of 
fertility  and  raised  most  excellent  crops.  The  rules  of  wealth 
and  the  laws  of  nature  combine  to  teach  the  lesson  which  may 
be  applied  right  here  amongst  you.  All  summer  long  Boston 
has  been  complaining  of  the  bad  odors  from  this  river  and 
that  river.  Worcester  has  been  complaining  of  her  sewage  ; 
so  have  Newport  and  other  places.  We  find  that  the  Back  Bay 
of  Boston  is  the  source  of  a  good  deal  of  trouble — that  the  peo- 
ple living  in  the  large  houses  of  that  section  say  it  is  unhealthy. 
These  matters  may  seem  about  as  far  oft"  from  agriculture  as 
the  north  pole,  yet  they  tell  us  some  stern  facts  of  nature. 
You  make  huge  draughts  on  the  guano  banks  for  material  to 
put  on  the  land,  and  yet  you  waste  in  your  rivers  and  sewers 
manure  worth  more  than  guano.  Not  only  this,  but  the  efflu- 
via from  great  sewers  poisons  the  air  and  undermines  the 
health  of  the  people.     And  yet  you  allow  the  waste  of  mat- 


10 

ter  which,  if  fully  utilized,  would  make  Norfolk  County  the 
garden  of  the  world  ;  you  throw  away,  in  fact,  what  would 
make  this  County  and  every  other  county  fruitful,  and  you  die 
and  pay  for  it.  We  shut  our  eyes  to  all  this,  yet  they  will  in 
time  have  to  be  opened,  and  opened,  perhaps,  in  the  sternest 
wa}^  In  giving  your  premiums,  also,  you  should  look  more  to 
what  will  develope  the  general  agricultural  interests  of  the 
County  rather  than  simply  the  development  of  special  crops. 
On  this  question  we  must  deal  with  things  in  the  mass. 

There  is  another  side  to  the  question — its  esthetic  side.  I 
have  only  to  look  about  me  to  see  that  you  appreciate  the 
beauty  of  flowers.  Within  a  few  years  past  the  farmers  have 
developed  many  out-door  plants  which  it  would  have  been 
thought  impossible  to  raise  twenty-five  years  ago,  except  in 
green-houses.  We  find  flowers  everywhere,  for  nature  loves 
beauty.  We  ought  to  do  everything  which  will  tend  to  en- 
courage the  people  to  appreciate  the  beautiful,  and  in  flori- 
culture many  can  find  a  most  congenial  as  well  as  profitable 
vocation.  It  only  is  a  very  short  time  since,  that  when  peo- 
ple talked  about  beautifying  a  country  place,  men  turned  aside 
with  a  sneer  and  asked,  "what  is  it  all  worth  .-'"  The  worth  of 
beauty,  let  me  reply,  no  man  can  tell.  The  birds  and  flowers 
and  many  other  objects  of  nature  which  we  see  around  us, 
have  beauty  developed  in  a  most  extraordinary  degree  in  color 
and  form,  and  all  these  things  teach  us  that  what  is  worth 
doing  at  all  is  worth  doing  well.  You  have,  to  be  sure,  your 
public  parks  and  streets,  planted  with  trees,  but  how  little  in 
the  way  of  natural  adornment  has  been  done  as  yet,  and  how 
much  has  been  left  undone  !  When  you  look  up  to  your  Blue 
Hill  or  go  to  its  top,  or  go  to  Wachusett,  and  gaze  below, 
you  see  a  landscape  that  is  unsurpassed  anywhere  in  natural 


11 

beauty.  You  may  go  to  the  Adirondacks,  or  the  White  Moun- 
tains, or  the  Rocky  Mountains,  and  never  see  anything  better 
than  this.  But  many  of  our  beautiful  objects  are  constantly 
being  destroyed  to  make  way  for  what  is  called  "the  march  of 
improvement."  Look  at  the  ugly  gashes  which  have  been 
made  in  Parker's  Hill  in  Roxbury,  and  the  many  disfigure- 
ments of  natural  scenery  in  many  other  quarters  around  the 
outskirts  of  Boston.  If  this  work  continues  with  the  same 
activity  in  the  next  twenty-five  years  that  it  has  in  the  last,  the 
man  who  stands  on  Blue  Hill  in  Milton  will  see  that  a  sacri- 
fice has  gone  on  by  destroying  that  which  can  never  be  re- 
placed. If  every  man  should  try  to  prevent,  so  far  as  it  is  in 
his  power,  every  unnecessary  sacrifice  of  natural  objects, 
great  good  would  be  done.  If  we  could  only  put  the  city  of 
Boston  under  bonds,  so  that  when  it  takes  in  any  surround- 
ing country  it  shall  be  withheld  from  destroying  objects  of 
natural  beauty,  it  would  be  an  excellent  thing.  The  injurious 
effects  of  this  ruthless  destruction  are  felt  principally  among 
the  poorer  classes.  The  few  who  are  possessed  of  wealth  can 
have  their  own  lawns  and  gardens,  but  the  great  multitude, 
those  who  are  the  workers  of  the  country,  are  cut  off  from 
these  luxuries.  The  people  cannot  enjoy  the  places  of  the 
rich  as  well  as  those  of  their  own.  Any  one  who  has  seen 
the  Central  Park  in  New  York,  or  the  Prospect  Park  in  Brook- 
lyn, and  enjoyed  the  spectacles  there  presented  to  him,  does 
not  need  me  to  tell  him  of  the  pleasure  which  he  received. 
The  rich  men  owe  it,  in  fact,  to  the  people  to  give  them  such 
places  of  entertainment — such  lawns  and  trees  and  grounds — 
as  will  tend  to  turn  their  attention  away  from  vaneful  amuse- 
ments and  encourage  a  love  of  the  simple  pleasures  and  of 
beautiful   natural  objects.     If  they  do  not  give  them  these 


12 

things,  the  time  will  come  when  the  great  siih  stratum  of  so- 
ciety will  demand  them.  And  why  not  give  these  things  in 
time  ?  Why  not  furnish  a  resort  where  the  boys  can  play  at 
ball,  where  lovers  can  meet  and  stroll  ?  I  could  dwell  long 
upon  such  a  subject  as  this,  had  I  time. 

Let  me  now  go  back  once  more  to  the  old  agricultural  ques- 
tion.   It  is  hardly  possible  for  us  to  realize  the  improvements 
which  are  in  store  for  us  during  the  next  quarter  century.    If  ag- 
riculture has  grown  to  such  great  proportions  during  the  last 
twenty-five  years,  and  horticulture  has  become  what  it  has, 
then  it  is  reasonable  to  suppose  that  many  wonderful  improve- 
ments are  still  in  store  for  us.      When  we  see  the  farmers 
right  around  us  with  their  horse-rakes  and  other  modern    ap- 
pliances, we  are  apt  to  think  that  about  all  has  been  done  that 
can  be  done  ;    that  we  have  about   reached  the  limits  of  agri- 
cultural machinery  ;  but  this  is  not  so.       One  ingenious  man 
has  made  a  machine,  which,  I  believe,  is  destined  to  thorough- 
ly revolutionize  agriculture  —  tomake  as  vast  an  improve- 
ment as  is  seen  in  improving  the  breeds  of  cows  from  the  old 
grade  of  $20  to  the  modern  blooded  animal  of  $40,000.    Those 
v/ho  have  seen  the  Wilkinson  steam  plow,  to  which  I  refer,  an 
engine  with  a  wheel  like  the  foot  of  an  elephant,  which   can 
carry  ten  wagons  loaded  with  men,  and  will  accomplish  a  vast 
amount  of  work  in  a  very  short   time,  will  understand  the 
worth  of  this  new  agency.     I  have  seen  this  machine  hitched 
up  and  running  ten  plows.     It  will  save  from  $10  to  $50  to  the 
farmer  every  time  it  is  used.      Thus  you  will  see,  my  friends, 
that  agricultural  science  is  as  yet  but  in   its   infancy.      The 
farmer  who  now  tills  twenty  acres  will  in  the  future  till  one 
hundred  acres,  and  do  it  with  greater  ease  and  profit  than  he 
can  now  manage  his  twenty.     These  monster  machines,  to  be 


sure,  are  too  expensive  for  any  one  individual  to  own,  but  a 
score  or  more  farmers,  by  clubbing  together,  can  make  it  prof- 
itable to  use  them.  When  you  realize  the  vast  possibilities 
of  the  future,  you  will  believe  that  the  man  who  is  with  us 
to-day  —  who  has  seen  such  improvements  as  Col.  Wider  has 
seen  during  the  past  twenty-five  years  —  will  be  but  as  a  mere 
child  in  comparison  with  the  grown  man  of  a  generation  or 
two  hence.     (Applause.) 


14 


Report  of  the  President  and  Secretary. 


To  the  Secretary  of  the  State  Board  of  Agriculture : 

Sir, —  We  herewith  submit,  in  compHance  with  the  require- 
ments of  the  Statute,  the  following  statement  of  the  Trans- 
actions of  the  Norfolk  Agricultural  Society  for  the  year  1873. 

No  material  change  has  taken  place  in  the  condition  or 
prospects  of  the  Society,  now  more  than  twenty-five  years 
old.  We  believe  however  that  we  but  express  the  unanimous 
judgment  of  those  present,  that  the  last  Annual  Exhibition  of 
the  Society  was  in  all  respects  one  of  the  best  ever  held  in 
the  County. 

For  a  detailed  statement  of  the  operations  of  the  Society 
for  the  past  year,  we  refer  to  the  subjoined  Reports  of  the 
several  Committees. 

HENRY    S.    RUSSELL,  President, 

Henry  O.  Hildreth,  Secretary. 


15 


REPORTS  OF  COMMITTEES. 


HORSES. 

The  Committees  of  the  several  classes  into  which  this  depart- 
ment is  divided  have  reported  to  me  as  follows : — 

Class  A  —  Roadsters. 

1st  Division,  Stallions.  —  First  premium  of  ten  dollars  to  ^Y.  T. 
Brown  of  West  Roxbury ;  Diploma  to  Juson  Houghton  of  Milton. 

2cl  Division,  Brood  Mares. — First  premium  of  seven  dollars  to 
W.  T.  Cook  of  Milton ;  2d  premium  of  five  to  W.  T.  Cook  of 
Foxboro'. 

2>d  Division,  Colts  and  Fillies. — Four  years  old,  first  premium  of 
five  dollars  to  R.  Holmes  of  Boston  Highlands  ;  three  years  old,  first 
premium  of  five  dollars  to  J.  Houghton  of  Milton  ;  2d  premium  of 
three,  to  J.  Walter  Bradlee  of  Milton  ;  two  years  old,  first  premium 
of  three  dollars  to  W.  T.  Cook  of  Foxboro' ;  2d  premium  of  two, 
to  G.  C.  Park,  P^ast  Walpole  ;  one  year  old,  1st  premium  of  three 
dollars  to  W.  T.  Cook  of  Foxboro' ;  2d  premiuna  of  two,  to  W. 
E.  Coffin  of  Dorchester. 

4th  Division,  Pairs  in  Harness. — First  premium  of  tea  dollars  to 
Albert  Tirrell  of  Weymouth. 

bth  Division,  Harness  Horses.  —  First  premium  of  eight  dollars 
to  W.  T.  Cook  of  Foxboro' ;  2d  premium  of  six,  none  awarded  ;  3d 
premium  of  four,  to  A.  P.  Bickmore  of  Hyde  Park  ;  -Ith  premium  of 
two,  to  W.  H.  Warren  of  Randolph. 

Class  B.  —  Horses  of  all  Work. 

\st  Division,  Stallions.  —  First  premium  of  ten  dollars  to  K.  W. 
Sewell  of  Medfield. 

2d  Division,  Brood  Mares.  —  Pirst  premium  of  seven  dollars  to 
A.  Davenport  of  Canton  ;  2d  premium  of  five,  none  awarded. 


16 

dd  Division,  Colts  and  Fillies.  —  Four  years  okl,  no  entries  ;  three 
3  ears  old,  first  premium  of  three  dollars  to  J.  Davenport  of  Canton  ; 
two  years  old,  no  entries  ;  one  year  old,  no  entries. 

■ith  Division,  2)airs  in  liarness.  —  First  premium  of  seven  dollars 
to  W.  T.  Cook  of  Foxboro' ;    2d  premium  of  five,  none  awarded. 

oth  Division,  horses  in  harness.  —  First  premium  of  six  dollars 
to  W.  T.  Cook  of  Foxboro' ;  2d  premium  of  four,  to  J.  H.  Far- 
rington  of  Millon. 

Class  C.  —  Family  Horses. 

1st  Division,  Stallions.  —  No  entries. 

2f/  Division.  Brood  Mares  and  Colts.  —  First  premium  of  seven 
dollars  to  CM.  Vinson  of  Dorchester;  2d  premium  of  five,  none 
awarded. 

od  Division,  Colts  and  Fillies.  —  Four  years  old,  first  premium 
of  five  dollars  to  J.  W.  Bradlee  of  Milton  ;  2d  premium  of  three, 
to  Patrick  McTernern  of  Foxboro' ;  three  years  old,  first  premium 
of  five  dollars  to  L.  A.  Eaton  of  Dedham  ;  two  years  old,  none 
entered  ;  one  year  old,  first  premium  of  three  dollars  to  Capt. 
Patillo  of  Stoughton  ;  2d  premium  of  two,  to  Charles  Bronsdon  of 
Milton. 

4//t  Division,  Carriage  Horses.  —  First  premium  of  ten  dollars  to 
R.  Holmes  of  Boston  Highlands  ;  2d  premium,  none  awarded. 

bth.  Division,  Buggy  or  Chaise.  — First  premium  of  eight  dollars 
to  W.  T.  Cook  of  Foxboro' ;  2d  premium  of  six,  to  C.  W.  New- 
hall  of  Norwood  ;  3d  premium  of  four,  to  C.  F.  Ellis  of  Dedham. 

6th  Division,  Saddle  Horses.  —  First  premium  of  six  dollars  to 
W.  T.  Cook  of  Foxboro' ;  2d  premium  of  four,  to  George  S.  Ferry 
of  Milton  ;  3d  premium,  none  awarded. 

1th  Division,  Ponies.  —  Matched  pairs,  first  premium  of  six  dol- 
lars to  R.  W.  Hamblin  of  Hyde  Park  ;   2d  premium,  none  awarded. 

Single  Pony.  —  First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  J.  W.  Bradlee 
of  Milton. 

To  Emery  Hawes  of  Stoughton  the  committee  recommend  a 
Diploma  for  his  black  horse,  Orleans. 

Class  D.  — Draught  Horses. 

]st  Division,  Single  Draught-horse.  —  First  premium  of  seven 
dollars  to  Edward  Sumner  of  Dedham. 


17 

Pairs.  —  First  premium  of   ten  dollars  to  D.  F,  Decatur,  West 
Deilbam  ;  2d  premium  of  seven,  to  J.  P.  Sias  of  Milton. 


SPECIAL   PRIZES. 


First  Day.  —  Tiiuksday. 

Gentlancti's  Druing-Horses.  —  First  premium  of  the  Society's 
Cup,  twenty-five  dollars,  to  ^y.  R.  Angier  of  Milton  ;  ■2d  premium 
often,  to  H.  Parker  of  Dedham. 

Xearest  to  three  minutes.  —  Societj^'s  Cup,  twenty-five  dollars,  to 
B.R.  Ballon  of  Sharon. 

Double  Teams.  —  First  premium.  Society's  Cup,  twenty  dollars, 
to  R.  W.  Hamblin  of  Il3de  Park  ;  2d  premium  of  Driving  AVhip, 
ten  dollars,  to  W.  E.  Coffin  of  Dorchester. 

Running  Horses. — First  premium,  Societj^'s  Cup,  thirty  dollars, 
to  C.  R.  Robinson  of  Boston  Highlands  ;  2d  premium  of  fifteen 
dollars  to  C.  W.  Raymond  of  Boston  Highlands. 

Second  Day.  —  Friday. 

Open  to  all  Horses.  — First  premium.  Society's  Cup,  fifty  dollars, 
to  B.  R.  Ballon  of  Stoughton  ;  2d  premium  of  forty  dollars  to  H. 
Parker  of  Dedham ;  3d  premium,  Driving  Whip,  ten  dollars,  to 
Bradford  Gannett  of  Sharon. 

Double  Teams.  —  First  premium.  Society's  Cup,  fifty  dollars,  to 
R.  W.  Hamblin  of  Hyde  Park  ;  2d  premium  of  twenty -five  dollars, 
to  H.  Parker  of  Dedham. 

Running  Horses.  —  First  premium.  Society's  Cup,  twent3--five 
dollars,  to  AY.  Bell  of  Milton  ;  2d  premium  of  fifteen  dollars  to  C. 
W.  Raymond  of  Boston  Highlands. 

Last  Horse.  —  First  premium  of  ten  dollars  to  H.  L,  Hunt  of 
Canton  ;  2d  premium  of  five  to  J.  W.  ]5radlee  of  Milton. 

A.  P.  Calder,  Chairman. 


18 

PLOWING. 

Double  Ox  Teams. — First  premium  of  fifteen  dollars  to  "William 
Fales,  Dedham,  with  Prouty  &  Mear's  Plow,  155. 

Nathan  Longfellow,  Needham,  Chairman. 

Double  Horse  Teams. — First  premium  of  fifteen  dollars  to  Black- 
man  Brothers,  Needham,  with  Michigan  Plow;  2d  premium  often 
to  J.  H.  Farrington,  Milton,  with  Nourse  Plow. 


James  T.  Sumner,  Canton,  )  ^         . , , 
James  Capen,  Foxboro,'  '  J  Committee. 


Single  Horse  Teams. — Henry  Gouldingof  Dover,  first  premium, 
ten  dollars.  Plow,  Steel  Clipper,  Ames  Plow  Co. 

Henry  W.  Vose  of  Milton,  with  Plow,  Prouty  &  Mears,  No  154, 
2d  premium,  five  dollars. 

L.  W.  Morse,  Sharon,  Chairman. 


BULLS. 

Jersey — one  year  old  and  upwards. — First  premium  of  ten  dollars 
to  Henry  M.  Mack  of  Dorchester  ;  2d  premium  of  five  to  William 
T.  Cook  of  Foxboro'. 

Jersey —  under  one  j^ear  old.  —  First  premium  of  five  dollars  to 
William  T.  Cook  of  Foxboro' ;  2d  premium  of  two  to  A.  T.  Brown 
of  Brookline. 

Ayrshire — one  year  old  and  upwards. — First  premium  of  ten 
dollars  to  E.  J.  Morton  of  Milton  ;  2d  premium  of  five  to  James 
Galloway  of  Quincy. 

Holstein — one  year  and  upwards. — First  premium  of  ten  dollars 
to  Henry  Chaffin  of  Brookline. 

Jamestoivn — one  year  old  and  upwards. — Second  premium  of 
five  dollars  to  Freeman  Fisher  of  West  Dedham. 

Asahel  S.  Drake,  Sharon,        '] 
Nathaniel  S.  White,  Canton,   !    p         .,, 
James  M.  Codman,  Brookline,    [   <-0"^"a"^e<^- 
E.  M.  Gary,  Milton,  j 


19 

cows. 

^e,.cZs.— First  premium  of  the  Wilder  Cup  to  William  T.  Cook 
of  Foxboro' ;  2d  premium  of  twelve  dollars  to  Henry  M.  ISIack  of 
Dorchester  ;  3d  premium  of  eight  to  W.  R.  Eobeson  of  Milton. 

Best  Coio  in  Milk. — First  premium  of  twelve  dollars  to  A.  T. 
Brown  of  Brookline,  for  his  grade  cow. 

Best  Heifer  in  MUk. — First  premium  of  four  dollars — 2  years — 
to  Matthew  Bolles  of  West  Roxbury  ;  2d  premium  of  two  to  Wisner 
Park  of  Hyde  Park. 

Jersey. — First  premium  of  ten  dollars  to  B.  S.  Rotch  of  Milton  ; 
2d  premium  of  five  to  B.  S.  Rotch  of  Milton  ;  3d  premium  of  four 
to  A.  T.  Brown  of  Brookline. 

Holstein. — First  premium  of  ten  dollars  to  Henry  Chaffin  of 
Brookline. 

Grade. — 2d  premium  of  five  dollars  to  Freeman  Fisher  of  Ded- 
ham ;  3d  premium  of  four  to  Freeman  Fisher  of  Dedham. 

Col.  E.  Stone  exhibited,  on  the  second  day,  an  excellent  James- 
town cow,  which  attracted  much  attention  but  which  was  not  entered 
for  premium. 

J.  W.  Gay,  Dedham,  Chairman. 


HEIFERS. 


For  the  best  Jersey  Heifer,  two  years  old  and  under  three. — First 
premium  of  five  dollars  to  John  A.  Cunningham  of  Milton. 

For  the  best  Grade  Heifer,  two  years  old  and  under  three. — Second 
premium  of  four  dollars  to  John  A.  Cunningham  of  Milton. 

For  the  Second  best  Grade. — Third  premium  of  two  dollars  to 
Freeman  Fisher  of  West  Dedham. 

For  the  Best  Heifer  one  year  old  (Jamestoion) . — First  premium  of 
four  dollars  to  Freeman  Fisher  of  West  Dedham. 

For  the  second  best  Heifer  one  year  old  {Grade). — Second  pre- 
mium of  two  dollars  to  J.  R.  Engley,  Dedham. 

For  the  best  Heifer  Calf  under  one  year  old. — First  premium  of 


20 

four  dollars  to  Wm.  T.  Cook,  Foxboro' ;  2d  premium  of  two  dol 
lars  to  A.  T.  Brown  of  Brookliue. 

Edward  P.  Burgess,  Dedham,  \ 

Lehiuel  Billings,  Quincy,  >  Committee. 

William  AValker,  Nepouset,    ) 


SWINE. 

For  best  Collection. — First  premium  of  fifteen  dollars  to  Nat.  Far- 
ringtou,  Jr.,  of  Canton  ;  2d  premium  of  ten  dollars  to  J.  H.  Far- 
rington  of  Milton ;  3d  premium  of  seven  dollars  to  N.  Farring- 
ton  of  Canton. 

For  best  Boar. — First  premium  of  six  dollars  to  D.  F.  Decatur 
of  West  Dedham  ;  2d  premium  of  four  to  J.  H.  Farriugton  of  Mil- 
ton. 

For  best  Soio. — First  premium  of  six  dollars  to  J.  H.  Farrington 
of  Milton  ;  2d  premium  of  four  to  D.  F.  Decatur  of  West  Dedham. 

For  Weaned  Pigs — best  litter. — First  premium  of  six  dollars  to 
N.  Farrington  of  Canton  ;  2d  premium  of  four  to  J.  H.  Davenport 
of  Canton. 

For  best  Fat  Hog. — First  premium  of  ten  dollars  to  N.  Farring- 
ton of  Canton. 

A  gratuity  of  three  dollars  to  L.  J.  Carthy  of  Brookline,  for 
Berkshire  Sow  and  seven  pigs ;  a  gratuity  of  two  dollars  to  C. 
Davenport  of  Canton,  for  sow  and  six  pigs. 

Samuel  B.  Noyes,  Canton,     \ 

Thos.  B.  Griggs,  Brookline,   >  Committee. 

Henry  Goulding,  Dover,        ) 


POULTRY.— Ill  Coops. 

For  Collection — First  premium  to  M.  I.  Ellis,  Norwood,  fifteen 
dollars. 

Light  Brahma — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  A.  H.  Drake 


21 

of  Stoiigliton  ;  2(1  premium  of  two  to  A.  H.  Drake  of  Stoughton  ; 
3d  premium  of  one  to  L.  H.  Ga}-  of  Stoughton. 

Dark  Brahma. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  A.  II.  Drake 
of  Stoughton  ;  2d  premium  of  two  to  F.  Codman  of  Brookline  ; 
3d  premium  of  one  to  F.  Codman  of  Brookline. 

Partridge  Cochin. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  M.  I.  Fllis 
of  Norwood  ;  2d  premium  of  two  to  M.  I.  Ellis  of  Norwood  ;  3d 
premium  of  one  to  G.  H.  Pike  of  Roxbur}-. 

Buff  Cochin. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  A.  H.  Drake  of 
Stoughton. 

White  Cochin. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  M.  I.  Ellis  of 
Norwood  ;  2d  premium  of  two  to  M.  I.  Ellis  of  Norwood. 

Black  Cochin — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  M.  I.  Ellis  ot 
Norwood  ;  3d  premium  of  one  to  M.  I.  P^Uis  of  Norwood. 

Black  Sjmnish.  —  First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  C.  &  F. 
Spring  of  Needham  ;  2d  premium  of  two  to  C.  &  F.  Spring  of  Need- 
ham  ;  3d  premium  of  one  to  C.  &  F.  Spring  of  Needham. 

Leghorns. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  C.  &,  F.  Spring  of 
Needham  ;  2d  premium  of  two  to  C.  &  F.  Spring  of  Needham. 

Chicks. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  E.  C.  Aldrich  of  Hyde 
Park. 

Bed  Leghorn. — "W.  C.  Fuller  of  Dedham,  3d  premium  of  one 
dollar. 

Houdans. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  E.  C.  Aldrich  of 
Hyde  Park  ;  2d  premium  of  two  to  E.  C.  Aldrich  of  Hyde  Park  ; 
3d  premium  of  one  to  E.  C.  Aldrich  of  Hyde  Park. 

Creve-Cotirs. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  C.  &  F.  Spring 
of  Needham. 

Dominique. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  M.  I.  Ellis  of 
Norwood  ;  2d  premium  of  two  to  M.  I.  Ellis  of  Norwood  ;  3d  pre- 
mium of  one  to  M.  I.  Ellis  of  Norwood. 

I^lymouth  Rocks. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  A.  H. 
Drake  of  Stoughton. 

Chicks.  —  First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  A.  H.  Drake  of 
Stoughton  ;  2d  premium  of  two  to  A.  II.  Drake  of  Stoughton  ;  3d 
premium  of  one  to  L.  II.  Gay  of  Stoughton. 

Games. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  M.  I.  Ellis  of  Nor- 
wood ;  2d  premium  of  two  to  M,  I.  Ellis  of  Norwood  ;  3d  pre- 
mium of  one  to  M.  I.  Ellis  of  Norwood. 

Dominique  Game. — Second  premium  of  two  dollars  to  ]M.  I.  Ellis 
of  Norwood. 


22 

Black  Red  Game. — Second  premium  of  two  dollars  to  "W.  T. 
Cook  of  Milton. 

White  Bantams. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  A.  F.  Stev- 
ens of  Wellesley. 

Sebright  Bantams. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  A.  F.  Stev- 
ens of  Welleslej^ 

Silver  Sebright. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  A.  F.  Stev- 
ens of  Wellesle3\ 

Game  Bantams. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  J.  B.  Tilley 
of  Brookline ;  2d  premium  of  two  to  J.  M.  Twitchell  of  H3^de 
Park. 

Ducks. 

Aylesbury. — First  premium  of  three  dollai's  to  M.  I.  Ellis  of  Nor- 
wood ;  2d  premium  of  two  to  M.  I.  Ellis  of  Norwood. 

Rouen. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  M.  I.  Ellis  of  Nor- 
wood ;  2d  premium  of  two  to  M.  I.  Ellis  of  Norwood. 

Cayuga. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  M.  I.  Ellis  of  Nor- 
wood ;  2d  premium  of  two  to  M.  I.  Ellis  of  Norwood. 

Mallard. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  M.  I.  Ellis  of  Nor- 
wood ;  2d  pi-emium  of  two  to  M.  I.  Ellis  of  Norwood. 

Crested  Ducks. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  M.  I.  Ellis 
of  Norwood ;  2d  premium  of  two  to  J.  B.  Tilley  of  Brookline. 

Gratuities. 

White  Ducks. — M.  I.  Ellis  of  Norwood,  two  dollars. 

Canaries. — G.  Karcher  of  Dedham,  two  dollars. 

Gray  Squirrels. — F.  F.  Place  of  Dedham,  fiftj^  cents. 

White  Rabbits. — F.  AY.  Donahoe  of  Dedham,  fifty  cents. 

Guinea  Foiuls. — W.  C.  Fuller  of  West  Dedham,  one  dollar. 

Partridge  Cochins  Chicks.  First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  A. 
H.  Drake  of  Stoughton ;  2d  premium  of  two  to  A.  H.  Drake  of 
Stoughton ;  3d  premium  of  one  to  G.  H.  Pike  of  Boston  High- 
lands. 

Buff  Cochins. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  A.  H.  Drake 
Stoughton. 

Mhite  Cochins. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  A.  II.  Drake 
of  Stoughton ;  2d  premium  of  two  to  A.  H.  Drake  of  Stoughton  ; 
od  premium  of  one  to  L.  H.  Gaj'-  of  Stoughton. 

Black  Cochins. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  A.  H.  Drake 


23 

of  Stoiighton  ;  ^d  premium  of  two  dollars  to  A.  H.  Drake  of 
Stoughton. 

Jloudans. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  E.  C.  Aldrich  of 
Il3'de  Park ;  2d  premium  of  two  to  PI  C.  Aldrich  of  Hyde  Park  ; 
3d  premium  of  one  to  E.  C.  Aldrich  of  Hyde  Park. 

Geese. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  AV.  T.  Cook  of  Mil- 
ton ;  2d  premium  of  two  to  Henry  Goulding  of  Dover. 

Abel  F.  Stevens,  Needham,  Chairman. 


VEGETABLES. 


For  Largest  unci  Best  Collection. — First  premium  of  twent}-  dollars 
to  J.  B.  Tiller,  Brookline  ;  2d  premium  of  fifteen  to  James  Mack- 
intosh, Needham  ;  3d  premium  of  ten  to  Gilbert  Sumner,  Milton. 

Potatoes,  Largest  and  Best  Collection. — First  premium  of  six 
dollars  to  A.  F.  Stevens,  ("Wellesley,)  Needham  ;  2d  premium  of 
three  to  \V.  R.  Robeson,  Milton. 

Winter  Squashes. — First  premium  of  four  dollars  to  W.  A.  Hum- 
phrey', Brookline  ;  2d  premium  of  three  to  Francis  Guild,  Dcdham. 

Seedling  Potatoes. — First  premium  of  ten  dollars  to  "NMlliam 
McDonald,  Milton. 

Table  Potatoes. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  E.  Paul  of  Ded- 
ham  :  2d  premium  of  one  to  A.  D.  Capen  of  Dorchester. 

Turnips. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  George  Richardson 
of  Needham ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  E.  Paul  of  Dedham. 

Carrots. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  T.  B.  Griggs  of 
Brookline ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  A.  F.  Stevens  of  (Wellesley,) 
Needham. 

Beets. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  George  Richardson  of 
Needham  ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  T.  B.  Griggs  of  Brookline. 

Tomatoes. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  N.  T.  Davenport  of 
Milton. 

Onions. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  G.  Richardson  Of 
Needham  ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  Allen  Colburn  of  West  Dedham. 

Parsnips. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  A.  F.  Stevens  of 
(Wellesley,)  Needham. 

Drumhead    Cabbages. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  Allen 


24 

Colburn  of  "West  Dcdham ;    2d  premiam  of  one  to   Charles  H. 
Stearns  of  Brookline. 

Green  Globe  Savoy  Cabbages. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to 
George  Richardson  of  Needham  ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  J.  TV. 
Broolvs  of  Milton. 

Canlijloicer. — First  jiremium  of  two  dollars  to  Allen  Colburn  of 
West  Dedhara. 

Celenj. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  N.  T.  Davenport  of 
Milton. 

Marrotv  Squashes. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  T.  B  Griggs 
of  Brookline  ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  Rnfus  P.  Sumner  of  Milton. 

Canada  Crook-Xeck  Squashes. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to 
E.  Paul  of  Dedham ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  George  Mellen  of 
Brookline. 

PumpJdns. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  D.  F.  Decatur  of 
West  Dedham ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  A.  A.  Mandell  of  Hyde 
Park. 

Wafer  Melons. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  E.  Paul  of  Ded- 
ham ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  D.  F.  Decatur  of  West  Dedhara. 

Sioeet  Corn.—Y'wat  premium  of  two  dollars  to  George  Craft  of 
Brookline;  2d  premium  of  one  to  A.  F.  Stevens  of  (Wellesle}-,) 
Needhara. 

Mr.  W.  J.  Hyde  of  Brookline,  being  one  of  the  committee,  could 
not  compete  for  a  premium,  but  his  collection  was  of  so  superior  a 
(juality  that  we  recommend  that  he  receive  a  gratuity  of  two  dol- 
lars. 

Your  committee  are  pleased  to  report  that  the  exhibition  was 
one  of  the  largest  and  in  every  respect  or^e  of  the  best  ever  made 
by  the  Society. 

C.  L.  CoPELAND,  Milton,  ") 

W.  J.  Griggs   Brookline,         '  Committee. 
W.  J.  Hyde,  Brookhne,  | 

D.  F.  Henderson,  Needham,  j 


PEARS. 

The  exhibition  of  Pears  was  one  of  the  best  ever  seen  in  our 
Hall,  including  a  collection  from  Col.  Marshall  P.  Wilder  of  Dor- 
chester, of  127  varieties,  but  not  entered  for  premium.     Messrs.  F. 


25 

&  L.  Clapp  of  Dorchester,  exhibited  over  50  varieties,  one-half  of 
wliich  were  seedlings  of  their  own  growing,  many  of  them  being 
of  very  decided  merit,  and  destined  to  become  popnlar  as  soon  as 
introduced  to  general  culture.  Fine  collections  were  shown  by 
Messrs.  Walker  &  Co.  of  Boston  Highlands  ;  Col.  E.  Stone  of 
Dec!  ham  ;  H.  P.  Kidder  of  Milton  ;  A.  T.  Brown  of  Brookline  ;  C.  F. 
Curtis  of  Jamaica  Plain  ;  Charles  Stearns  of  Brookline  ;  Mrs.  B.  F. 
Kadford  of  Hyde  Park  ;  W.  A.  Humphrey  of  Brookline,  and  many 
others. 

List  of  Puemiums. 

Best  Twenty  Varieties. — First  premium  of  fifteen  dollars  to 
Charles  F.  Curtis  of  Jamaica  Plain  ;  2d  premium  of  twelve  to 
Charles  Stearns  of  Brookline. 

Best  Ten  Varieties.  —  First  premium  of  eight  dollars  to 
William  J.  Griggs  of  Brookline ;  2d  premium  of  six  to  George 
S.  Curtis  of  Jamaica  Plain  ;  3d  premium  of  four  to  Joshua  W. 
Vose  of  Milton. 

Best  Five  Varieties. — First  premium  of  six  dollars  to  Benjamin 
Cashing  of  Dorchester  ;  2d  premium  of  four  to  J.  VV.  Brooks  of 
Milton  ;  3d  premium  of  two  to  Col.  E.  Stone  of  Dedham. 

Single  Dishes. 

Bartlett. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  Geo.  S.  Curtis,  Jama- 
ica Plain  ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  F.  H.  Caffin,  Hyde  Park. 

Beiirre  Anjoic. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  J.  D.  Bradlec, 
Milton  ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  Joshua  W.  Vose,  Milton. 

Urhaaiste. — tirst  premium  of  two  dollars  to  J.  D.  Bradlee,  Mil- 
ton ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  A.  D.  Capen,  Dorchester. 

Merriam. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  C.  F.  Curtis,  Jama- 
ica Plain  ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  Edward  Sumner,  Dedham. 

Louise  Bon  d' Jersey. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  Walker 
&  Co.,  Boston  Highlands  ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  J.  P.  S.  Churchill. 
Milton. 

Vicar  of  Winkjield. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  J.  D. 
Bradlee,  Milton ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  J.  P.  S.  Churciiill,  Milton. 

Duchess. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  Charles  Sin-ing  of 
Hyde  Park  ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  J.  D.  Bradlee  of  Milton. 

Seckle. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  E.  Sumner  of  Dodhiim  ; 
2d  premium  of  one  to  A.  D.  Capen  of  Dorchester. 


26 

Sloan's  Orange.— First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  J.  D.  Bradlee 
of  Milton. 

Sheldon. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  C.  F.  Curtis  of  Ja- 
maica Plain ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  E.  Paul  of  Dedbam. 

Beurre  Bosc. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  Geo.  S.  Curtis 
of  Jamaica  Plain ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  J.  D.  Bradlee  of  Milton. 

Doyenne  Bowssocfc.—First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  C.  F.  Cur- 
tus  of  Jamaica  Plain. 

Beurre  CI airgeati.— First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  C.  F.  Cur- 
tis of  Jamaica  Plain  ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  J.  D.  Bradlee  of  Mil- 
ton. 

Winter  Mlis.— First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  Col.  Theodore 
Lyman  of  Brookline  ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  A.  D.  Capen  of  Dor- 
chester. 

Beurre  Hardy.— First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  C.  F.  Curtis  of 
Jamaica  Plain. 

_B^^^^t,^._First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  Joshua  W.  Vose  of 
Milton  ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  Col.  Theodore  Lyman  of  Brookline. 

Maria  Lonise.—First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  Timothy  Smith 
of  East  Dedham  ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  Col.  Theodore  Lyman  of 
Brookline. 

Dana's  Ilovey .—First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  Col.  Theodore 
Lyman  of  Brookline. 

Mount  Verno7i.—First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  Walker  &  Co.  of 
Boston  Highlands  ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  C.  F.  Curtis  of  Jamaica 

Plain. 

Flemish  Beauty.— First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  F.  H.  Caffin 
of  Hyde  Park ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  J.  D.  Bradlee  of  Milton. 

jjoicell. —First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  J.  D.  Bradlee  of  Mil- 
ton ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  AValker  &  Co.  of  Boston  Higldands. 

Goodale.— First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  Walker  &  Co.  of 
Boston  Highlands. 

The  Committee  also  award  gratuities  to  the  following  for  collec- 
tions of  Pears : — 

To  Mrs.  B.  F.  Radford  of  Hyde  Park,  five  dollars  ;  H.  P.  Kidder 
of  Milton,  four  dollars  ;  A.  T.  Brown  of  Brookline,  three  dollars  ; 
W.  A.  Humphrey  of  Brookline,  two  dollars. 

C.  F.  Curtis,  Jamaica  Plain,  Chairman. 


27 

APPLES   AND   OTHER  FRUITS. 

Your  Coramittee  think  the  thanks  of  the  Societj'  are  espccially 
due  to  the  Messrs.  Clapp  of  Dorchester,  Hon.  Otis  Cary  of  Fox- 
boro',  and  Mr.  Joseph  Crane  of  Dedham  for  Apples ;  Messrs.  J. 
W.  Brooks  and  W.  H.  Forbes  of  Milton,  and  W.  J.  Stuart  of 
Hyde  Park,  for  Grapes.  Mr.  Crane  would  have  been  entitled  to 
the  first  premium  for  a  collection  of  apples  if  he  had  exhibited  the 
number  of  dishes  and  number  of  apples  to  a  plate  required  by  your 
Regulations.  To  Hon.  Otis  Cary  we  are  indebted  for  specimens 
of  fifty  varieties  of  apples  from  Nebraska  and  twenty  from  the  Fruit 
Grower's  Association  of  Canada — all  perfect.  The  Messrs.  Clapp. 
who  always  do  well,  we  may  safely  and  truly  say  excelled  them- 
selves. Their  dishes  of  apples  would  have  done  credit  to  any  ex- 
hibition at  any  fair,  in  one  of  our  most  fruitful  seasons. 

Aaron  D.  Capen.  Dorchester,  1 

David  Shaav,  Foxboro',  I  ^ 

Thomas  B.  Griggs,  Brookline,  f  Committee. 

Elijah  Tdckek,  Milton.  J 

The  Committee  award  the  following  premiums  : — 

Apples — Five  Varieties. — Second  premium  of  four  dollars  to 
Abraham  Bigelow  of  Dover. 

Single  Dishes. 

Baldioin. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  James  Breck  of  Mil- 
ton ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  James  Faulkner  of  Milton. 

Greenings. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  James  Faulkner 
of  Milton  ;  2d  pi-emium  of  one  to  F.  &  L.  Clapp  of  Dorchester. 

Poiiers. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  James  Breck  of  Mil- 
ton. 

Gravenstein. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  F.  «&  L.  Clapp  of 
Dorchester. 

Washington. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  F.  &  L.  Clapp  of 
Dorchester. 

Dutch  Codling. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  F.  &  L.  Clapp 
of  Dorchester  ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  A.  D.  Capen  of  Dorchester. 

Pomroy. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  A.  D.  Capen  of  Dor- 
chester. 


28 

Collections. 

Gratuity. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  Joseph  Crane  of 
West  Dedham. 

Peaches. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  Henry  W.  Vose 
of  Milton. 

Cranberries. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  Nathan  Long- 
fellow of  Needham ;  2d  premium  of  two  to  Nathaniel  Gay  of 
Stoughton  ;  3d  premium  to  James  Mackintosh  of  Needham,  East- 
wood's Cranberry  Culture. 

Collection  of  Foreign  Grapes. — First  premium  of  six  dollars  to  J. 
AY.  Brooks  of  Milton,  seven  varieties  ;  2d  premium  of  four  to  W. 
J.  Stuart  of  Hyde  Park,  two  varieties. 

Collection  of  Native  Grapes. — First  premium  of  four  dollars  to 
W.  H.  Forbes  of  Milton,  fourteen  varieties  ;  2d  premium  of  three 
to  J.  W.  Brooks  of  Milton,  twelve  varieties  ;  3d  premium  of  two 
to  S.  M.  Vose  of  Hyde  Park,  eight  varieties. 

Concord. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  J.  M.  Merrick  of 
Walpole  ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  Walker  &  Co.  of  Boston  High- 
lands. 

Deleivare. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  E.  Hemman  of  West 
Roxbury ;  2d  premium  of  one  dollar  to  J.  B.  Tilley  of  Brookline. 

Diana. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  Walker  &  Co.  of  Bos- 
ton Highlands  ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  J.  W.  Talbot  of  Norwood. 

Rogers'  Hybrid. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  B.  C.  Vose  of 
Hyde  Park. 


FLOWERS. 


Pot  Plants. — First  premium  of  ten  dollars  to  H.  P.  Kidder  of 
Milton  ;  2d  premium  of  five  to  B.  C.  Vose  of  Hyde  Park  ;  gratu- 
ity of  three  to  N.  T.  Davenport  of  Milton. 

Cut  Floivers. — First  premium  of  four  dollars  to  George  Craft  of 
Brookline ;  2d  premium  of  three  to  N.  T.  Davenport  of  Milton ; 
3d  premium  of  two  to  Mrs.  John  Vose  of  Hyde  Park ;  gratuities 
of  two  to  Anthony  McLaren  of  Jamaica  Plain  ;  of  one  to  H.  P. 
Kidder  of  Milton  ;  of  one  to  J.  W.  Brooks  of  Milton ;  of  one  to 
Eliphalet  Stone  of  Dedham. 

Basket  of  Flowers. — First  premium  of  four  dollars  to  Miss  H. 


29 

D.  Davenport  of  Milton  ;  gratuity  of  one  to  Mrs.  B.  C.  Vose  of  Hyde 
Park. 

Boicqrtets.— First  premium  of  four  dollars  to  Miss  H.  D.  Daven- 
port of  Milton  ;  2d  premium  of  three  to  J.  D.  Davenport  of  Mil- 
ton ;  3d  premium  of  two  to  Anthony  McLaren  of  Jamaica  Plain ; 
gratuity  of  fifty  cents  to  Mrs.  S.  M.  Barbour  of  Foxboro'. 

G'^afZio^as.— Named— First  premium  of  four  dollars  to  Anthony 
McLaren  of  Jamaica  Plain  ;  gratuity  for  collection,  of  one  each 
to  Anthony  McLaren  of  Jamaica  Plain  and  Jas.  Faulkner  of 
Milton. 

Dahlias.— First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  Macy  Randall  of 
Sharon  ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  Mrs.  Joseph  Crane  of  Dedham. 

Zinnias.— First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  Mrs.  Abraham 
Holmes,  Jr.,  of  Milton ;  2d  premium  of  one  to  Macy  Randall  of 
Sharon. 

Bose  Buds. —GrsLtiiity  of  one  dollar  to  N.  T.  Davenport  of 
Milton. 

The  Committee  were  especially  pleased  with  the  specimens  of 
rose  buds  from  the  green  house  of  Mr.  Lyman  Davenport  of  Mil- 
ton, showing  in  the  green  and  healthy  wood  and  foliage  and  well 
developed  buds,  the  most  careful  and  successful  cultu^-e.  Col. 
Stone  of  Dedham,  very  kindly  placed  on  exhibition  a  new  and 
nicely  quilled  Dahlia,  brought  to  this  country  by  Hon.  Charles  L. 
Flint,  and  never  before  exhibited.  The  exhibition  of  pot  plants 
by  H.  P.  Kidder  of  Milton,  and  B.  C.  Vose  of  Hyde  Park,  was 
remarkably  fine,  many  of  the  plants  being  rare  at.d  beautiful.  As 
a  whole,  the  display  of  flowers  far  surpassed  that  of  former  years. 

A.  K.  Teele,  Milton,  Chairman. 


DAIRY. 


Best  Produce— Ten-Pound  Lots.— First  premium  of  ten  dollars 
to  W.  R.  Robeson  of  Milton  ;  2d  premium  of  eight  to  Henry  M. 
Mack  of  Mattapan ;  3d  premium  of  five  to  James  R.  Fisher  of 
Norwood. 

Best  Sample — Six-Pound  Lots. — First  premium  of  live  dollars 


30 

to  James  R.  Fisher  of  Norwood ;  2d  premium  of  three  to  W.  R. 
Robeson  of  Milton;  3d  premium  of  "Flint's  Treatise"  to  Henry 
M.  Mack  of  Maitapan. 

Quality  generally  superior. — W.  R.  Robeson  only  complied  with 
the  conditions  for  Best  Produce  of  Butter  with  sample  of  ten 
pounds. 

M.  M.  Fisher,  Medwa}^,  Chairman. 


BREAD. 

Wlieat. — First  premium  of  thi'ee  dollars  to  Mrs.  Eliza  Doole  of 
Dedham  ;  2d  premium  of  two  to  Nathaniel  Gay  of  Stoughton. 

Unbolted  Wlieat. — None  worthy  of  first  premium  ;  2d  premium 
of  two  to  Mrs.  Martha  A.  Everett  of  Dover. 

Wheat  and  Indian. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  to  Mrs. 
Nathan  Longfellow  of  Needham  ;  2d  premium  of  two  to  Mrs. 
Martha  A.  Everett  of  Dover. 

Bye  ayid  Indian. — First  premium  of  three  dollars  and  25  per 
cent,  additional,  (contributor  being  only  eleven  years  of  age). 
Miss  Sadie  E.  Everett  of  Dover ;  2d  premium  of  two  to  Mrs. 
Martha  A.  Everett  of  Dover. 

J.  "White  Belcher,  Randolph,  Chairman. 


JELLIES,  PRESERVES,  &c. 

First  premium  of  five  dollars  to  Mrs.  John  Vose,  Hyde  Park, 
for  ten  varieties  of  Canned  Fruit. 

Second  premium  of  three  dollars  to  Mrs.  Edward  Sumner,  Ded- 
ham, for  eight  varieties  of  Canned  Fruit. 

Third  premium  of  two  dollars  to  A.  F.  Stevens,  (Wellesley,) 
Needham,  for  collection  of  Jellies  and  Pickles. 

Sarah  E.  Sumner,  Canton,  for  the  Committee. 


31 

SEEDS. 

The  Committee  on  Seed  Corn   award  the  first  premium  of  two 
dollars  to  Eugene  Batchelder  of  Dover,  for  his  Batchelder  Corn. 

Nath.  S.  White,  Canton,  for  the  Committee. 


STRAW  GOODS. 


For  best  specimen  of  Straw  Bonnets. — First  premium   of  eight 
dollars  to  Messrs.  Wm.  T.  Cook  &  Co.  of  Foxboro'. 

For  best  specimen  of  Straw  Braid. — First  premium  of  five   dol- 
lars to  Messrs.  Wm.  T.  Cook  &  Co.  of    Foxboro'. 

A.  S.  Harding,  Medway,  Chairman. 


CARRIAGES,   WAGONS,   CARTS,    &c. 

For  best  specimen  of  Open  Wagon. — Premium  of  five  dollars  to 
J.  W.  Boby  &  Co.  of  Norwood. 

For  best  specimen  of  Covered  Wagon. — Premium  of  three  dollars 
to  S.  E.  Morse  of  Norwood. 

Geo.  K    Gannett,  Milton,  \ 

C.  L.  CoPELAND,  Milton,      >  Committee. 

Samuel  Cook,  Milton,  ' 


MANUFACTURES. 


The  Committee  were  much  pleased  with  an  exhibition  of  Sponge 
Carpet  Lining,  moth  proof,  by  AV^illiain  T.  Cook  &  Co.,  (Union 
Straw  Works)  of  Foxboro'. 

This  article  combines  the  qualities  of  straw  and  paper  lining, 


32 

being  manufactured  from  sponge,  with  sufficient  jute  fibre  to  hold 
it.  It  has  been  used  in  several  large  hotels  in  the  city  of  New 
York.     It  is  moth  proof. 

The  Committee  award  the  Societj^'s  Diploma. 

Charles  H.  French,  \ 

N.  B.  WiLMARTH,         >  Committee. 

Samuel  B.  Noyes,       ) 


LADIES'  WORK. 


The  ladies,  in  giving  their  report,  would  say  that  the  contribu- 
tions this  year,  although  smaller  in  quantity-,  are  superior  in  qual- 
ity ;  therefore  the  Committee  have  thought  best  to  award  larger 
premiums.  The  work  contributed  by  the  children  deserves  special 
notice.  We  particularly  request  that  all  articles  should  be  en- 
tered the  first  day,  or  before  nine  o'clock  the  second  day,  as  it 
would  save  much  unnecessary  labor. 

Mrs.  John  Vose,  Hyde  Park,  for  the  Committee. 

The  following  is  a  list  of  premiums  awarded  : — 

Mrs.  Morrison,  Foxboro',  silk  quilt,  $2.50. 

Mrs.  S.  Staples,  Oakdale,  Dedham,  $1. 

Mrs.  Josiah  Capen,  Jamaica  Plain,  knit  quilt,  $2. 

Mrs.  Welch,  Oakdale,  Dedham,  patchwork,  50  cents. 

Mrs,  W.  B.  Southworth,  Stoughton,  carriage  robe,  $3. 

Mr.  Isaacus  Colburn,  West  Dedham,  braided  mat,  $2. 

Mrs.  George  Craft,  Readville,  drawn  rug,  $1. 

Mrs.  A.  M.  Farrington,  Canton,  1  drawn  mat,  75  cents. 

Mrs.  A.  II.  Brainard,  Hyde  Park,  carriage  robe.  Diploma. 

Miss  Olivia  J.  McCullough,  Hyde  Park,  pictures,  $2. 

Mr.  S.  M.  Wales,  Oakdale,  Dedham,  pen  drawing,  50  cents. 

Mrs.  Spring,  Hyde  Park,  oil  paintings,  50  cents. 

Mrs.  W.  Shedd,  Hyde  Park,  bead  towel  rack  and  cushion,  $1.50. 

Mrs.  C.  A.  Parrott,  Hyde  Park,  netted  tidies,  $1. 

Mrs.  Leander  G.  Britton,  Stoughton,  crochet  tidy,  50  cents. 


33 

Miss  H.  E.  Barbour,  Miiton,  crochet  tidy,  50  cents. 
Mrs.  Annie  E.  Thacher.  Hyde  Park,  silk  embroidery,  S2. 
Mrs.  C.  B.  Slialer,  Canton,  embroidered  garment,  81.50. 
Mrs.  A.  M.  Uphara,  Readville,  crochet  garment,  50  cents. 
Mrs.  J.  V.  Abbott,  Oakdale,  Dedham,  braided  mat,  25  cents. 
Mrs.  R.  Williams,  Hyde  Park,  wax  work,  §1.50. 
Mrs.  Samnel  M.  Wales,  Oakdale,  Dedham,  feather  wreath,   S2. 
Mrs.  John  Vose,  Hyde  Park,  1  pair  hose,  $1. 
Mrs.  J.  II.  Miller,  Sharon,  stockings,  50  cents. 
Mrs.  Spanlding,  Canton,  chair  covering,  $1. 
Mrs.  S.  M.  Baker,  Foxboro',  tatting,  50  cents. 
Miss  Minnie  Spring,  Hyde  Park,  tidy  and  hood,  $1. 
Miss  Annie  Chapin,  Hyde  Park,  tidy  and  hood,  §1. 
Miss  Mary  F.  Clark,  Sharon,  scrap  bag,  Si. 
Miss  Grace  A.  Vose,  Hyde  Park,  tid}-,  $1. 
Charley  Blanchard,  Dedham,  patchwork,  §1. 
Miss  Daisy  Spring,  Hyde  Park,  pansey  mats,  ^5  cents. 
Mrs.  LeanderG.  Britton,  Stonghton,  silk  quilt.  Si. 
Miss  Georgia  B.  Sumner,  Milton,  mats,  25  cents. 
Mrs.  George  Haggett,  Oakdale,  Dedham,  worsted  work,  $1. 
Miss  Emma  L.  Staples,  Dedham,  mats,  50  cants. 
Miss  A.  Farrington,  Readville,  bible  cushion,  50  cents. 
JNIiss  Eva  Elliott,  Readville,  tatting,  50  cents. 
Mrs.  Hall,  Readville,  tatting  collar,  40  cents. 
Miss  M.  A.  Dunsmore,  Dedham,  mats  and  tidy,  Si. 
Mrs.  J.  Britton,  Stonghton,  tidy  and  mats,  50  cents. 
Miss  H.Davenport,  Milton,  tatting.  25  cents. 
Mrs.  Mary  Marden,  Dover,  silk  quilt.  Diploma. 
Mrs.  E.  F.  Bo3-den,  Norwood,  bead  picture.  Diploma. 
Mrs.  James  K.  Shattuck,  Hyde  Park,  infant's  cloak,  SI. 
Mrs.  Charles  Marden,  Dedham,  drawn  rug.  Diploma. 
Miss  Charlotte  Mitchell,  N.  Abington,  cushion,  Diploma. 
Miss  Sophronia  M.  Barbor,  Foxboro',  miniature  house,  S3. 
Miss  Hattie  Bonney,  Hyde  Park,  cushion,  25  cents. 
Miss  Belle  Bicknell,  Hyde  Park,  moss  mat,  75  cents. 
Mrs.  AV.  A.  Bonney,  Hyde  Park,  needlework,  SI. 
Total,  S47.15. 


34 

CABINETS    OF    BIRDS    AND    INSECTS. 

Insects. — First  premium  of  two  dollars  to  Miss  Anna  Howell  of 
Hyde  Park ;  2d  premium  of  one  dollar  to  John  Goulding  of  Dover. 

Birds,  &c. — First  premium  of  Samuel's  Book  of  Birds  to  John 
Goulding  of  Dover,  for  collection  of  34  specimens  of  Birds  and 
Animals  ;  2d  premium  of  two  to  P.  W.  Aldrich  of  Milton,  for  col- 
lection of  20  specimens  of  Birds  ;  1st  premiflm  of  one  dollar  to 
A.  E.  Hunt  of  Hj'de  Park,  for  116  varieties  of  Birds'  eggs;  2d 
premium  of  fifty  cents  to  J.  P.  Tebbets  of  Hyde  Park,  for  eggs  ; 
od  premium  of  twenty-five  cents  to  Miss  Ella  D.  Holmes  of  Hyde 
Park,  for  eggs. 

A.  W.  Cheever,  Wrentliam,    )  p         .,, 
A.  F.  Stevens,  Needham,       f 


SPECIAL    COMMITTEE. 

We  award  the  following  Diplomas  : — Josiah  Tisdale  of  Norwood, 
for  Tisdale  Treadle  on  Sewing  Machines  ;  Timothy  Smith  of  East 
Dedham,  for  Spring  Bed ;  D.  M.  Easton  of  Hyde  Park,  for 
finished  Calf  Skins. 

N.  B  WiLMARTH,  Walpole,  for  the  Committee. 


35 


Recapitulation   of   Premiums 


AWARDED  BY  THE 


NORFOLK  AGRICULTURAL   SOCIETY 

For  1873. 


HORSES. 

W.  T.  Cook,  (Foxboro')  ....$46  00 

Richard  Holmes 15  00 

J.  W.  Bradlee 11  00 

W.  T.  Brown 10  00 

Albert  Tirrell 10  00 

E.  W.  Sewall 10  00 

D.  F.  Decatur 10  00 

W.  T.  Cook.  (Miltou) 7  00 

Alfred  Davenport 7  00 

C.M.Vinson 7  00 

Edward  Sumner 7  00 

J.  P.  Sias 7  00 

C.  W.  Newhall 6  00 

R.  W.  Hainblin 6  00 

Jasou  Houghton 5  00 

L.  A.  Eaton 5  00 

E.  C.  Bickniore 4  00 

.J.  H.  Farriugton 4  00 

C.  F.  Ellis 4  00 

Geo.  S.  Ferry 4  00 

John  Davenport 3  00 

Patrick  McTeruan 3  00 

Captain  Patillo 3  00 

G.  C.  Park 2  00 

W.  E.  Coffin 2  00 

W.H.Warren 2  00 

Charles  Bronsdou 2  00 


HORSES.— ExTiJA  Premiums. 

B.  R.  Ballon $115  00 

R.  W.  Hamblin 70  00 

H.  E.  Parker 35  00 

C.R.Robinson 30  00 

C.W.Raymond 30  00 

W.R.  Angler 25  00 

W.  Bell 10  00 

W.  E.  Coffin 10  00 

Bradford  Gannett 10  00 

H.  L.  Hunt 10  00 

J.  W.  Bradlee 5  00 

PLOUGHING. 

Blackman  Brothers $15  00 

William  Fales 15  00 

Henry  Goulding 15  00 

J.  H.  Farrington 10  00 

Henry  W.  Vose 5  00 

BULLS. 

Henry  M.  Mack §10  00 

Wm.  T.  Cook,  (Foxboro') ...   10  00 

E.  J.  Morton 10  00 

Henry  Chaffin 10  Oo 

James  Galloway 5  Oo 


36 


Freeman  Fisher $5  00 

A.T.Brown 2  00 

COWS. 

W.  T.  Cook,  (Foxboro')-.-.$25  00 

A.  T.  Brown 16  00 

B.  S.  Rotch 15  00 

Henry  M.  Mack 12  00 

Henry  Chaffin 10  00 

Freeman  Fisher 9  00 

W.R.Robeson 8  00 

Matthew  Belles 4  00 

Wisner  Park 2  00 

HEIFERS. 

John  A.  Cunningham $9  00 

Freeman  Fisher 6  00 

W.  T.  Cook,  (Foxboro') ....     4  00 

J.  R.  Eugley 2  00 

A.T.Brown 2  Oo 

SWINE. 

N.  Farrlngton,  Jr $38  00 

J.  H.  Farrington 20  00 

D.  F.  Decatur 10  00 

J.H.Davenport 4  00 

L.  J.  Carthy 3  00 

C.Davenport 2  00 

POULTRY. 

M.  I.  Ellis $75  00 

A.  H.  Drake 37  00 

E.  C.  Aldrich 15  00 

C.  &F.  Spring 14  00 

A.F.Stevens 9  00 

W.  T.  Cook,  (Milton) 5  00 

J.    B.Tilley 5  00 

L.  H.  Gay 3  00 

F.  Codraan 3  00 

G.  H.  Pike 2  00 

W.  C.  Fuller 2  00 

J.  M.  Twitchell 2  00 

G.  Karcher 2  00 

Henry  Gouldiug 2  00 

F.  F.  Place 50 

F.  W.  Donahue 50 

VEGETABLES. 

J.  B.  Tilley $20  00 

James  Mackintosh 15  00 

Gilbert  Sumner 10  00 

A.  F.  Stevens 10  00 

William   McDonald 10  00 

George  Richardson 8  00 

E.  Paul 7  00 

T.  B.  Griggs 5  00 


Allen  Colburn $5  oo 

W.A.Humphrey 4  oo 

N.T.Davenport 4  oo 

W.  R.  Robeson 3  oo 

Francis  Guild 3  oo 

1).  F.  Decatur 3  oO 

W.  J.  Hyde 2  00 

George  Craft 2  00 

A.  D.  Capen 1  qo 

Chas.  H.  Stearns 1  oO 

J.  W.  Brooks 1  00 

R.  P.  Sunmer 1  oo 

Geo.  Mellen 1  oo 

A.  A.  Mandell 1  oo 


PEARS. 


Charles  F.  Curtis $26  00 

J.  D.  Bradlee 14  00 

Charles  Stearns 12  00 

Geo.  S.  Curtis 10  00 

W.  J.  Griggs 8  00 

J.  W.  Vose 7  00 

Walker  &  Co 7  00 

Benj.  Gushing 6  00 

Theodore  Lyman 6  00 

J.W.Brooks 4  00 

F.  H.  Caffin 3  00 

A.  D.  Capen 3  00 

Edward  Sumner 3  00 

Eliphalet  Stone 2  00 

J.  P.  S.  Churchill 2  00 

Charles  Spring 2  00 

Timothy  Smith 2  00 

Ebenezer  Paul 1  00 


APPLES  AND   OTHER  FRUITS. 


J.  W.  Brooks $9  00 

F.  &  L.   Clapp 7  00 

Abraham  Bigelow 4  00 

James  Breck 4  00 

W.  J.   Stuart 4  00 

W.  H.  Forbes 4  00 

James  Faulkner 3  00 

A.  D.  Capen 3  00 

Henry  W.  Vose 3  00 

N.  Longfellow 3  00 

Walker'&  Co 3  00 

Joseph  Crane 2  00 

Nathaniel  Gay 2  00 

S.  M.  Vose 2  00 

J.  M.  Merrick 2  00 

E.  Heramau 2  00 

J.  B.  Tilley 1  00 

J.  W.  Talbot 1  00 


37 


DAIRY. 

W.  E.  Robeson .$13  00 

James  R.  Fisher 10  00 

Heury  M.  Mack 8  00 

BREAD. 

Mrs.  Martha  A.  Everett §0  00 

Miss  Sadie  E.  Everett 3  75 

Mrs.  Eliza  Doole 3  00 

Mrs.  N.  Longfellow 3  00 

Nathaniel  Gay 2  00 

FLOWERS. 

H.  P.  Kidder SH  00 

A.  McLaren 9  00 

Miss  H.  D.  Davenport 8  00 

N.  T.  Davenport 7  00 

B.  C.  Vose G  00 

Geo.  Craft 4  00 

J.  D.  Davenport 3  00 

Macy  Randall 3  00 

Mrs.JohnVose 2  00 

Mrs.  Abram  Holmes,  Jr 2  00 

J.W.Brooks 100 

Eliphalet  Stone 1  00 

James  Faulkner 100 

Mrs.  Joseph  Crane 1  00 

Mrs.  S.  M.  Barbour 50 


JELLIES,  PRESERVES,  Etc. 

Mrs.  John  Vose S5  00 

Mrs.  Edward  Sumner 3  00 

A.F.Stevens 2  00 

SEEDS. 

Eugene  Batchelder S2  00 

STRAW  GOODS. 

W.  T.  Cook,&Co,(Foxboro)$13  00 

CARRIAGES,  WAGONS,  Etc. 

J.  W.  Rol)y  &  Co §5  00 

S.  E.  Morse 3  00 

CABINETS   OF  BIRDS  AND  IN- 
SECTS. 

Miss  Annie  Howell S2  00 

P.  W.  Aidrich 2  00 

John  Goulding 100 

A.  E.  Hunt 1  00 

J.  P.  Tebl)ets 50 

Miss  Ella  D.  Holmes 25 

LADIES'  WORK,   Etc. 

(See  pages  ii  and  45) $47  15 

Total Sl,542  15 


38 


TREASURER'S    REPORT. 


C.  C.  Churchill,    Treasurer,   in  account  with   the  JS^oifolk  Agricultural 

Society. 

De. 

To  balance  in  Treasury,  Nov.  30,  1872 $144:  15 

cash  of  new  members 123  00 

"    "  Commonwealth 600  00 

"         from  proceeds  of  Fair,  1873 2,788  50 

*'             "    all  other  sources 731  88 


$4,337  63 


Contra.     Cr. 


By  cash  paid  incidental  expenses $637  98 

"       "     premiums     1,603  50 

"     Secretary's  salary 100  00 

"       "     Treasurer's     "         100  00 

"       '•     interest  on  debt 1,878  7-4 

Balance  in  Treasury 17  31 

84,337  53 

C.    C.    CHURCHILL,  Treasurer. 

Dedham,  Nov.  30,  1873. 


39 


FROCEEDINOS 

on  the  occasion  of  the 
Twenty-Fifth    ^nniyei\sai\y 

OF   THE 

NORFOLK    AGRICULTURAL     SOCIETY 

THURSDAY  AND  FRIDAY,  September  25th  and  26th,  1873. 


The  2oth  Annual  Exhibition  of  the  Norfolk  Agricultural  Society 
was  held  at  Readville,  on  Thursday  and  Friday,  September  25th 
and  2Gth,  1873.  The  weather  was  remarkably  fine  during  the 
entire  two  days,  the  number  in  attendance  very  large,  and  the 
entire  proceedings  harmonious  and  highly  satisfactory  both  to  the 
visiting  public  and  the  managers  of  the  Fair.  In  many  depart- 
ments the  displays  were  equal  to  any  ever  made  by  the  Society, 
and  in  none  M-as  the  show  of  an  inferior  character.  The  following  is 
a  brief  recapitulation  of  the  leading  features  of  the  Exhibition  : — 

Of  Horses,  the  most  prominent  exhibitor  was  Col  Henry  S. 
Russell,  proprietor  of  Home  Farm  and  the  President  of  the  So- 
ciety, among  whose  many  fine  animals  there  were  four  fine  colts 
of  the  famous  Fearnaught  stock.  William  T.  Cook  of  Foxboro' 
contributed  nine  animals  entered  in  three  classes  and  representing 
the  Morgan,  Messenger,  St.  Lawrence,  Morrill,  Knox,  Gray  Eagle 
and  Touchstone  l)reeds. 

The  stock  pens  enclosed  the  largest  number  of  thoroughbreds 
ever  brought  upon  the  gi-ounds  of  the  Society,  comprising  Jerseys, 
Ayreshires  and  Holsteins,  with  a  few  crosses  of  Jersey  and  James- 
town.    William  T.  Cook  of  Foxboro',  contributed  twenty-five  ani- 


40 

mals  of  the  Jersey  breed,  A.  T.  Brown  of  Brookline,  eleven, 
and  Henry  M.  Mack  of  Dorchester  made  a  fine  show  of  Jerseys, 
inchiding  the  famous  bull  Sir  Richard.  Contributions  of  clioice 
stock  were  made  by  W.  R.  Robeson,  B.  S.  Rotch  and  E.  J.  Mor- 
ton of  Milton,  Henry  Chaffln  of  Brookline,  Matthew  Bolles  of  AYest 
Roxbury,  and  Freeman  Fisher  and  Francis  Marsh  of  Dedham. 

Of  Swine  the  principal  contributors  were  J.  H.  Farrington, 
Milton  ;  N.  Farrington,  Jr.,  Canton  ;  and  S.  J.  Carthy  of  Brook- 
line. 

Of  Poultry,  the  largest  exhibitor  was  M.  I.  Ellis  of  Norwood, 
with  thirty-seven  coops ;  A.  H.  Drake  of  Stoughton,  contributed 
sixteen  coops;  E.  C.  Aldrich  of  H^'de  Park,  nine;  C.  &  F. 
Spring  of  Needhan,  nine,  and  L.  H.  Ga}^  of  Stoughton,  six. 

The  display  of  Fruits  was  never  surpassed  at  any  previous  ex- 
hibition of  the  Society.  Among  other  contributions  were  the  follow- 
ing of  Pears  : — Col.  Marshall  P.  Wilder,  Dorchester,  one  hundred 
and  twenty-seven  varieties,  not  entered  for  competition  ;  F.  &  L. 
Clapp,  Dorchester,  twenty  varieties,  not  for  competition  ;  C.  F. 
Curtis  of  Jamaica  Plain,  twenty ;  Col.  Eliphalet  Stone  of  Ded- 
ham, twenty  ;  H.  P.  Kidder  of  Milton,  twenty  ;  B.  F.  Radford  of 
Hyde  Park,  twenty  ;  A.  T.  Brown  cf  Brookline,  twenty;  J.  W. 
Vose  of  Milton,  fifteen  ;  A.  D.  Capen,  Dorchester,  eleven  ;  J.  D. 
Bradlee  of  Milton,  eleven  ;  John  W.  Brooks  of  Milton,  ten  ;  Geo. 
S.  Curtis  of  Jamaica  Plain,  ten  ;  Col.  Theodora  Lyman  of  Brook- 
line, seven  ;  E.  Paul  of  Dedham,  seven;  and  smaller  collections 
by  a  great  number  of  contributors.  Contributions  of  Apples  were 
made  by  F.  &  L.  Clapp,  Benjamin  Cushing  and  A.  D.  Capen  of 
Dorchester  ;  Abraham  Bigelow  of  Dover,  and  others.  Fine  dis- 
plays of  Grapes  were  made  by  J.  W.  Brooks,  W.  H.  Forbes,  H.  P. 
Kidder  and  N.  S.  Davenport  of  Milton  ;  W.  J.  Stuart,  Sarah  M. 
Vose,  A.  Ennis,  John  Vose  and  B.  C.  Vose  of  Hyde  Park ;  E. 
Hemman  of  West  Roxbury ;  J.  M.  Merrick  of  Walpole ;  N.  B. 
White  of  Norwood,  and  others. 

The  display  of  Flowers  was  of  great  beauty  and  extent,  the  lar- 
gest contributor  being  H.  P.  Kidder  of  Milton.  Other  contributors 
were  Miss  H.  D.  Davenport  and  Mrs.  H.  G.  Davenport  of 
Milton  ;  George  Craft,  Brookline,  and  Macy  Randall,  Sharon. 

The  show  of  Vegetables  was  one  of  the  largest  and  best  ever 
made  by  the  Society.  Among  the  leading  contributors  were  Mr. 
J.  B.  Tilley,  Brookline ;  James  Mackintosh,  Needham ;  Gilbert 
Sumner,  J.  W.  Brooks,  N.  T.  Davenport,  AV.  R.  Robeson,  Milton  ; 


W.  J.  Hyde,  L.  J.  Carthy,  Thomas  B.  Griggs,  W.  A.  Humphrey, 
Brookline ;  D.  F.  Decatur,  Allen  Colburn,  Ebenezer  Paul,  Francis 
Guild,  Dedham. 

The  display  of  Ladies'  Work  was  excellent,  many  of  the  con- 
tributions showing  great  skill  and  taste.  To  this  department 
Messrs.  Carpenter,  Cook  &  Co.,  of  Foxboro',  contributed  several 
cases  of  elegant  Straw  Goods,  which  attracted  much  attention,  as 
did  the  newly  patented  Carpet  Lining  manufactured  b}'  that  firm. 

The  show  of  Bread  and  Butter  was  larger  than  usual,  that  of 
Butter  being  the  best  ever  made  b}'  the  Society. 

To  the  department  of  Manufactures,  contributions  were  made  by 
D.  M.  Easton  &  Co.,  Hyde  Park,  Leather ;  Carriages,  by  C.  L. 
Farnsworth,  Hyde  Park,  and  S.  E.  Morse,  Norwood ;  Timothy 
Smith,  Dedham,  Spring  Bed ;  Josiah  Tisdale,  Norwood,  Tisdale 
Treadle  on  Sewing  Machines. 

On  Thursday-  forenoon  the  Ploughing  and  Drawing  Matches,  in 
which  there  were  an  unusual  number  of  contestants,  took  place, 
and  the  afternoon  was  devoted  to  examination  of  contributions  bv 
the  several  committees,  and  to  trotting  on  the  course. 

On  Friday,  the  first  performance  was  the  grand  cavalcade  of  all 
the  horses  on  exhibition,  on  the  track.  At  12  o'clock  m.  a  proces- 
sion was  formed  under  the  direction  of  Colonel  Henry  A.  Darling 
of  Hyde  Park,  Chief  Marshal,  which  marched,  to  the  excellent  music 
of  the  Randolph  Band,  to  the  tent.  After  prayer  b}-  Rev.  Dr.  Mor- 
ison  of  Milton,  Chaplain  of  the  da^^,  the  President  of  the  Society, 
Gen.  Hemy  S.  Russell  of  Milton,  invited  the  company  to  partake 
of  an  excellent  and  substantial  dinner  prepared  b}'  L.  E.  Reed  of 
Boston,  at  the  close  of  which  the  company  was  called  to  order  by 
the  President,  who  said  : — 

Ladies  and  Gentlemen, — We  are  favored  to-day  with  the  pres- 
ence of  Robert  Morris  Copeland,  whose  eminence  in  his  profession 
has  alread}^  added  another  name  to  the  roll  of  honor  of  Old  Nor- 
folk Count}'.     (Applause.) 

Mr.  Copeland  received  a  hearty  greeting,  and  gave  the  thought- 
ful, suggestive  and  eloquent  address  which  will  be  found  reported 
in  full  at  the  commenc'ement  of  this  volume. 

At  the  conclusion  of  Mr.  Copeland's  address,  Colonel  Russell 
arose  and  said  : — 

It  would  be  presuming  in  me  to  undertake  to  introduce  to  you 
your  staunch  friend  and  the  founder  of  this  Society,  tlie  Hon. 
Marshall  P.  AVilder.     (Loud  applause.) 


42 

Col.  Wilder  said  :— 

3fr.  President, — I  thank  3'ou  for  bringing  my  name  to  notice, 
and  3'ou  my  friends  for  tlie  very  cordial  manner  in  wliich  3'ou  have 
received  its  announcement.  But  I  suppose  all  you  wish  of  the 
young  man  is  simply  to  see  him  once  more,  or  to  hear  his  voice  if 
it  be  but  for  a  moment.  (Applause.)  No  one,  I  can  assure  3'ou, 
Mr.  President,  rejoices  more  than  I  do  in  this  glorious  exhibition  of 
your  Society.  But,  sir,  I  believe  the  audience  will  give  me  credit 
of  having  had  some  experience  in  this  way,  and  I  stand  here  to- 
day to  say  that  I  have  never  seen  a  better  exhibition  of  the  old 
Norfolk  Agricultural  Society  than  has  graced  its  festival  to-day. 
It  does  ni}'  soul  good,  sir  ;  I  ft  el  that  I  live  anew.  I  recount  the 
days  past  when  we  assembled  together  on  some  of  those  very  re- 
markable occasions,  but  I  assure  3'OU  of  these  days  that  none  ever 
surpassed  this,  if  we  may  except  its  first  exhibition,  which  was 
crowned  with  an  amount  of  distinguished  talent  that  has  scarcel3'  ever 
been  seen  at  an3'  simihir  assemblage.  But  in  every  other  respect — 
and  I  pa3'  most  cordial  liomage  to  the  gentlemen  I  see  around  me, 
and  I  would  not  bring  them  in  invidious  comparison  with  the  splen- 
did galax3-  of  that  da3'- — in  most  every  other  respect  this  exhibition 
closes  the  most  prosperous  year  that  the  Societ3'  has  ever  had.  I 
rejoice  in  it,  sir ;  for  ever3'  institution  of  age  has  its  da3'-  of 
decadence — has  its  ups  and  downs.  Now,  sir,  to-day  the  old  Nor- 
folk Society  takes  lier  stand  in  the  front  rank,  and  there  may  she 
stand  forever !  I  am  extremel3'  obliged  to  this  old  Norfolk  County 
boy  for  his  excellent  effort.  He  has  given  3'ou  an  epitome  of  what 
we  have  gone  through  for  the  advancement  of  agriculture. 

In  those  earlier  days  when  a  man  brought  up  in  his  remarks  the 
word  science,  all  the  papers  would  be  down  on  him.  Now  we 
have  our  Agricultural  College  which  teaches  science  as  applied  to 
farming,  and  we  have  its  President  here  to-day  who  knows  how  to 
teach  it.  (Applause.)  Now  brighter  days  have  fallen  upon  us,  as 
has  been  illustrated  b3'  the  orator  to-day. 

In  looking  over  the  exhibition  to-day,  and  the  splendid  horses 
raised  l\y  our  worth3'  President,  all  honor  to  him  (applause) — 
why,  look  back  and  compare  them  with  the  horses  in  the  da3-s 
gone  by  that  were  but  mere  shadows ;  would  that  the3- 
might  always  remain  so.  (Laughter.)  And  this  remarkable  pro- 
gress in  the  breeds  of  stock  ;  look  at  your  more  than  fifty  Jerse3'' 
animals — some  that  would  grace  any  exhibition.  I  can  remember 
the  da3'  when  there  was  not  a  Jersey  animal  in  the  County  of  Nor- 
folk. Now  what  is  this  but  progress  and  improvement?  M3- 
friend  has  alluded  to  the  cultivation  of  fruits  and  flowers.  I  agree 
with  all  he  sa3^s  about  flowers  ;  but  let  me  go  back  to  m3'  depart- 
ment of  fruit.  When  I  was  young  we  did  not  know  even  the 
names  of  the  fruits  we  raised.  The  apples  of  a  particular  tree 
were  often  distinguished  only  b3'  naming  them  after  some  object 
near  which  the  tree  stood.  They  were  known  as  the  "hog  pens," 
or  by  some  other  equall3'  outlandish  appellation.     But  in  the  ad- 


43 

van ce  of  the  culture  more  care  was  taken  in  the  nomenclature  of 
the  fruit  and  in  raising  distinct  and  now  kinds.  Among  the  new 
contributions  was  the  '•Roxbury  russet,"  whicli  is  one  of  the  best 
kind  of  apples,  and  is  known  and  valued  throughout  tlie  countr}'. 
But  let  me  say  to  you,  and  I  rejoice  to  state  the  Hxct,  that  I  have 
livod  to  see  that  grand  assemblage  of  our  fruits  :.t  the  national 
exhibition  in  Boston  two  weeks  since,  and  to  speak  of  the  great 
progress  which  it  marked.  Wh}',  sir,  in  the  State  of  Nebraska 
where  a  few  years  ago  there  was  not  a  fruit  raised,  two  j'cars  ago 
at  Richir.ond  she  carried  olf  the  8100  prize,  and  here  in  Boston  she 
again  carried  otf  other  prizes.  And  it  has  all  cmcnated  from  this 
centre, — from  the  etlbrts  made  by  the  Massachusetts  Horticul- 
tural Societ}',  to  which  Norfolk  County  contributed  so  largely. 
For  more  than  twenty  years  Norfolk  supplied  Presidents  for 
that  Society.  (Applause.)  Allow  me  now  in  closing  to  congrat- 
ulate 3'ou,  my  friends,  on  this  beautiful,  excellent  exhibition.  You 
are  now  on  the  right  track.  I  hope  this  Society  may  live  on 
prospering  and  to  prosper,  rising  higher  and  higher  in  its  excel- 
lence, and  having  better  and  better  exhibitions,  and  may  I  not  say. 
I  hope  to  be  here  and  witness  it.     (Warm  applause.) 

After  music  by  the  band,  the  following  hymn,  written  b}'  a  lady 
of  Dedham,  was  sung  : — 

Once  more,  dear  friends,  the  season's  round 

Our  annual  feast  hath  brought; 
Again  with  thankful  hearts  we  own 

A  year  with  blessings  fraught. 

Full  many  a  time  hath  seed  been  sown. 

And  harvests  p.athered  in. 
Since  here  went  forth  the  brave  and  true, 

Their  country's  peace  to  win. 

And  'mid  the  scenes  that  echoed  tlien 

To  sound  of  martial  strife, 
We  bring  the  fair  fruits  of  the  land 

For  which  they  gave  their  life. 

To  Him  whose  loving  kindness  gives 

The  husbandman's  reward, 
We  offer  now  our  grateful  thanks 

For  homes  with  plenty  stored. 

For  all  a  nation's  tlirift  ami  wcaltii, 

And  for  the  year's  hi(;rea.-<e. 
For  freedom  from  the  pestilence, 

And  for  a  land  at  peace. 

And  when  shall  send  the  harvest's  Lord 

To  bid  his  reapers  come, 
Bearing  our  slieaves  may' we  go  hence 

To  Heavenly  Harvest-Home. 


44 

Col.  William   S.   Clark,   President  of  the  Massachusetts  Agri- 
cultural College,  was  the  next  speaker.     He  began  b}'  saying  that 
he  was  glad  to  have  the  opportunity-  to  sa}'  a  word  in  regard   to 
the  excellence  of  the  exhibition,  particularly  in  the  matter  of  fruit, 
for  which  thanks  were  mainly  due  to  Col.  Wilder,  whose  name  has 
become  known  throughout  the  country  as  the  prince  of  pomologists. 
He  had  also  become  known  throughout  the  country  in  every  good 
work  which  will  benefit  the  people.     Col.  Wilder  had  said  that  he 
would  rather  originate  a  new  flower,  or  fruit,  or  vegetable,  that 
would  hand  down  his  name  to  posterity,  than  to  receive  any  other 
earthly  honor.     These,  said  the  speaker,  were  eloquent  words  ;  but 
his  fame  was  not  perishable,  for  he  would  be  remembered  as  the 
founder  of  institutions  that  shall  live  forever,  or  as  long    as   men 
cultivate  the  earth.     (Applause.)     He  would  also  be  remembered 
as  the  founder,  originator  and  main  spoke  in  the  wheel   of  the 
Massachusetts    Agricultural    College,    which  is  called   a  failure. 
(Laughter.)     He  has  failed  in  this  last  grand  eftbrt  of  his  life,  so 
some  would  try  to  have  us  believe.     He  has  in  truth  borne  more 
slander  on  this  account  than  any  man  in  Massachusetts.     The 
speaker  was  \evy  sorry  for  him.     He  said  he  had  stood  by  him 
himself  and  borne  a  good  deal  of  pounding.     But  he  would  not 
defend  the  Agricultural  College,  for  it  neeiled  no  defence.     He  did 
not  believe  the  farmers  of  Norfolk  County  would  decry  an  institu- 
tion which  was  founded  to  promote  the  cause  of  agriculture — to 
gather  the  wisdom  of  all  countries  and  diffuse  it  throughout  our 
own.     He  would  tell  them  in  a  word  what  they  Avere  doing  at  the 
College.     The}'  had  a  ver}-  beautiful  property  of  aljout  400  acres, 
and  also  property  in  buildings,  money,  &c.,  of  more  than  8500,000. 
Able   men    were  employed  to  instruct  the   pupils  in  the  various 
branches  of  scientiflc  farming  who  were  performing  their  dut}'  with 
great   zeal.     The  institution  was  also    full  of  students,  and  was 
never  before  in  so  flourishing  a  condition.     So  much  for  the  Col- 
lege.    The  speaker  then  alluded  to  the  requirements  needed  for  a 
farmer,  and  said  it  took  a  good  and  intelligent  man  to  make  a  suc- 
cess  in  this  pursuit,  as  in  other  things.     He  had  seen  a   great 
many  cases  where  the  right  kind  of  men  had  made  a  good  thing  in 
farming.     The  speaker  next  pleasantly  referred  to  a  recent  visit 
he  had  made  to  Cul.Russel's  farm  in  Milton,  and  to  the  operations 
of  that  gentleman  in   fancy  horse  flesh.     He  then  alluded  to  the 
dairy  business,  and  to   what  his  College  was  doing  in  that  line. 
The  results  which  had  been  achieved  were  enough  to  show  that 
intelligent  farming  pa^-s,  and  that  it  was  the  work  of  his  College 
to  train  intelligent  farmers.     Judge  Hoar  had  recently  stated  that 
the  ideal  of  Harvard  College  was  literary  culture,  but  the  ideal  of 
the  Agricultural  College    was  business.     It  taught  boys   how  to 
work.     It  took  them  when  th^-  had  got  through  the  three  R's — 
'rithmetic,  reading  and  'riting  (laughter) — and  put  them  right  to 
work  upon  the  farm,  and  taught  them  in  this  practical  way  the 


45 

science  of  agriculture  Without  this  actual  practice  there  was  no 
such  thing  as  intelligent  fanning.  His  students  had  the  scientific 
principles  thoroughly  instilled  into  them  by  practice  and  study 
combined.  In  farming,  as  in  other  things,  they  must  begin  at  first 
principles  and  get  the  elements  of  it  thoroughly  grounded,  and 
then  progress  can  be  made.  When  this  method  is  generally  pur- 
sued agriculture  will  take  a  place  as  a  profession  worthy  of  respect. 
It  needed  men  of  brains  to  bring  it  up  to  its  proper  position.  Give 
him  a  man  of  brains,  he  said,  and  such  an  one  Avould  go  right, 
whether  he  had  mone\^  or  friends  to  back  him  or  not. 

Mr.  George  M.  Baker,  President  of  the  Marshfield  Agricultural 
Society,  was  next  introduced.  He  briett}^  expressed  his  gratifica- 
tion at  the  character  of  the  exhibition,  which,  though  it  was  the 
twenty-fifth  held  by  the  Society,  yet  showed  none  of  the  deficien- 
cies of  age,  but  rather  evidences  of  vast  improvement  since  its 
earlier  days.  The  specimens  of  fruit  he  thought  were  wonderful, 
and  the  Society  that  could  make  such  a  display  must  surely  have 
among  its  supporters  the  presence  of  that  venerable  gentleman 
whose  name  was  beloved  and  venerated  wherever  luscious  fruits 
were  cultivated  and  their  excellence  appreciated.  He  closed  by 
expressing  the  hope  that  the  Society  would  be  favored  in  the  future 
with  as  genial  skies  as  then  smiled  above  them. 

The  next  speaker  was  Mr.  Charles  L.  Flint,  Secretary  of  the 
State  Board  of  Agriculture.  He  said  he  had  attended  many  of 
the  annual  shows  of  the  Norfolk  Societ}'',  and  was  with  them  in 
1849  when  that  grand  galaxy  was  present  to  which  Col.  Wilder 
had  referred.  He  had  also  attended  many  exhibitions  during  the 
present  season,  and  was  happ}-  to  say  that  this  was  the  crowning 
glory  of  them  all.  (Applause.)  He  was  pleased  at  the  condition 
of  the  stock  on  the  ground.  When  he  came  into  office  3'ears 
ago  there  was  scarcely  any  blooded  stock  in  the  State  ;  now  it  was 
abundant  in  nearly  every  part  of  the  Commonwealth.  He  also 
took  pleasure  in  visiting  the  halls,  where  the  display  of  apples, 
pears  and  vegetables  he  said  was  the  most  magnificent  he  had  seen 
in  any  County  exhibition.  The  progress  in  the  culture  of  fruits, 
he  said,  was  one  of  the  marvels  of  the  present  age.  The  speaker 
then  referred  to  the  first  efforts  at  fruit  raising  in  Massachusetts 
by  Governois  Winthrop  and  Endicott  and  other  farmers  during 
the  latter  part  of  the  seventeenth  century.  The  fruit  then  raised 
was  apples  exchisively,  which  were  all  seedlings  and  of  an  inferior 
quality,  and  were  raised  only  for  cider.  Even  down  to  the  end  of 
the  first  quarter  of  the  present  century  little  was  done  with  ai)ples, 
except  to  make  cider  and  vinegar  with  them.  I>ut  fast  progress 
has  been  made  since  that  time,  and  now  more  than  fifty  millions  of 
dollars  is  the  annual  product  of  the  fruit  of  this  country.  Before 
he  sat  down,  however,  he  wished  to  express  a  little  pride  he  felt  in 
one  addition  of  their  show,  and  this  was  in  respect  to  its  dahlias. 
In  1843,  while  travelling  over  the  Alps  in  Switzerland  he  came  to 


46 

the  town  of  Altorf,  which  had  been  made  immortal  as  the  scene  of 
the  famous  shootino-  by  William  Tell.  It  was  a  little  tumble-down  vil- 
lage, but  in  front  of  all  the  cottages  were  little  patches  filled  with 
the  most  beautiful  dahlias.  He  obtained  rocts  of  some  of  the  finest 
specimens  whicli  he  carried  about  with  him  in  his  travelling  bag,  and 
finally  brought  home  to  America,  and  succeeded  in  raiding  from 
them  some  magnificent  specimens,  and  established  their  growth  in 
this  country.  "This,  he  said,  was  the  only  claim  he  could  make  of 
having  contributed  to  the  stock  of  products  raised  upon  our  Ameri- 
can soil.  He  then  closed  by  congratulating  the  Norfolk  County 
Society  on  its  great  success,  and  hoped  it  would  go  on  as  it  had 
begun. 

At  the  close  of  Mr.  Flint's  address,  Samuel  B.  Noyes,  Esq.,  of 
Canton,  addressed  the  President  of  the  Society  as  follows  :— 

3fr.  President, — Among  the  many  pleasant  features  of  this 
exhibition  is  that  of  meeting  old  friends  and  old  faces,  and  also  of 
recollecting  those  who  have  been  here  in  former  times.  Last  year 
there  was  a  gallant  steed  at  this  exliibition  whose  beauty  attracted 
every  eye.  To-day  that  horse  i.^  not  here,  but  a  lady  of  Milton,  a 
farmers'  wife,  has  desired  me  to  present  this  to  you  in  memory  of 
the  bereavement  you  have  sustained  in  the  loss  of  Fearnaught. 

The  speaker  here  presented  to  Col.  Russell  a  beautiful  represen- 
tation of  his  famous  horse,  executed,  in  wax,  in  bas  relief,  and 
handsomely  framed,  and  read  some  lines  which  were  appropriately 
inscribed  on  the  back  of  the  token.  On  receiving  the  gift,  Col. 
Russell  responded  in  these  words  : — 

I  thank  the  ladv  for  the  kindness  which  has  prompted  this.  I 
assure  you.  sir,  that' I  value  and  appreciate  the  sympathy  which  is 
so  beautifully  expressed.  Fearnaught's  death  is  recognized  as  a 
loss  to  all  New  p:ugland,  while,  perhaps,  practically  speaking,  the 
loss  falls  heaviest  on  me.  I  am  touched  to  find  so  wide  a  circle  of 
sorrowers  with  me  in  my  bereavement.  Fearnaught  was  indeed 
a  gallant  animal,  and  it  "was  the  chief  pride  of  the  Home  Farm 
in  having  him  at  its  head. 

Col.  Russell  then  called  attention  to  the  exercises  on  the  track, 
which  brought  the  proceedings  in  the  tent  to  a  close. 

The  races  on  the  track  began  at  2  o'clock,  under  the  direction 
of  Messrs.  W.  A.  Angler,  Milton,  Albert  B.  Balch,  Medfield,  and 
A.  W.  Whitcomb,  Randolph,  and  .occupied  the  time  until  5  o'clock, 
when  the  exercises  of  the  day  were  brought  to  a  close. 

No  previous  exhibition  of  the  Society  ever  gave  more  satisfac- 
tion to  all  connected  with  its  management,  and  the   splendid  show 


of  Stock,  Fruit,  Flowers  and  Vegetables  were  never  excelled  at  any 
exhibition  held  in  the  County. 

The  best  order  prevailed  during  the  entire  two  days,  the  police 
arrangements  being  in  charge  of  that  excellent  officer,  B.  P. 
Eldridge,  Deputy  State  Constable,  assisted  b}'  tiie  following  mem- 
bers of  the  force: — Clifford,  Stoughton  ;  Porter,  Braintree  ;  Ham- 
mond, '\Vo\'mouth  ;  Whittaker,  Franklin  ;  Fernald,  Quincv  ; 
McAdoo,  Somerville  ;  Macoj',  Bridgewater ;  Bramhall  and  Noo- 
nan,  Cambridge. 

Tiie  onerous  and  responsible  duties  of  Chief  Marshall  were  ad- 
mirably performed  by  Col.  Henry  A.  Darling  of  Hyde  Park,  assist- 
ed b}'  the  following  gentlemen  as  aids  : —  William  B.  Fenner  and 
Albert  Carleton  of  Roxbury,  and  J.  B.  AValker,  Col.  Francis  Boyd 
and  Joseph  Richardson  of  Hyde  Park. 


48 


Officers   of   the    Society,    1875. 


President! 
HENRY   S.  RUSSELL, of  Milton. 

Honorary  President  ■■ 
IIox.   MARSHALL  P.  WILDER of  Dorchester. 

Vice-Presidents ! 

Hon.   OTIS  GARY, of  Foxborough. 

ALONZO  W.    CHEEVER, of  Wrentham. 

JOHN   QUINCY   ADAMS, of  Quincy. 

ALFRED  W.   WHITCOMB, of  Bandolph. 

THEODORE  LYMAN of  Brookline. 

WILLIAM  R.  MANN, of  Sharon. 

Corresponding  and  Recording  Secretary  s 
HENRY  0.  HILDRETH, of  Dedham. 

Treasurer: 
CHAUNCEY  C.  CHURCHILL, of  Dedham. 

Executive  Committee! 

E.    C.  R.    WALKER, of  Boxbury. 

ALBERT  B.  BALCII, of  3IedJield. 

CHARLES  F.    CURTIS, of  West Boo:bnry. 

AUGUSTUS  P.  CALDER, of  West  Boxbury. 

WILLIAM  T.  COOK, of  Foxborough. 

ELLIS  TUCKER of  Canton. 

HENRY  M.  MACK of  Dorchester. 

DAVID   W.    TUCKER, of  Milton. 

GEORGE  CRAFT, oj  Brookline. 

Finance  Committee  and  Auditors! 

IRA  CLEVELAND, of  Dedham. 

WILLIAM  J.    STUART, of  Hyde  Bark. 

ELIPHALET  STONE, of  Dedham. 


49 


Board  of  Trustese  { 
BELLINGIrA^r. 
GEORGE   H.    CROOKS. 
BRAINTUEE. 


ALVA    MORRISON. 
JOHN   B.    ARNOLD. 


GEORGE   CRAFT. 
WILLL\M   J.   HYDE. 


JAMES  T.    SUMNER. 
NATHANIEL   S.    WHITE. 


SOLOMON  J.   BEAL. 


LUTHER   EATON. 
ALLEN  COLBURN. 


FREDERICK   CLAPP. 
LEMUEL   CLAPP. 
SAMUEL  J.  CAPEN. 


HENRY   GOULDING. 
EPHP.AIM   WILSON. 


JAMES   CAPEN. 
FRANCIS  D.    WILLIAMS. 


ERASTUS   L.   METCALF. 
JOHN   W.    RICHARDSON. 


D.'VVID    II.    BATES. 
GEORGE   WALES. 


BROOK  LINE. 


GEORGE  GRIGGS. 
CHARLES   STEARNS. 

CANTON. 

ADAM   McINTOSH. 
EDMUND   TUCKER. 

COIIASSET. 

ABRAHAM   H.    TOWER. 

DEDIIAM. 


JEREMIAH    W.  GAY. 
AUGUSTUS   B.   ENDICOTT. 


DORCHESTER. 


AARON   D.    CAPEN. 
JOSEPH   E.   HALL. 
GEORGE  DORR. 


DOVER. 


BENJAMIN   SAWIN. 
AMOS   W.    SHUMWAY. 


FOXBOROUGH. 


ERASTUS  P.    CARPENTER. 
CHARLES   F.  HOWARD. 


FRANKLIN. 


HIRAM    W.   JONES. 
FRANCIS   B.    RAY. 


HOLBROOK. 

CALEB    S.    HOLBROOK. 

HYDE  PARK. 


ALPHEUS   P.   BLAKE. 
W^ILLIAM  J.    STUART. 


CHARLES   C.    SEWALL. 
ELIJAH   THAYEi;. 


WILLARD  P.   CLARK. 
RICHARD   RICHARDSON. 


ALBERT  K.    TEELE. 
LYMAN  DAVENPOJrr. 


WILLIAM   T.    THACITER. 
HENRY   A.   DARLING. 


MEDFIELD. 


WILLIAM   Q.   FISHER. 
ALONZO   B.    PARKER. 


MEDWAY. 


WILLIAM  DANIELS. 
MILTON  M.    FISHER. 


WILTON. 


OLIVER   W.   PEA  BODY. 
CHARLES  L.   COPELAND. 


50 


XEEDHAM. 


ABEL   F.  STEVENS. 
CHARLES   H.    MANSFIELD. 


HENRY   BLACKMAN. 
JAMES   MACKINTOSH. 


NORFOLK. 


WALTER   H.   FISHER. 
ERASTUS    DUPEE. 


JAMES   R.    FISHER. 
ISAAC    ELLIS. 


JOSEPH  W.   ROBERTSON. 
LEMUEL  BILLINGS. 


J.   WHITE   BELCHER. 
WILLIAM   PORTER. 


ROLAND   WORTHINGTON. 
J.    AUSTIN   ROGERS. 
ISAAC    HAYDEN. 


ASAHEL   S.    DRAKE. 
LEWIS    W.    MORSE. 


LUCAS   POND. 

GEORGE   E.    HOLBROOK. 


NORWOOD. 


JOSIAH   W.    TALBOT. 
SIDNEY   E.    MORSE. 


QUINCY. 


CHARLES    A.    HOWLAND. 
JOHN   QUINCY   ADAMS. 


RANDOLPH, 


EPHRIAM   MANN. 
SETH   MANN,  2d. 


ROXBURY. 


JOSEPH   H.    CHADWICK. 
GEORGE  CURTIS. 
SAMUEL   LITTLE. 


SHARON. 


GEORGE   R.   MANN. 
THOMAS   DECATUR. 


STOUGHTOX. 


LUCIUS    CLAPP. 
HENRY   BIRD. 


WILLARD   LEWIS. 
HENRY   M.    PLIMPTON. 


ROBERT   PORTER,   Jr. 
ALBERT   H.    DRAKE. 


WALPOLE. 


JOHN   N.    SMITH. 
EDMUND   POLLEY. 


WEST  ROXBURY. 


ALFRED    S. 
JOSEPH   W. 


BROWN. 
PAGE. 


HAMILTON   J.   FARRAR. 
GEORGE    S.    CURTIS. 


AVEYJVIOUTH. 


JOHN  W.  LOUD. 
JAMES  HUMPHREY, 


JOHN  F.  CO  WELL. 
EBENEZER  B.  PARKER. 


ERASTUS  NASH. 
JAMES  L.  BATES. 


WRENTHAM. 


CHAUNCEY   G.    FULLER. 
ROBERT    P.    GRANT. 


51 


Names   of    M.embei\s. 


BELLINGIIAM. 

Chilson,  Paul,*  18f  0. 
Crooks,  Geortje  H. 
Pickering,  Asa,*  '09.    [3.] 

BUAIXTUEE. 

Ainolil,  John  B. 
AinoUi,  Joseph  A. 
l$atos,  David  II. 
Blake,  Joseph  II.  D.,*'68. 
Bowilitch,  Ebeuezer  C. 
Bia«ltoid,  E.  S.,*  ISOG. 
Chiice,  George 
How,  Charles  II. 
Dyer,  I^^anc 
Dver,  Joseph 
Fogg-,  Charles  >r.,*l&J4. 
French,  Geoige  G. 
F'-ench,  Charles.*  1801. 
Freni-h,  Joeaihau 
Iloningsworlh,  E.  A. 
Hollis,  Caleb 
Hollis,  David  N. 
IloUis,  John  A. 
Hollis,  Josiah 
Howard,  J.  G. 
Ludden,  Miss  Carrie  F. 
Eudden,  Joseph  T.,*  "62. 
Locke,  W.F. 
Manslield,  John 
Maiislield,  Warren 
Morrison,  Alva 
Niles,  Daniel  II. 
Pennini'in,  Ezra.*  18GG. 
Perkins.  Oliver 
Potter,  Edward 
Kami,  William  T. 
Randall,  ApoUos,*  1803. 
Stetson,  Amos  W. 
Stetson,  Caleb 
Stoddard,  A.  A. 
Thaver,  Ebenezer  C. 
Thayer,  Hezekiah,*  ]8,it. 
Thayer,  Sylvanus,*  ln'rl. 
Viulon,  Thomas  IJ. 
Walnwright,  Peter 
Wainwrlght,  William  L. 
Wales,  George 
Wild,  Hiram 
Willis,  Geo.  W.,* '52.    [14.] 

BROOKLINE. 

Amory,  James  .S. 
Aniory,  William 
Applcton,  William,  Jr. 
Babcock,  George,* 
Bartlett,  James,*  1871. 
Benton,  Austin  W. 
Beegan,  .Jos.  11. 
Bird.  Jesse,*  1M.")0. 
Blake,  George  Buty 


Blanev,  Henry 
Bramhall,  William,*  1870. 
IJi'Own,  Atherton  T. 
Brown,  Joseph  T. 
'"haftin,  Ileniv 
Chiirchill.  Wiii.,*  18.->7. 
Codman,  Francis 
Co<lman,  James  M. 
Corey,  Elijah,*  1859. 
Corey,  Timothv 
Cralt,  Miss  Emeline  H. 
Crall,  Caleb 
Cralt,  Charles,*  1864. 
Craft,  Geori:e 
Cralt,  Samuel.*  1»50. 
Dane,  John,*  1854. 
Dane,  .John  H. 
I»enny,  Francis  P.,*  1871. 
Ferris,  Mortimer  C. 
Fisher,  Francis,*  1871. 
Fr;izar,  Amherst  A. 
Griggs,  George 
Griggs,  Thoniiis 
Griggs,  Thomas  B. 
Grigirs,  Wm.  J. 
Henshaw,  Samuel,*  1803. 
Hill,  M.  F. 
Howe,  Frank  E. 
Howe,  .James  Murray 
Howe,  John,*  1807. 
Humphrey,  Willard  J. 
Hnmi)lirey.  W.  A. 
Hyde,  William  J. 
Jaineson,  William  H. 
Kellogg,  Charles  D. 
Lawrejice,  Amos  A. 
Lyman,  Theodore 
I'arker,  Edward  G..*  'C8. 
I'arker,  M.  I).,*  ISOS. 
Parsons,  Thomas 
Keed,  Eben 
Reed,  Mrs.  Eben 
Heed,  Miss  Ella 
Salisbury,  Wililam  G. 
Sampson,  George  R. 
Shaw.  G.  IIowland,*'07. 
Stearns,  Charles 
Stearns,  Marshall,*  1870. 
Thayer,  John  E.,*  1857. 
Tilley,  Jas.  B. 
Trowbridge,  John  H. 
Turner,  John  N.,*  1804. 
Welch,  Matthew,*  1808. 
White,  Henry  K. 
Williams,  Moses B.,*  I8GC. 
[C4.] 

CANTON. 

Abbott.  Ezra,*  1872. 
.Vmes,  Frank  M. 
IJillings,  Uriah 
lijiliug-i,  William 
Bray,  Edgar  W. 


Brewster,  Ezra  S. 
Cabot,  Samuel 
Capen,  Ezekiel,*  1872. 
Capen,  Samuel,*  1803. 
Chapman,  Oliver  S. 
Crane,  .\lbert,*  1873. 
Cushman,  Charles  F. 
Davenjiort,  Alfred 
Davenport,  Charles 
Davenport,  .John,  Jr. 
Deane,  Francis  \V. 
Deane.  Oliver 
Downes,  George,*  1801. 
Downes,  Miss  C.  T. 
Downes,  (ieorge  E. 
I)raper,  Thomas 
Dunbar,  Elijah 
Dunbar,  James,*  1867. 
I  'unbar,  Nathaniel 
Dunbar.  William.*  1857. 
Eager,  Edward  R. 
Eldridgp,  John  S. 
?^ldridge,  John  S..  Jr. 
Endicott,  John,*  1855. 
Endicott,  Charles 
Everett  J.  Mason 
Everett,  Leonard,*  18.52. 
Farrington,  Nathaniel,  Jr. 
Fenuo,  Jesse 
French,  Charles  H. 
French,  Thomas,*  1802. 
Fuller,  Daniel 
Guild,  Horace 
Hall,  John 
Howard,  Lucius 
Hunt,  George  L. 
Huntoon,  Benj.,*  1804. 
Huntoon,  Mrs.  Benjamin 
Huntoon,  D.  T.  V. 
Kinsley,  Lyman 
Kidlock,  Jeremiah 
Lincoln,  Frederick  W.,*  '71 
Lord,  William  P. 
Manslield.  William 
Mcintosh,  Adam 
Mcintosh,  Roger  S. 
McKendry,  William 
Messinger,  Vernon  A. 
Messinger,  Virgil  J. 
Morse,  William 
Noyes,  Samuel  B. 
Prouty,  Lorenzo,*  1872. 
Revere,  Joseph 
Shejiard,  James  S. 
Spare,  Elijah 
Spaulding,  Corodon 
Stetson,  Joseph 
Sumner,  James  T. 
Sumner,  George  F. 
Sumner,  Mrs.  Sarah  E. 
Tilt,  Benjamin  B. 
Tucker,  Edmund 
Tucker,  Ellis 
Tucker,  Jedediah 


52 


Tucker,  Nathaniel,  Jr. 
Tucker,  Phineas 
Tucker,  William,*  18GS. 
Ward,  Samuel  (t. 
Wentwortli,  Edwin 
Wentwortli,  Natliaiiiel 
White,  Elisha,*  18(i,3. 
Wliite,  Natlianiel  S. 
Wood,  Kuliis  C.  [78.] 

COHASSET. 

Real,  Solomon  J. 
Beal,  Mrs.  S.  J. 
Doaue,  James  C. 
Johnson,  William  B.*  1872. 
Sohier,  William  D.*  18'JS. 
Souther,  L,aban,*  1800. 
Tower,  Abraham  H.      [7.] 

DEDHAM. 

Adams,  Benjamin  H. 
Alden,  Abner 
Aldeu,  Francis 
Alden,  George,*  1862. 
Alden,  Leonard 
Alden  Samuel  F. 
Ames,  William 
Ames,  William,  2d 
Babcock,  Samuel  B.*  1873. 
Bacon,  Silas  D. 
Bailey,  Benjamin  H, 
Baker,  David  A. 
Baker,  Obed,*  1868. 
Baker,  Timothy 
Baker,  William 
Balch,  Benj.  W.*  1858. 
Barrows,  Edward 
Barrows,  Thomas 
Bates,  Martin,*  1869. 
Bean,  Albion,*  1860. 
Bestwick,  Frederick  L. 
Bickner,  Samuel  11. 
Bosworth,  Isaac  C*  1866. 
Boy  den,  Addison 
Boyden,  Benjamin 
Brooks,  Edward  C. 
Bryant,  Austin,*  1851. 
Bullard,  Elijah 
Bullard,  John,*  1852. 
Bullard,  Lewis 
Bullard.  William 
Burgess,  Ebenezer,*  1870. 
Burgess,  Ebenezer  G. 
Burgess,  Edward  P. 
Capen,  Charles  J. 
Capen,  Oliver,*  1865. 
Carroll,  Sanford 
Cawley,  John 
Chase,  James  M.,*  1860. 
Chickering,  Horatio 
Chickering,  Munroe 
Churchill,  Chauncey  C. 
Clapp,  Edward 
Clapp,  Nathaniel 
Clarke,  -Joseph  W. 
Clark,  Horatio 
Clark,  Mrs.  Horatio 
Cleveland,  Ira 
Cobb,  Johnathan  Ht 
Cobarn,  Charles 
Coburn,  Mrs.  Charles 
Colburn,  Allen 
Coll)urn,  Isaacus 
Colburn,  Nathaniel,*  1853. 
Colburn,  Waldo 


Copeland,  Franklin 
Cormerais,  Henry 
Coolidge,  George 
Cox,  John,  .Jr. 
Crane,  E.  B. 
Crane,  Ebenezer  P. 
Crane,  Joseph 
Crane,  Mrs.  Susan 
Crocker,  Amos  II.,*  1864. 
Ci'ossman,  Charles  B. 
Curtis,  George  P. 
Cushing,  Henry  W. 
Dr.mrell,  Wm.  S.,*  1860, 
Danied,  Ellery  C. 
Davenport,  George,*  1872. 
Decatur,  D.  F. 
Dean,  .James 
Deane.  John,*  1864. 
Dixon,  llefus  E. 
Doggett,  John,*  1857. 
Donahoe,  Patrick 
Drayton,  John,*  1856. 
Dull',  John 
Dunbar,  Thomas,  Jr. 
Eaton,  John 

Eaton,  John  Ellis,*  1854. 
Eaton,  Luthfir 
Eaton,  Luther  A. 
Edson.  Mrs.  E.  G.,*  1859. 
Ellis,  Calvin  F. 
Ellis,  Colburn,*  1854. 
Ellis,  George,*  1856, 
Ellis,  Jason 
Ellis,  Merrill  D. 
Ellis,  Oliver 
Ely,  F.  D. 

Endicott,  Augustus  B. 
Everett,  Mrs.  Hepzibah 
Fairbanks,  Wm.,*1863. 
Fales,  William 
Farrington,  Charles.,*  1859. 
Farrington,  George  O. 
Farrington,  .James,*  1864. 
Farringon,  Mrs.  James 
Farrington,  Jesse,*  18.57. 
Farrington,  .Jesse 
Field,  William 
Fisher,  Albert 
Fisher,  Alvan,*  1863. 
Fisher,  Alvan  J.,*  1863. 
Fisher,  Amoiy 
Fisher,  Eben'r  S.,*  1867. 
Fisher,  Mrs.  Elizabetli  D. 
Fisher,  Freeman,*  1860. 
Fisher,  Freeman 
Fislier,  Joseph 
Fisher,  Joshua 
Fisher,  Thomas 
Fleming,  Douglas,*  18.58. 
Follansbee,  Isaac  W. 
Foonl,  Enos,*  1861. 
Foord,  James 
French,  Abram 
French,  Charles 
French,  George  M. 
Fuller,  George,*  1869. 
Fuller,  Greenwood 
Gardner,  John 
Gay,  Ebenezer  F.,*  1871. 
Gay,  Mrs.  Hannah  S. 
Gay,  Jeremiah  W. 
Gay,  Lusher,*  1855. 
Gay,  Mrs.  A.  M.,*  1866. 
Gay,  Wm.  King,*  1860. 
(ilenson,  Daniel 
Gould,  George 
Green,  Elisha,*  1865. 
Green,  .John 


Green,  Mrs.  .John 
Guild,  Calvin 
Guild,  Francis 
Guild,  Henry 
Gunnison,  George  D. 
Harnden,  Harvey,*  1863. 
Hartney,  Thomas 
Henck,  .John  B. 
Hewes,  Hannah  E. 
Hewins,  Mrs.  Haitie  W. 
Hildreth,  Henrv  O. 
Hinkley,  Mrs.  M.  J. 
Holmes,  Edward  B.,*  1864. 
Houghton,  William  A. 
Howe,  Elijah,  Jr. 
Howe,  Francis,*  18.59. 
Howe,  Josiah  D.,*  1867. 
Jackson,  Marcus  B. 
.Johnson,  Edwin,*  1856. 
Keelan,  Michael 
Keyes,  Ebenezer  W. 
Keyes,  Edward  L.,*  1859. 
Kingsbury,  Lewis  H. 
Kingsbury,  Moses 
Kingsbury,  Mrs.  Sally 
Lamson,  Alvan,*  1864. 
Luce,  D.  W. 
Lynch,  Mrs.  A.,*  1869. 
Lynch  Daniel  A. 
Lynch  Wm.  F.,*  1869. 
McLaue,  James 
Mann,  Henry  A. 
Mann,  Herman,*  1851. 
Maun,  Samuel  C*  1864. 
Mann,  W.  II.*  1864. 
Marden,  Charles 
Marsh,  Francis 
Marsh,  Martin,*  1865. 
Marsh,  Mrs.  Martin,*  1869  . 
Mason,  William 
Mason.  Wm.  H.,*  18C1. 
Mercer,  Miss  Mary 
Mitchell,  Francis  N.* 
Morgan,  .John 
Morrell,  Henrietta  W. 
Motley,  Thomar',*  1864. 
Murray,  Daniel 
Neal,  A.  B. 
Noyes,  Nathaniel 
Norris,  Andrew  J. 
Onion,  Henry 
Onion,  Joseph  W. 
Otis,  Benjamin  H. 
Pai;e,  Frederick  A. 
Patterson,  Albert  C. 
Paul,  Ebenezer 
Paul,  Mrs.  Ebnezer 
Pettee,  James,*  1868. 
Phelps,  Timothy 
Phillips,  Nathan 
Phillips,  Mrs.  P.  M. 
Quincy,  Edmund 
Band,  Edward  S.,.Jr. 
Robley,  Robert  C. 
Rice,  John  P. 
Rice,  William  R. 
Richards,  Abiathar 
Richards,  Edward  M.,*  '65 
Richards,  Henrv  White 
Richards,  J.  F.,*  1852. 
Richards,  Lewis  A. 
Richards,  Mason,*  1866. 
Richaris,  Reuben,*  18)5. 
Richards,  William  B. 
Rodman,  Alfred,*  1853. 
Rodman,  All'red 
Rodman,  Mrs.  Alfred 
Rooney,  Francis 


53 


Kussell,  Charles 
Kussell,  Ira 
;jampson,  E.  W.,*  18C7. 
.Scanlan,  David 
Scliwartz,  Mrs.  Johanna 
Scoto,  Joel,*  1858. 
Shattuck,  NVillaicl 
Shaw,  Charles  B.,*  1SU9. 
'sheriff.  John  L. 
Sherman,  Charles  B..* 
Sherwiu,  Thomas,*  1SG9. 
Slalter,  Carlos 
Small,  Miss  Jane  S. 
Smith,  E  Iwiu 
Smi'h,  Henry 
Smith,  Nathaniel,* 
Smith,  Nathaniel 
Smith,  Thomas 
Smith,  Zebina,*  1805. 
Spear,  Henry  F. 
Stimsou,  Jeremy,*  1869. 
Stone,  Eliplialet 
Sully,  John 
Sumner,  Edward 
Sumner,  Mirick  P. 
Sumner,  Mrs.  Sarah  R. 
Sumner,  William  R.,*  1860. 
Sutton,  Enoch,*  1853. 
Talt,  Ezra  W. 
Thayer,  John  H.  B.,*1873. 
Tnomas,  John  \V. 
Tower,  William  B. 
Trel'rv,  James 
Tubbs,Beuj,n.,*1851. 
Van  Brunt,  G.  J.,*  1863. 
Vose,  George  11. 
Wakelield,  Thomas  L. 
Wales,  Sam'l  Jr.,*  1860. 
Washburn,  Alex  C. 
Waters,  Joseph  W. 
Weatherbee,  Comfort 
Weatlierbee,  Jabez 
Weatherbee,  Jesse 
Weatherbee,  John  E. 
Webb,  JMoses  E. 
Webb,  Selh,  Jr.,*  1862. 
Welch,  Stephen 
Weld,  Joseph  R. 
Wellcome,  Jacob  H. 
While,  John,*  1852. 
White,  Walter 
Whiting,  George  E. 
Wliithig,  Hezekiah 
Whiting,  Horace 
Whiting,  Margaret  M. 
Wiiiling,  Moses 
Whiting,  William 
Whiluey.  S.  8.,*  1855. 
Wigiit,  Danlorth  1*. 
Wight,  Ebenezer,*  1871. 
Williams,  G.  W.,*  1861. 
Wilson,  John  r.,*  1853. 
Wilson,  Reuben  S. 
Withington,  Warren 
\\'ood,  Mrs.  Amos 
Woods,  Win.  G.,*1863. 
Worthington,  E.         ["■280.] 

DORCHESTER. 

Abbott,  William  E. 
Adams,  Benjamin  W, 
Atherton,  Samuel 
Austin,  William  R. 
r.achi,  Ignatius  C.,*  1859. 
BacDii,  Charles  H. 
Baker,  Edinuml  J. 
Baker,  Walter,*  1852. 


Baldwin,  Enoch,*  1800. 
Barnes,  Parker 
Barry,  Michael  O.,*  1859. 
Bass,  Seth  B. 
Beal,  Alexander 
Hillings,  Lemuel 
Bisphani,  Eleazer  J. 
Hlanchard,  Chas.  F. 
Brown,  B.  F.,*  1872. 
Brown,  Mrs.  B.  F. 
Bradlee,  James  B. 
Iji-adstreet,  Samuel 
Branihall,  Cornelius 
Breck,  Henry,  Jr. 
Brewer,  Darius,*  1854. 
Briggs,  Franklin 
Brooks,  Noah,*  18.52. 
Ijrooks,  Williams  B. 
Brown,  Augustus 
Brown,  George  M. 
IJurt,  George  L. 
Capen,  Aaron  1). 
Ca|ieii,  Samuel  J. 
Capen,  Thomas  W. 
Campbell,  Thomas 
Caiieton,  Mary  A. 
Carlelou,  Martha  G. 
Cariuth,  Charles 
Canuth,  Nathan 
C  liter,  Josiali  H. 
Carter,  Elizibeth  E, 
Carter,  Lizzie  S. 
Childs,  Nathaniel  R. 
Cluircliill,  Asaph 
Chipp,  Amasa 
"lapp,  Edward  B. 
Chipp,  Frederick 
Chipp,  Frederick  A. 
Chipp,  Lemuel 
Clapp,  James  H. 
Claiip,  John  P. 
Clapp,  Richard,*  1862, 
Clapp,  Thaddeus,*  1861. 
Clapp,  William,*  1860. 
Clapp,  William  C. 
Cleveland,  S.  H.,*  1856. 
Cobb,  Moses  G. 
Codinaii,  John 
Codmaii,  Robert 
Collin,  William  E, 
Conant,  R.  B. 
Copenhagen,  A.  W.,*  1860. 
Curtis,  Ebenezer 
Cushiug,  Abel,*  1866. 
Gushing,  Benjamin 
Davis,  Barnabas 
Dearborn,  Axel 
Denny,  Daniel,*  1872. 
Denny,  Daniel,  Jr. 
Doody,  Dennis 
Dorr,  James 
Downer,  Samuel 
Flynn,  Thomas 
Follansbee,  Isaac  W. 
Foster,  William  H. 
Fowler,  M.  Field 
French,  Beuj.  V.,*  1860. 
Flench,  iMrs.  B.  V. 
Gardner,  Henry  J. 
Gilbert,  Samuel,  Jr. 
Gleason,  Moses,*  1856. 
Gleason,  Roswell 
Gleason,  Sarall,*  1854. 
Groom,  Thomas 
Hall,  Joseph 
Hall,  Oliver 
Hall,  Samuel 
Hammond,  Horatio 


Harding,  William 
Harding,  Mrs.  William 
Hardy,  Alpheus 
Harris,  Benjamin  W. 
Hartshorn,  Lewis  E. 
Hathaway,  Nicliolas 
Haven,  John  A. 
Hayues,  Edward 
Haynes,  George  A. 
Hebard,  B.  F.,*  1871. 
llebard,  C.  F. 
Hewins,  John  C. 
Hickey,  Timothy 
Hickey,  William 
Holbrook,  Nathan 
Holmes,  Ebenezer 
Hoojier,  Franklin  Henry 
Hooper,  Robert  C.,*  1869. 
lloo[ier,  Robert  C,  Jr. 
Houghton,  George  A. 
Howe,  Charles,*  1869. 
Howe,  James  T. 
Humphrey,  Henry 
Hunt,  Charles 
Igoe,  Patrick 
Jacobs,  Benjamin,*  1870. 
Jones,  Nahum 
Joues,  William 
King,  Edward,*  1807. 
King,  Franklin 
Learned,  J.  M. 
Lee,  James,  Jr. 
Leonard,  Joseph 
Lewis,  Edwin  J. 
Liversidge,  S.,*  1852. 
Liversidge,  Thomas 

Mack,  Henrv  M. 

Mai  k.Mrs.H.  M. 
Mack,  S.  P.,*  1866. 
McAulifle,  Daniel 

Marshall,  Wm.,*  1867. 

May,  John  J. 

Means,  James  H. 

Mears,  John 

Mears,  John,  Jr. 

Miller,  Erasmus  D. 

Minot,  John,*  1861. 

Mitchell,  Simeon 

Moseley,  Flavel 

Mumford,  Thomas  J. 

Munroe,  William 

Murphy,  Timothy 

Nazro,  John  G.,*  1870. 

Newhall,  Cheever 

Newhall,  John  M.,*  1809. 

Nichols,  Norman 

Payson,  Thomas 

Payson,  Mrs.  Thomas 

Perrin,  Augustus  W. 

Peters,  Henry  H. 

Petersilea,  Franz 

Pierce.  Chas.  B.,*1857. 

Pierce,  Henry 

Pierce,  Henry  L. 

Pierce,  Jesse,*  1856. 

Pierce,  Lewis 

Pierce,  Robert 

Pierce,  William,*  1853. 

Pierce,  Wni.  B.,*  1858. 

Pierce,  William  P. 

Pope,  Alexander 

Pope,  William 

Pratt,  Laban 

Preston,  Edward 

Preston,  John,*  1850. 

Preston,  John 

Prince,  William  G. 

Richardson,  George 


54 


Richardson,  William  II. 
Hideout,  Asa 
Kobie,  John 
llobinson,  Mrs.  D.  A. 
Kohiiison,  Eli  \V. 
Robinson,  John  H. 
Robinson,  Nathan  T. 
llobinson,  Stephen  A. 
Ruggles,  Edward  H.  K. 
Sciiddev,  Horace,*  1851. 
Shaw,  Theron  V.,*  1870. 
Smith,  Henry 
Suell,  Stephen  D. 
Southworth.  A.  O. 
Spear,  Daniel 
Spear,  Joshua,  Jr. 
Spear,  Luther 
Spooner,  John  P. 
Stephenson,  Charles  E. 
Sumner,  Clement 
Swan,  James,*  1873. 
Temple,  Hanuaniah,*  1873. 
Temple,  Thomas  F. 
Temple,  William  P. 
Thayer,  Benjamin  W. 
Thompson,  Joshua  P. 
Thurlow,  Rufus 
Tileston.E.  P.,*1873. 
Tileslon,  b'.  L. 
Tileston,  Samuel,*  1872. 
Tolinan,  Eben'r,*  18(53. 
Tohnan,  William 
Train,  Enoch,*  1868. 
Trenilet,  Thomas,*  1858. 
Trull,  John  H. 
Trull,  Mrs.  J.  H. 
Trull,  John  W. 
Tuttle,  Joseph,*  lb70. 
Upham,  James  H. 
Vinson,  Thomas  M. 
Vose,  Robert 
Vose,  Robert,  .Jr. 
Washburn,  Allen  J.,*  1865. 
Webster,  Charles  W. 
Welch,  John  H. 
Welch,  Mrs.  J.  H. 
Whipple,  John  L. 
Wilder,  Marshall  P. 
Wilder,  Mrs.  M.  P.,*  1854. 
Wilder,  Mrs.  M.  P. 
Williams,  S.  B.,*  1854. 
Willis,  C.  J. 
Withington,  William  C. 
Whitien,  Charles  V. 
Woodman,  James 
Worthingtun,  Wm.,* 
Wurthington,  Wm.  F.,*'73. 
Wright,  Edmund 
Wright,  Mrs.  Edmund 
Wright,  Otis,* '05.       [223.] 

DOVER. 

Adams,  Adna  J. 
Adams,  John 
Alien,  Jared 
Allen,  Timothy 
L'a  'on,  Aaron 
Bacon,  Mary  S. 
Baldwin,  Frank 
Baker,  .Jabez 
Bardcn,  Calvin 
Battelle,  John 
Baltello,  Mrs.  John 
Batlelle,  John  E. 
B  ittelle,  Mary  D. 
Battelle,  Rachael  A. 
Battelle,  Ralph 


Beatie,  Thomas 
Bigelow,  Calvin 
Bigelow,  Charles  A. 
Bigelow,  Mrs.  Hannah  T. 
Bigelow,  Mrs.  Abraham 
Bigelow,  William  A. 
Bliss,  Linus,*  1872. 
Bliss,  Mrs.  Linus 
Broolibank,  Miss  Bella 
Chickering,  Daniel 
Chickering,  George  E. 
Chickermg,  Otis 
Chickering,  Samuel 
Cleveland,  William 
Dunn,  Theodore 
Everett,  George  D. 
Everett,  Mrs.  Martha  A. 
Everett,  JMiss  Martha  E. 
Everett,  Miss  Sarah  E. 
Fearing,  Perez  L, 
Gannett,  William  W. 
Gay,  Francis  G. 
Goulding,  H.  Emeline 
Goulding,  Henry 
Goulding,  Henry  E. 
Lyman,  Miss  Frances  L. 
Mann,  Mrs.  Adeline  B. 
Mann,  Daniel,*  1859. 
Mann,  Daniel  F. 
Mann,  Elbridge  L. 
Maun,  lloUis 
Mann,  S.  J.  B. 
Marden,  Mrs.  Mary 
McGill,  Thomas 
McNaniara,  Patrick 
Newell,  Benjainia 
Newell,  Mrs.  Benjamin 
Newell.  Miss  Betsey  E, 
Newell,  Jesse 
Newell,  Josiah  B. 
Otis,  E.  B. 
Perry,  Elijah 
Perry,  Mrs.  Mehitable 
Richards,  Calvin,*  1873. 
Richards,  Mrs.  Calvin 
Richards,  Jennie  A. 
Richards,  Lucy  M. 
Richards,  Luther 
Rogers,  \Vilbor  J. 
Sanger,  Ralph,  *18G0. 
Sawin,  Beniijmin  N. 
Sawin,  Frank  W. 
Sawin,  Mary  A. 
Sawin,  .Mary  J. 
Shumway,  Amos  W. 
Shuniway,  Amos  W.,  Jr. 
Shumway,  Hannah 
Shuniway,  Johu  W^. 
Shumway,  Sarah  G. 
Sias,  Samuel 
Smith,  Abner  L. 
Smith,  Charles  H. 
Smith,  Mary  W. 
Sullivan,  Daniel 
Ti-sdale,  William 
Upham,  Martha  F. 
Upham,  Walter  W. 
Wall,  Patrick 
Wilson,  Ephraim 
Wilson,  Mrs.  Ephraim 
Wilson,  E.  Henry 
Wilson,  Miss  N.  D.      [87.] 

FOXBOROUGH. 

Aldrich,  H.  D.,  *185L 
BeJcher,  Lewis  ^V. 
Burr,  Simeon 


Capen,  James 
Carpenter,  Daniels 
Carpenter,  Erastus  P, 
Carpenter,  James  E. 
Carpenter,  Oliver 
Cary,  Otis 
Cobb.  Elias  G. 
Cook,  William  T. 
Dickerman,  Lemuel 
Dixon, Sarah  O. 
Fisher,  Albert 
Foster,  James  W. 
Gay,  Lewis  E. 
Guild,  Freedom,*  1862. 
Hersey,  David 
Hodges,  x\llre<l 
Kerr,  Robert  W.,*  1867. 
Kingsburv,  Joseph 
Leonard,  Mrs.  E.  S. 
Leonard,  Samuel  B.,*  1866. 
Leonard,  James  F. 
Leonard,  Sauford 
Merrick,  John  M.,*  1871. 
Pettee,  Davil 
Pittee,  Joseph  G. 
Pettee,  Simeon  E. 
Shepard,  J.  M.,*  1866. 
Sherman,  Job 
Smith,  Silas 
Shaw,  David 
Sumner,  Mrs.  A.  M. 
Sumner,  Charles  C. 
Torrey,  Martin,*  1861. 
Williams,  Francis  D. 
Wymau,  David.  [38.] 

FRANKLIN. 

Adams,  Albert,*  1869.- 
Adams,  Peter 
Adams,  Ward,*  18l'5. 
Alby,  R. 

Atwood,  Mrs.  Ruth,*  1862. 
Atwood,  Shadrach 
Baker,  David  J?. 
Bullard,  Piam,*  1865. 
Chapman,  Elisha  P. 
Daniels,  Albeit  E. 
Daniels,  Charles  F. 
Daniels,  Mrs.  Charles  F. 
DeWitt,  Archibald,*  18o9. 
DeWitt,  Mrs.  Mary  A.,*'65. 
Fisher,  Herman  C. 
Fisher,  Maxcy,*  18G5. 
Green,  Henry  M. 
Green,  Martin,* 
Harding,  Lewis,* 
Hills,  Theron  C.,*  1862. 
Jones,  Hiram  W. 
Jones,  Alice  J. 
Jones,  1.  L. 
Jones,  Lucy 
Kuai:p,  Allied 
Metcalf,  Altred  G. 
Metcalf,  Alfred  H. 
Metcalf,  Erastus  L. 
Metcalf,  Erasmus  B. 
JMetcaU,  Whiting,*  1869. 
Metcalf,  William,*  1872. 
Miller,  John,  W. 
Miller,  Phillip  W.,*  1860. 
Morse,  George  W. 
Morse,  Joseph 
Nason,  George  W.*  1868. 
Pond,  Henry  E, 
Ray,  Francis  B. 
Ray,  Mrs.  Francis  B. 
Ray, Joseph  G. 


55 


Kay,  James  P. 
Uiclianlson,  John  \V. 
Richauison,  Stepheu  W, 
Kockwood,  E.,*  18m. 
llockwood.  Natliaa 
Sersieant,  A.D. 
Thayer,  Davis,  Jr. 
WaiJsworth,  George  !M. 
Wadsworth,  Joseph  II. 
Wales,  Otis,  Jr. 
Whitiug,  Joseph 
Whiting,  Joseph  M. 
Whiting,  Wm.  E.        [j:5.] 

HOLBROOK. 

nolbrook,  Caleb  S. 
ilolbrook,  Elisha  S.*  1S72. 
[■^•] 

IIYUE  Px\RK. 

Adams,  Henry  C. 
Adams,  C.  Henry 
Adams,  Henry  S. 
Aldrich,  E.  C. 
Allen,  Zenas 
Blake,  Alpheus  P. 
Blciikie,  Robert 
Blazo,  \V.  A. 
Bissett,  Henry  F. 
Beaiey,  John 
Bonney,  William  A. 
Bradbury,  C.  C. 
Bradbury.  W.  C. 
Brainard,  Amos  H. 
Bragg,  William  M. 
Bryant,  H.  J. 
■3ullard,  William 
Coleman,  E.  J. 
Clarke,  T.  Emory 
Conuor,  Barney 
Crane,  Nathaniel 
Darling,  Henry  A. 
Dolau,  Thomas 
Davis,  Enoch  P. 
Davis,  David  L. 
Dow,  J.  E. 
Downing,  Alfred 
Downing,  iMrs.  Alfred 
Downing,  .James 
Kaston,  F.  A. 
Ellis,  Charles,*  187-2. 
Evans,  Thomas  C. 
Everett,  W.  S. 
Farnsworth,  C.  L. 
Farrington,  John  B. 
Fiske,  H.  C. 
Uorrv,  Charles  F. 
Getchell,  R.  C. 
Gilson,  John 
Gilson,  Violettie  L. 
Gould,  John  I'..,*  1870. 
Grew,  Henry 
ilaniblm,  J.  G. 
Hamblin,  R.  W. 
Hardy,  B.  H. 
Haskell,  B.  B. 
Hebard, Nathaniel 
Horton,  E.  G. 
Ireland,  John 
Ireland,  Mrs.  John 
Kendrick,  Henry  C. 
Lawson,  J.  D. 
Leach,  B.  F. 
Leach,  .Mrs.  L.  A. 
Lougei^  R.  W. 


McAvoy,  J.  n. 
Maconibrr,  E.  II. 
Moseley.  R.  P. 
aioseley.  T.  W.  H. 
Norris,  R.  N. 
Nott,  Gordon  H. 
Nott,  Roxtinua 
Nott.  I>.  B. 
Nott,  Margaret 
Nott,  Maggie  G. 
Noyes,  George  W. 
O'Co mell.  Daniel 
Patterson,  .James 
Parrott,  tieorge  B. 
Pratt,  James 
Perkins,  E.  G. 
I'ark,  Wisiier 
Pierce,  C.  H. 
Pioice,  George 
Plunimer,  R.  B. 
Putman,  Sydney 
Radlord,  B.  F. 
Ranlet,  D.  D, 
Ravues,  J.  J. 
RaVnes,  Mrs.  E.  H. 
Ri("h,  D.B. 
Rich,  Ilenrv  A. 
Russell,  A.'L. 
Sluing,  Charles 
Sprague,  R.  T. 
Sliarrock,  George 
Stark,  C.  C. 
Stevens,  J.  N. 
Stuart,  William  J. 
Stuart,  Mrs.  W.  J.,*  1873. 
I  Sherman,  George  E. 
San  ford,  O.  S. 
Sumner,  Clarissa,*  18G9. 
Straw.  L.  H. 
Sw.an.  B. 
Swift,  Thomas  P. 
Thacher,  William  T. 
Thacher,  Mrs.  W.  T. 
Thaine,  T.  G. 
Thaine,  Mrs.  J.  W. 
Thompson,  B.  F. 
Tower,  Isaac  N. 
Turner,  C.  R. 
Turner,  R.  W, 
Twitchell,  John  M. 
Vose,.John 
Vose,  .Mrs.  John 
Vose,  B.  C. 
Vose,  Mrs.  B.  C. 
Weeman,  W.  E. 
Wright,  Richard 
Whittier,  A.  R. 
Williams,  J.  1). 
Williams,  John  M. 
Williams,  Rinaldo 
Williams,  Mrs.  Rinaldo 
Willis,  John  M. 
Whitchcr,  M.  L. 
White,  Charles  A.,  Jr. 
White,  E.  P.  [119.3 

MEDFIELD. 

Abell,  Wm.  F. 
Abell,  Mrs.  Wm.  F, 
Adams,  George  F. 
Allen,  Mrs.  Harriet  B. 
Allen,  Noah 
Allen,  William  C. 
Baker,  Josepli  H. 
Baker,  Mrs.  Joseph  H. 
Balch,  Albert  15. 
Battelle,  Ralph  A. 


Barnev,  Thomas  L. 
Barney,  .Mis.  Thomas  L. 
Bigfhiw,  .\ndrew 
Btillard,  John  K. 
Carson,  Jo.-eph 
Ciiouery,  William 
Cheney,  Nathaniel  II. 
Cheney,  Seth 
Crane,  George 
Curtis,  Daniel  D. 
Curtis,  Mrs.  Dauiel  D. 
Curtis,  Irving 
Cushman,  Jacob  R. 
Cushman,  Mrs.  Jacob  R. 
Davis,  George 
Davis,  Mrs.  George 
Ellis,  Caleb 
Ellis,  Francis  D. 
Ellis,  George  W. 
Ellis,  John 
Ellis,  Samuel 
Everett,  Edmund  T. 
Everett,  E.  T. 
Fishtr,  Hinsdale,*  18G9. 
Fisher,  Mrs.  Mary  L. 
Fisher,  Mary  E. 
Fisher,  Sarah  II. 
Fisher,  Wm.  Quincy 
Fiske,  George 
Fiske,  Isaac 
Fiske,  Mrs.  Isaac 
Frost,  Phineas,  Jr. 
Hamant,  Miss  Alice  E. 
Haniant,  .Mrs.  N.  Anna 
Hamant,  .Miss  Abby 
Hamant,  Mrs,  Eliza  M.  C. 
Hamant,  Caleb  S.*  1873. 
Hamant,  Charles 
Hamant,  Mrs.  Charles 
Hamant,  Uaniels,  Ji . 
Hamant,  Daniel  D. 
Harding,  Alfred 
Harding,  Natluin 
Hartshorn,  Joseph,*  IS6G. 
Hartshorn,  Warren 
Hewins,  William  P. 
Hewins,  Mrs,  William  P, 
Janes,  Walter,*  18G7. 
Jones,  John  P. 
Morse,  Eliakiui,*  1872. 
Morse,  Joel 
Morse,  Miss  Lucy 
Parker,  .\lonzo  B. 
Parker,  Mrs.  A.  B. 
Partridge,  Mrs.  E.  A. 
Partridge,  Henry,  Jr. 
Richardson,  Simeon 
Roberts,  -Mrs.  Helen  M. 
Roberts,  Robert,*  1872. 
Ross,  .John 
Salisbury,  Wm,*  IS.'i7. 
Sanborn,  Edward  M. 
Sanborn,  W. 
Sewall,  Charles  C. 
Sewall, -Mrs.  CC*  1872. 
Sewall,  Edward  U, 
Sewall,  .Miss  Elizabeth  S. 
Sluimway,  Benjamin  F, 
Smith,  George  Al. 
Stednian,  Cyrus,*  ISG5. 
Thayer,  Elijah 
Thayer,  .Mrs.  Elijah 
Turner,  John  A.,*  18G1. 
Turner,  J.  Addison 
Wetherell,  Halus  W. 
Wheeler,  Emory 
Willanl.  Gibson  [8G] 


5Q 


MEDWAY. 

Adams,  Edward 
Adams,  Elisha 
Adanis,  Lyman 
Adams,  VVyman 
Barber,  George,*  1851. 
Barber,  Thomas 
Boyd,  William  B. 
Bullard,  John,  Jr. 
Cary,  Gilmau 
Carey,  William  H. 
Chase,  Leander  A. 
Clark,  James  P.,*  1865. 
Clark,  James  W. 
Clark,  .Mrs.  James  W. 
Clark,  Maria  F. 
Clark,  Wdlard  P. 
Crosby,  George,*  1860. 
Daniols.  James  Willard 
UanleU,  Paul 
Dauiels,  Mrs.  Paul 
Daniels,  William 
Ellis,  James  H. 
Fisher,  Miltou  M. 
Fuller,  Asa  M.  B. 
Harding,  Theodore 
Henderson,  William 
Hurd,  Julius  C. 
Ide, Jacob 
Kingsbury,  Gilbert 
Lovell,  Asahei  P. 
Lovell,  Zachariah 
Lovering,  Warren 
INIann,  James 
Mason.  Horatio,*  1868. 
Mason,  Miss  Matilda  G. 
Metcalf,  Liuther 
Morse,  Asa  D. 
Partridge,  Clark. 
Partridge,  George 
Kichardson,  Elisha  P. 
Kichardson,  Jeremiah  D. 
Kichardson,  Joseph  L. 
Kichardson,  Moses 
Kichardson,  Richard 
Slocumb,  C.,*  1861. 
Stevens,  Daniel  G. 
Walker,  Johns.,*  1871. 
Walker,  Timothy 
Wheeler,  Abiiali  R.     [48j 

MILTON. 

Adams,  Edward  H. 
Adams,  John 
Adams,  Samuel 
Aniory,  Francis 
Arnold,  John,  Jr.* 
Babcock,  Josiah,*  1863. 
Babcock,  Lemuel  W. 
Babcock,  Samuel 
Baldwin,  Edward 
Beal,  Jonathan 
Beck,  Gideon 
Blanchard,  J.  W. 
Bradlee,  John  L>. 
Br.idlee,  J.  W. 
Bradlee,  Miss  W.  A. 
Breck,  Charles 
Breck,  Charles  E.  C. 
Bronsdon,  Charles 
Bronsilon,  Lewis 
Brooks,  John  W. 
Bunton,  Jesse 
Burt,  John 
Burt,  Sumner 
Busli,  James  P. 


Chase,  Leander  A. 
Churchill,  Jos.  McKean 
Chapman,  R.  L. 
Clapp,  G.  W. 
Claik,  Thomas 
Cook,  Charles  W. 
Cook,  Samuel 
Cook,  W.  T. 
Copeland,  Charles  L. 
Copeland,  Lewis 
Cornell,  Walter 
Crehore,  John  A. 
Crowd,  George 
Cunningham,  C.  Loring 
Cunningliam,  Francis,*  '67 
Cunningham,  John  A. 
Curtis,  Daniel  T. 
Davenport,  Edwin 
Davenport,  Mrs.  Ellen  M. 
Davenport.  F.  G. 
Davenport,  Miss  H.  G. 
Davenport,  Lewis 
Davenport,  Lyman 
Davenport,  Nathaniel  T. 
Davis,  William  H. 
Dow,  John  R. 
Dudley,  Benjamin  F. 
Elkins,  D.  H. 
Emerson,  Joshua 
Everett,  George 
Farriugton,  Henry  J. 
Faulkner,  James 
Fenno,  Rul'usP. 
Ferry,  George  S. 
Ferry,  William  M. 
Forbes,  John  M. 
Forbes,  Robert  Bennett 
Forbes,  R.  B.,  Jr. 
Foster,  William  H. 
Foster,  William  L. 

Gannett,  George  K. 

Gannett,  Samuel 

Garrett,  George  E. 

Greene,  George  W. 

Hall,  George  W. 

Harvey,  William 

Higgins,  David 

Hinckley,  Thomas  H. 

Hobson,  A.  R. 

Hobson,  Miss  Martha  J. 

Hollingsworth,  Z. 

Hollis,  Thomas,*  1873. 

Holmes,  C.  C. 

Holmes,  Mrs.Abraham,Jr. 

Hougliton,  Geo.  D. 

Houghton,  E.  W.* 

Houghton,  Mrs.  E.W. 

Houghton,  Jason  W.,*  '67. 

Houghton,  Jason 

Hunt,  Charles  E. 

Hunt,  Charles  L. 

Hunt,  George 

Hunt,  William  M. 

Kendall,  J.  B. 

Kent,  George  W. 

Kidder,  Henry  P. 

Kinsman,  Adolphus 

Lothrop,  T.  K. 

Merriam,  Mrs.  Charles  H. 

Morton,  E.  VV. 

Myers,  John 

Parker,  C.  H. 

Peabody,  Oliver  W. 

Pierce,  Dean 

Pierce,  Edward  L. 

Pope,  Ebenezer,*  1853. 

Raymond,  George 

Richards,  Reuben  A. 


Robbins,  James  M. 
Rodgers.O.  T.,*1859. 
Rogers,  H.,  Jr.,*  1855. 
Rotch,  Benjamin  S. 
Rowe,  Joseph,*  1856. 
Ruggles,  E.  T. 
Ruggles,  Philemon 
Russell,  Henry  S. 
Saflord,  N.  F. 
Senter,  L.  W. 
Sias,  Eliphalet 
Sias,  .John 

Sigourney,  Henry  H.  W. 
Slone,  Cliarles,*  1851). 
Stevens,  F.  H. 
Sumner,  R.  W. 
Teele,  Albert  K. 
Teele,  Mrs.  A.  K. 
Thayer,  Jason 
Thayer,  James  B, 
Thompson,  George,*  1858. 
Todd,  Robert  M. 
Townc,  A.  .J. 
Tucker,  David  W. 
Tucker,  Elijah 
Tucker,  Mrs.  Elijah 
Tucker,  Stillnian  L. 
Tucker,  Timothy.*  1804. 
Twombly,  Josiah  F. 
Vose,  Francis  E. 
Vose,  George 
Vose,  Mrs.  George 
Vose,  Henry 
Vose,  Miss  Lizzie  W. 
Vose,  Joshua  VV . 
Watson,  Itobert  S. 
Walker,  J.  K. 
Webb,  Josiah 
Webster,  Joseph  R. 
West,  Henry 
White,  Benjamin 
White,  Franklin  B. 
White,  James  P. 
White,  John  E. 
Wolcott,  J.  Huntington 

[147] 

NEEDHAM. 

Aldeu,  Otis 
Avery,  Jonathan 
Ayling,  Isaac 
Beless,  Thomas 
Bemis,  Mrs.  S.  S. 
Bowers,  Henry 
Blackman  Henry, 
Blackman,  Augustus 
Buck,  Charles 
Buck,  Mrs.  F.  P.  H.*  1855. 
Buck,  Miss  Mary  M. 
Bullen,  Ichabod,*  185S. 
Clark,  Joseph  P. 
Cooper,  Samuel 
Daniell,  George  K. 
Darling.  George  F. 
Dewing,  Charles  H. 
Dewing,  Warren 
Eaton,  George  E. 
Eayrs,  William  C. 
Emmons,  Chas.  P.,*  1867. 
Flagg,  Solomon 
Flagg,  Wm.,*  ISGl. 
Gardner,  Elbridge 
Goss,  Daniel  J. 
Gray,  James 
Harmon,  Charles  H. 
Harmon,  Cyrus 
Harris,  Jolin,*  1858. 


57 


Harris,  John  M.  , 

Harvev,  Stephen  F. 
Holluiul,  John 
Hollis,  Elishii  P. 
Howe,  Albion  K. 
Howe,  Mrs.  Eliza  M. 
Howland,  George 
Hubbanl.  G.  G.,*  I«56. 
Hunnewell,  H.  Hollis 
Hunting,  Israel 
Kiniljall,  Benjamin  G.*  '73. 
Kimball,  Mrs.  Betsev  G. 
Kimball,  Daniel,*  mi. 
King'^bury,  J.  M. 
King^buiy,  Lemuel 
Kiiigsburv,  Lauren 
Kingsbury  ,Thos.,*  18.i9. 
Kingsbury,  William  A. 
^napp,  A.  P. 
Lombard,  R.  T, 
Longfellow,  George  J, 
Longlellow,  Mary  L. 
Longfellow,  Nathan 
Longlellow,  Mrs.  Nathan 
Longlellow,  \V.  E.,*  ,73. 
Low,  George  \V. 
Lyon,  iMro.  Julia  A. 
Lyon,  Edward 
Lyon,  William 
Manslield,  Charles  H. 
Mansfielil,  John 
Mansfleld,  Robert 
Manslield,  Mrs.  Robert 
Manslield,  William 
McCrackin,  John 
McCrackin,  Robert 
Mcintosh,  Charles 
Mcintosh,  Curtis 
Mcintosh,  Mrs.  F.  E. 
Mcluiosh,  Mrs.  H.  P. 
Mcintosh,  James 
BJcIntosh,  Mrs.  Mary  0. 
Mills,  John 
Mills.  Matthias 
Morton,  Otis,  Jr. 
Morton,  W.T.  G.*  1868. 
Kewell,  Artemas,*  1871. 
Newell,  Mrs.  Martha  S. 
Noyes,  Josiah,*  1871. 
I'eabody,  Ezekiel 
Phillips',  Freeman 
Pierce,  William 
Pierce,  William,  Jr. 
Pierce,  Mrs.  Harriet 
Revere.  George 
Richardson,  Geo. 
Robinson,  Henry 
Sawyer,  John 
Sawyer,  Otis,*  IS.'i.'i. 
Scudder,  Marshal  S. 
Seagrave,  Saul  S. 
Shaw,  George  W.,*  1852. 
Shaw,  John  W. 
Snelling.  X.athaniel  G. 
Spring,  Charles  H. 
Stedinan,  Francis 
Stedman,  Mrs.  F.  F. 
Stcdman,  William  M. 
Stevens,  A.  F. 
Stone,  David 
Stone,  Henry  L. 
Sumner,  Lewis 
Sumner,  .Samuel  B. 
Tucker,  E.  il. 
Turner,  John,*  1872. 
Turner,  Mrs.  John 
Upham,  Cyrus  G. 
Upham,  Mrs.  C.  G. 


Upham,  Mrs.  C.  G. 
Hare,  Dexter,*  1851. 
Ware,  Reuben 
Ware,  Althea 
Ware,  Rnel 
Ware,  William  S. 
Washburne.  G.  W. 
Webber,  Aaron  D. 
Welles,  John 
Whittaker.  Edgar  K. 
White,  George 
Wilder,  C.  T. 
Williams,  Silas  G. 
Wood,  Henry 
Wright,  Lewis  [124.1 

NORFOLK. 

Daniels,  Adams 
Fisher,  Walter  11. 
Fisher,  Mrs.  W.  H. 
Fisher,  Walter  M. 
Ford,  James  T. 
Pond,  Lucas 
Pond,  Mrs.  Lucas 
Robinson,  Joel  H. 
Scott,  Saul  B. 
Trowbridge,  Henry      [10] 

NORWOOD. 

Baker,  Joel  M. 
Boyden,  Miss  Emma  F. 
Day, Joseph 
Day,  Lewis 
Ellis,  M.  1. 
Everett,  George 
Fisher,  James  R. 
Fogg,  David  S. 
Hartshorn,  Caleb  W. 
Haitshorn,  Richard  D. 
Hoyle,  Mark  C. 
Metcalf,  George  E. 
Morse,  Albert 
Morse,  Curtis  G. 
Morse,  John,*  1861. 
Morse,  John  L.,*186t. 
Morse,  Onis 
Morse,  Sidney  E. 
Smith,  Lyman 
Talbot,  Josiah  W. 
Thompson,  Robert,*  1854. 
White,  N.B. 
Winslow,  Alfred  N. 
Winslow,  George  [24J 

QUINCY. 

Adams,  Charles  Francis 
Adams,  John  Q. 
Adams,  Ebenezer 
Bartlett,  Ibrahim,*  18.53, 
Bass,  Josiah 
Bass,  Lewis 
Baxter,  Daniel 
Baxter,  Elijah 
Baxter,  Mrs.  Elijah 
Baxter,  Mrs.  George 
Baxter,  George  L. 
Beale,  George  W..*  1851. 
Beals,  Nathaniel  H. 
Billings,  Lemuel 
Bracket! ,  Lemuel 
Brigham,  Josiah,*  1867. 
Carr,  John  J..*  1865. 
Curtis,  Noah,*  18.56. 
Eaton,  Jacob  F.,*  1871. 
Emmous,  Nathaniel  H. 


Fellows,  Ensign  S. 
Frederick,  Elciizer 
French,  Washington  M. 
Gallowav,  James 
Glover.  H.N.,*  186.3. 
Green,  John  A.,*  1861. 
Greenleaf,  Daniel 
Greenleaf,  Thomas,*  1854. 
Howland,  Charles  A. 
llorton,  Lloyd  G. 
Marsh,  Charles 
Marsh,  Mrs.  Henrietta 
Miller,  Charles  E. 
Morton,   William   S.*  1871. 
Munroc,  Israel  W. 
Newcomb,  .James 
Newcomb,  John  B. 
Quincy,  Josiah,*  1864. 
Quincy,  Josiah  P. 
Itichards,  L.,*  1852. 
Robertson,  Joseph  W. 
Rogers,  Clilt 
Savil,  John 

Southworth,  C.  A.,*  1871. 
Spear,  Charles  A.,*  1868. 
Stetson,  James  A. 
Thayer,  G.  F.,*  1864. 
Torrey,  William 
Turner,  Eilward 
Walker,  William 
White,  Nathaniel,*  1867. 
Willard,  Solomon,*  1861. 
Williams,  Francis         [53] 

RANDOLPH. 

Alden,  Eljenezer 
Alden,  Horatio  B, 
Belcher,  Allen  A.. 
Belcher,  J.  White 
Buck,  Nathan,*  1853. 
Burrill,  David 
Cordley,  Christopher  M.* 
Cushuig,  Abner  L. 
Jordan,  John  T.,*  1865. 
Leeds,  Jo.seph,*  1858. 
Maguire,  James 
Maguire,  James  F. 
Mann,  Ephraira,*  1863. 
Mann,  Seth,  2d 
Niles,  Jacob.*  1871. 
Porter,  William 
Snow,  Zenas,*  1857. 
Stevens,  Richard 
Tileston,  G.  H. 
Tower,  Isa.ic,*  18(i5. 
Turner,  Royal  W. 
Turner,  Seth 
Wales,  .\pollo8 
Wales,  Ephraim.*  1855. 
Wales,  John,  2d 
Wales,  .Jonathan,*  1863. 
Whitcomb,  Alfred  W. 
White.  Adoniram 
W  hite,  Jairus 
White,  Jonathan,  [30] 

ROXBURY. 

Adams,  Thomas,*  1869. 
Ames,  Robert  W. 
Andrews,  Alfred  A.,*  1864. 
Appleton,  Charles  T, 
Bacon,  William* 
Bartlett,  Henry,*  1860. 
Blake,  S.  Parkmau 
Bowditch,  Azell 
Bowditcb,  Azell  C. 


58 


Bray,  Charles  F. 
Brigham,  Joseph  L. 
Brown,  Audiew  J. 
Bryant,  Charles  H. 
Bnffonl,  John  II. 
Chadwick,  Joseph  H. 
Chandler,  John  G. 
Clarke,  John  J. 
Codnian,  Henrv,*  IS.'iS, 
Copelaud,  B.  F.,*  1803. 
Copelaud,  Chas.,*  1853. 
Cotting,  Benjamin  E. 
Crawshaw,  Joseph 
Crosby,  Benjamin  H. 
Davis,  Gilman 
Dearborn,  H.  A.  S.,*  1851. 
Kllis,  Charles,*  1800. 
Ellis,  Charles  M. 
Enstis,  William 
Fisher  Warren 
Fiske,  <ieorye  A. 
Ford,  Seth  H.,*  1863. 
Francis,  Eben'r.,*  185?. 
French,  Jonathan 
French,  Mrs.  J. 
Fuller,  H.  Weld 
Fussell,  John 
Gardner,  Francis 
Gray,  Henry  D. 
Guilil,  Frederick 
Guild,  Henry 
Guild,  James 
Ham,  Joseph 
Harris,  Horatio 
Hayden,  Isaac 
Hendee,  Charles  J, 
Hewes,  John  iSI. 
Hewins,  Whiting,*  185.", 
Ilickling,  Charles 
Holmes,  Richard 
Holmes,  Mrs.  It. 
Huckins,  James,*  1868. 
Huckins,  James  W. 
Huston,  William  R. 
Keene,  James 
Kidder,  Frederic 
King,  William  S. 
Kingsbury,  Wm.  B.,*  1873. 
Kittredge,  Alvah 
Kee,  William  Raymond 
Lemist,  Edwin,*  1872. 
Lewis,  Daniel 
Lewis,  Franklin  H. 
Lewis,  Samuel  S. 
Longfellow,  Fannie  E. . 
Lovewell,  Charles  B. 
Lowell,  John  A. 
Mackintosh,  Samuel 
Mann,  Benjamin 
Matlies,  AlDert  11. 
McBurney,  Charles 
Mcintosh,  William  H. 
Merrill,  John  J. 
Monroe,  George  H, 
Oakley.  Frank  E.,*  1865. 
Paine,  Joseph  P. 
Parker,  Augustus 
Parker,  Geo.  J.,*  1860. 
Parker,  Thomas 
Perry,  Alraon 
Pickering,  Henry  W. 
Pike,  Cliarles  S. 
Putnam,  Allen 
Rich,  Naphthalie  D. 
Rice,  George  \V. 
Ritchie,  James,  1873. 
Robinson,  J.  P.,*  1863. 
Ropes,  Joseph  S. 


Sargent,  Epes 
Shed,  Henry  P. 
Simmons,  D.  A.,*  1859. 
Skinner,  Elias 
Sleeper,  John  S. 
Stevens  Amos 
Stone,  Ebenezer  W. 
Sturgis,  James 
Tappan,  Josiah,  S. 
Thacher,  Thos,  Jr.,*'69. 
Thwing,  Supplv  C. 
Tolnian,  James,*  1868. 
Trescott,  Elijah 
Tucker,  Daniel 
Vinson,  Cornelius  M. 
Walker,  E.C.R. 
Walker,  Samuel,*  1860. 
Ware,  Leonard 
Way,  Samuel  A.,*  1872. 
Weston,  Lycurgus  B.,*  '72. 
Whiting,  Wm.     (Montrose 

avenue,)  *1873. 
Williams,  A.  D.,*  1863. 
Williams,  Aaron  D. 
Williams,  David  W. 
Williams,  Mrs.  D.  W. 
Williams,  Dudley 
Williams,  G  Foster,*  1872. 
Williams  G.  B.,*  1802. 
Williams,  S.,*  18.52. 
Williams,  Thomas  B. 
tVilson,  Granville  W. 
Winslow,  Edward 
Wiswall,  Samuel 
Wolcott,  John  W. 
Worthingtou,  Roland  [120] 

SHARON. 

Baker  P.  Howard 
Baker,  Mrs.  P.H. 
Blackman,  E.  H. 
Bullard,  Benjamin 
Carpenter,  Shepard 
Carpenter,  Mrs.  Shepard 
Clark,  Edwin  R.,*  1808. 
Cobb.  Warren 
Cobb,  Mrs.  Warren 
Cobt),  Miss  Ella  M. 
Cobb,  Lizzie  31. 
Decatur,  Thomas 
Drake,  Asahel  S. 
Drake,  Mrs.  Asahel  S. 
Drake,  Ellis  D. 
Gay,  George  W. 
G.ny,  Mrs.  G.  W. 
Geissler,J.  N. 
Geissler,  Mrs.  J.  X. 
Hewins,  Elijah,*  1857. 
Hewins,  Lemuel  D.,*  1868. 
Howard,  George  F. 
Howard,  Mrs.  G.  F. 
Hixon,  G.  F. 
Hixon,  Mrs.  G.  F. 
Hixon,  Charles  O. 
Hixon,  Mrs.  C.  O. 
Johnson,  Lucas 
Johnson,  Otis 
Lothrop,  Howard  A. 
Mann,  George  R. 
Mann,  Mrs.  George  R. 
Mann,  William  R. 
Mann,  Mrs.  William  R. 
Mann,  MissM.  Ella 
Mann,  Miss  E.  Mary 
Mann,  George  H. 
Morse,  Edward  L. 


Morse,  Miss  E.  G. 
Morse,  Harvey 
Morse,  Leprellette 
Morse,  Lewis  W. 
Morse,  Mrs.  Lewis  W. 
Park,  George  C. 
Pettee,D.  Webster 
Pettee,  Mrs.  D.  W. 
Randall,  Macey,  Jr. 
Sanger,  John  M. 
Smith,  Lewis 
Talbot,  Solomon 
Turner,  (.alvin 
Turner,  Julia  C. 
Warren,  Charles  H. 
Weld,  H.  O. 
Wicks,  Mrs.  A.  L. 
Wicks,  Miss  Mary  L. 
Wicks,  William  B. 
Winship,  Charles 
Winship,  Mrs.  Charles 
Winship,  Miss  Elmira  S. 
[001 


STOUGHTON. 


Anderson,  E.  S. 
Atherton,  James 
Atherton,  William 
Belcher,  Luther  J. 
Belcher,  Orin 
Belcher,  Wm.  S.,*  18G2. 
Bird,  Henry 
Capen,  Samuel 
Clapp,  Lucius 
Clapp,  Mrs.  l^ucius 
Clark,  Chester 
Curtis,  Snmuel  W. 
Drake,  Albert  H. 
Drake,  Jonathan  S. 
Drake,  Phillip  H. 
Ellis,  J.  Frecmau 
Gay,  Cyrus  H. 
Gay,  Hiram 
Gay,  John  M. 
Gay,  Lemuel,*  1866. 
Gay,  Mace 
Gay,  Nathaniel 
Goldthwait,  Daniel  A. 
Hawes,  Emery 
Hill,  James 

Hodges,  Leonard,*  1870. 
Hodges,  Samuel  W. 
Hodges,  Mrs.  S.  W. 
Ingham,  James 
Jones,  Henry 
Kiriiball,  Henry  C. 
Littlelield,  Charles 
Monk,  Elisha  C. 
Paul,  Samuel 
Porter,  Luther 
Porter,  Robert 
Porter,  Robert,  Jr. 
Porter,  Uriah  C. 
Porter,  Theron  M. 
Porter,  John  M. 
Southworth,  Amasa,*  1872. 
Southworth,  Asahel 
Sumner,  Francis  C. 
Swan,  Elisha 
Talbot,  George 
Talbot,  Newton 
Thayer,  S.  Lysander 
Tucker,  Wales 
Wales,  Nathaniel 
Warren,  N.  M.  [501 


69 


V\%VLPOLE. 

Allen,  Jeremiah 
Allen,  Lewis 
Biicon,  H.  E. 
Bacon,  Samuel  \V.,*  'U9. 
IJacon,  William,*  ISt^i. 
IJinl,  Charles 
IJinl,  Francis  W. 
Boyden,  Horatio 
Cheney,  Joseph 
Clai;,Eiimun.l  \V. 
Clap,  (jieorge  K. 
Clap,  Samuel  U.,*  1870. 
Clap,  Warren 
Clarke,  Mrs.  Betsey  M. 
Clarke,  Henry  S. 
Clarke.  Mrs.  H.  S. 
Clarke,  Xruemau 
Cunanc,  George 
Cram,  Jerome  B. 
£llis,  Isaac 
Ellis,  James 
Ellis,  Joseph,*  Ifol, 
Fuller,  James  K. 
Gilbert,  Sanjuel 
Gould,  John  A.,*  181>1. 
Gray,  II.  Fannie 
Gray,  smith,  *18G9. 
Gray,  Mrs.  Smith 
Gray,  William  H. 
Grover,  Sarah  B. 
Guild,  Charles 
Hartshorn,  Charles 
Hartshorn,  Georjce 
Haxves,  Joseph,*  1849. 
Hyde,  George  B. 
Lewis,  Willard 
Mann,  John 
.Mann,  Lowell 
Xeal,  Benjamin 
Page,  William  A. 
I'ierce,  Shadrach  S. 
riimpton,  C.  G.,*  lSU-1. 
I'limpton,  H.  M. 
I'olley,  Edmund 
Friest,  Mrs.  Leon  A. 
Scott,  James  G. 
Shepard,  E. 
'inith,  John  N. 

mith,  -Mrs.  John  X. 

.nith,  .Metcall 

:one,  Elicnezer,*  18(J'J. 

nompsoii,  Edwin 

■  ilmarth.  Ada  E. 

t'ilmarth,  N'aaman  B. 
IVilmarth,  Elizabeth  F. 
Wilson  Edwin 
Wilson,  Mrs.  Edwin,   [57.] 

WEST  ROXBUUY. 

Allen,  Stephen  M. 
Andrews,  Edward  R. 
Andrews,  Mrs.  E.  U. 
Arnold  Joseph 
Austin,  Arthur  W. 
Austin,  Miss  Florence 
Austin,  William  Percy 
Bacon,  Daniel  C.,*  1850. 
Bacon,  Francis  E.  ' 

Bacon,  William  B. 
Bailey,  Luther  C. 
Balch,  George  H. 
Balch,  Joseph,*  1*19. 
Balch,  Joseph  W. 
Banlleld,  Everett  C. 
Barter.  A.  D. 


Bartlett,  Alden 
Bartlett,  Mrs.  Alden 
Beckwith,  Henry 
Billings,  Joseph  H. 
Billings,  Mrs.  Joseph  H. 
Billings,  Miss  Jennie 
Billings,  Miss  .Mary 
Blake,  John  J. 
Blake,  William 
lilackman,  George 
Bliss,  George  X. 
I'liss,  Mrs.  Lucius  S. 
Bolles,  Maltnew 
Bond,  George  William 
Bowditch,  J.  Ingeraoll 
Bradford,  S.  I).,*  1805. 
Bradish,  Levi  J. 
Brewer,  Charles 
Brewer,  Otis 
Brown,  .\lfreil  S. 
Brown,  Benjamin 
Brown.  Uaniel  A. 
Browne,  Horace  E. 
Brown,  W.  T. 
Bruce,  X.  T. 
Butters,  J.  A.  C.,*  1850. 
Cabot,  Stephen 
Calder,  Augustus  P. 
Cary,  Isaac  U. 
Cass,  Aaron 
Cass,  Francis  W. 
Cass,  Henry  W. 
Cronin,  Jeremiah 
Crosby,  .\lbert 
Crosby,  Miss  Fannie  H. 
Crosby,  .Miss  Irene  M. 
Crosby,  Miss  Minnie  U. 
Comins,  Linus  B. 
Cowing,  Widter  H. 
Curtis,  Joseph  II. 
Curtis,  George  S. 
Curtis,  Charles  F. 
Dabney,  Chas.  W.  Jr.<*  '71. 
Davis,  Francis,*  1805. 
De.vter,  Anson 
Di.\well,  John  J. 
Drai)er,  Abijali  W. 
Dudley,  Henry  | 
Dudley,  Ephraim  W. 
Eldrid'ge,  Oliver 
Emmons,  John  A. 
Enslin,  William 
Evans,  William 
Farrar,  J.  Hamilton 
Farrington,  Ebenezer  T. 
Gates,  Mrs.  F.  L. 
Gilbert,  Luther 
Gooding,  George 
Gould,  Joseph  D. 
Greenough,  David  S. 
Hall,  Allied  B. 
Hall,  David  P. 
Hall,  Joseph 
Hall,  William  D. 
Harod,  William  F. 
Head,  Charles  I). 
Head,  Francis  (;.,*  1805. 
HeiK'hman,  Xathaniel  H. 
llewins,  Charles  A. 
Hilborn,  S.  C. 
Howe,  Edward  W. 
Howe,  Mrs.  Edward  W. 
Ilowland,  J.  T. 
Hunt,  Harrison  G. 
Knights,  Miss  H. 
Keith,  William,*  ia50. 
Lamb,  Iteuben  A.,*  1858. 
Lawrie,  Andrew  B. 


Low,  John  J. 
Lyman,  .Mrs.  Thomas 
Mackintosh,  Charles  G. 
Mackintosh,  J.  S. 
Manning,  Charles,*  18G9. 
March,  A.  S.,*  185L 
March,  Andrew  S. 
Mcintosh,  William 
McLaren,  Anthony 
Meserve,  Andrew  T. 
Meserve,  Isaac  H. 
Miniit,  George  R. 
Morse,  Charles 
Morse,  Robert  M. 
Motley,  Charles  D. 
Motley,  Thomas 
Motley,  Mrs.  Thomas 
Motley,  Thomas  L. 
North^  George  G. 
Orange,  Thomas 
Page, Joseuh  W. 
Page,  Kilby,*  1869. 
Palmer,  William,*  1800, 
Papineau,  Antome 
Papineau.  Alfred 
Parker,  S.  Winchester 
Parkinson,  John,*  18<i5. 
Pearce,  John 
Popp,  Hieronemas 
Pratt,  John  C. 
Prescott,  Xathan  B. 
Prescott,  Mrs.  X.  B. 
Prichard,  Jeremiah     • 
Prichard,  Vila 
Prichard,  Gilman 
Kichards.  Edward 
Richards,  George  H. 
Richards,  Mrs.  G.  T. 
Richmond,  Thomas  11. 
Robeson,  William  R. 
Rodman,  Samuel  W. 
Russell,  Geo.  R.,*  1806. 
Sampson,  Charles,*  1859. 
Seaverns,  Thomas  W. 
Shaw,  Francis  G. 
Shaw, J. J. 
Shaw.  Quincy  A. 
Slocumb,  William  H. 
Smith,  Alvin,*  1870. 
Smith,  Humphry 
Smith,  Joseph  M.,*  187i. 
Smith,  Lorenzo 
Smith,  Melancthon 
Spaulding,  Solomon  R. 
Spooner,  William  IL,  Jr. 
Stevens,  S.  W. 
Sturgis,  Russell 
Sturtevant,  Benj.  F. 
Swett,  Samuel  W. 
Taft,  Reed 
Taylor,  H.  B.,*  1801. 
Ticknor,  Wm.  D.,*  1861. 
Tilden,  George  A. 
Tolnian,  Ebenezer  W. 
Toliiian,  Lucius  A.,*  1871. 
Towiisend,  David 
Tufts,  James,*  1859. 
Watt,  Uobert 
Watt,  Lizzie 
Walt,  Marion  J. 
Webster,  John  L. 
Weld.  Aaron  D. 
Weld,  Mrs.  A  D.*  1872. 
Weld,  Aaron  D.,  Jr. 
Weld,  Miss  A.  K. 
Weld,  .Miss  Eliza 
Weld,  Francis  M. 
Weld,  J.  Gardner 


60 


Wekl,  Nathaniel 
Weld,  Mrs.  Mary  P. 
Weld,  Richard  H. 
Weld,  Stephen  M.,*  18G7. 
Weld,  Miss  Susan 
Wentworth,  Jacob 
Westcott,  Stephen 
Wheeler,  Warren  R. 
Whitney,  Israel  G. 
Whitney,  Mrs.  I.  G. 
Whitney,  Miss  N.  B. 
Whytal,  Thomas  G. 
Whytal,  Mrs.  Thomas  G. 
AVilliams.B.  P.,  1850. 
Williams,  George  H. 
Williams,  Henry  H. 
Williams,  Moses 
Williams,  Moses  B. 
Williams,  N.D.,*  1852. 
Williams,  Joseph  W. 
Willson,  Edmund  B. 
Winchester,  Parker 
Wing,  B.  F. 
Withcrbee,  John  B. 
Woodman,  George  F. 
Woodward,  Chauncy,*  '72. 
Woodbury,  Joseph  P. 
Worley,  B.  W. 
Young,  Calvin 
York,  John  [•202] 

WEYMOUTH. 

Blanchard,  Nathaniel 


Burrill,  Ansel 

Fifleld,  Noah,*  1867. 
Howe,  Applftton,*  1870. 
Humphrey,  Ebenezer 
Humphrey,  L.,*1857. 
Hunt,  A.  N.,*  1804. 
Hunt,  Elias 
Jones,  James 
Kingsbury,  F.  A.,*  18G0. 
Loud, Joseph 
Loud, John  SV. 
Nash,  Abner  P. 
Nash,  Erastus 
Nash.  Stephen  W. 
Porter,  Thomas  B. 
Richards,  Elias 
Shaw,  Nathaniel,*  1860. 
Tirrcll,  Albert, 
Tirrell,  James,*  1865. 
Tirrell,  VVilson 
White,  James 
White,  Thomas  [23] 


WRENTHAM. 


Aldrich,  Artemas 
Barnard,  Alfred,*  1871. 
Blakes'ey,  Hubbai'd 
Cheever,  Alonzo  W. 
Cheever,  Mrs.  Eliza  R. 
Cheever,  Otis  G.,*  1872. 


Clap,  Harvey  E.,*  1F53. 
Clay,  Nehemiah 
Cowell,  John  F. 
Cowell,  William  W. 
Dupee,  Erastus        t 
Everett,  Melatiah,*  1858. 
Faxon,  Francis  G. 
Fisher,  Calvin,  Jr.,*  1869. 
Fisher,  Hiram  B. 
Fisher,  Silas  P.*  1865. 
Ford,  Peter 
Fuller,  Chauncey  G. 
Grant,  Goorge 
Gassett,  Henry,  Jr. 
Grant,  Robert  P. 
Grant,  Whiting 
Hawes,  Benj.,*  1867. 
Holbrook,  GeorgeE. 
Ide,  Edwin  S. 
Jepson,  William  A. 
Larkin,  Lyman  B. 
Mann,  Howard 
Parker,  Ebeneznr  B. 
Pond,  Handel,*  1867. 
Poud, Jabez  E. 
Proctor,  Thomas 
Sayles,  Caleb  W.,*  1863. 
Starkey,  Gardner  H. 
Stone,  Curtis 
Sturdy,  James  H. 
Ware,  Asa 
White,  James  A. 
Wiggiu,  James  S.  [39] 


MEMBERS  RESIDING  OUT  CF  THE  COUNTY. 


Allen,  George  E.,  Newton, 
Allen,  Joseph  A.,  Newton. 
Allen,  Nathaniel  T.,  Newton. 
Balch,  Wesley  P.,  Boston. 
Beckler,  Daniel  \V. 
Callender,  Benjamin,  Boston. 
Collins,  James  H.,  Cambridge. 
Copeland,  R.  McCleary,  Boston. 
Dennie,  Edward  M.,  Boston. 
De  Reynoso,  Bernard. 
Donahoe,  Patrick,  Boston. 
Edmands,  J.  Wiley,  Newton. 
Ellis,  David,  Cambridge. 
Garbett,  William  A.,  Boston. 
Goddard,  Thomas,  Boston. 
Gould,  James,  Boston. 
Gould,  George,  Newton. 
Hapgood,  Lyman  S.,  Boston. 
Hollis,  John  W.,  Newton. 
Inches,  Martin  B.,  Boston. 


Lawrence,  Mrs.  James,  Boston. 
Loring,  A.  K.  Boston. 
Matthews,  Nathan,  Boston. 
Messenger,  G.  W.,  Bo.ston,*  1871. 
Minot,  George  H.,  Boston. 
Norton,  R.  R.,  Boston. 
Parmenter,  Joshua,  Natick. 
Potter,  Silas,  Boston. 
Quinu,  John,  Boston. 
Rand.  Edward  S.,  Boston. 
Rogers,  J.  A.,  Boston. 
Boswell,  Mary  Ann,  Boston. 
Slade,  Robert,  Boston. 
Smith,  George  W.,  Boston,*  1864. 
Stearne,  John,  Newton. 
Tappau,  Lewis  W.,  Boston, 
Vinal,  Otis,  Boston. 
Wainwright,  H.  C,  Boston, 
Wells,  B.  T.,  Boston. 
Wheeler,  Lewis,  Cambridge. 


140.] 


Members  admitted, 
Members  deceased, 


2111. 
370. 


LIST  OF  PREMIUMS, 


Rules  and  Regulations  and  List  of  Committees, 


Norfolk  Agricultural  Society 


TWEMY-SIXTU  ANMAL    EXHIBITION, 


TO  BE  HOLDEN  AT 


READYILLE, 

THURSDAY  AND    FRIDAY,  Sept.  24th  and  25th,  1874. 


HYDE   PAIIK: 
PRINTED  AT  THE  GAZETTE  OFFICE. 

1874- 


J^^-The  Trustees  invite  the  Agriculturists,  Mechanics, 
Manufacturers,  Horticulturists,  and  Ladies  of  the  County,  to 
join  their  endeavors  to  render  the  Exhibition  worthy  of  the 
patronage  of  the  Commonwealth,  and  creditable  to  them- 
selves. 


OFFICERS  OF  THE  SOCIETY, 

1873-7-4. 


Fresident. 

HENRY  S.  RUSSELL, Milton. 

Honorary  President. 

Hon.  MARSHALL  P.  WILDER Dorchester. 

Vice-rrfisulotts. 

Hox.  Otis  Gary Foxborough. 

Alonzo  W.  CriEKVKU Wrentham. 

John  Quixcy  Adams , Quiucy. 

Ai.FUKU  W.  WiirrcoMB Randolph. 

TiiEODOUK  Lyman, Brookliue. 

William  R.  AL\xx, Sharon. 

.  Corresponding  and  Becording  Secretary. 

IIkxry  0.  HiLDRETii Dedhaiii. 

Treasurer. 

diAUXCY  C.  CiuiiCHiLL Dcdhaiii. 

Executive  Committee. 

E.  C.  R.  Walker,  Roxbury ;  A.  B.  Balch,  Medfleld ;  Charles  F.  Curtis, 
West  Roxbury:  Augustus  P.  Caldcr,  West  Roxbury;  William  T.  Cook, 
Foxboro';  Henry  M.  Mack,  Dorchester;  David  W.  Tucker,  Milton;  Ellis 
Tucker,  Canton ;  George  Craft,  Brookline. 

Finance  Committee  and  Auditors. 

Ira  Cleveland,  Dcdham  ;  William  J.  Stuart,  Hyde  Park ;  Eliphalet  Stone, 
DedhaiH. 

Supervisory  Committee. 

The  President,  Honorary  President,  and  Secretary,  ex-officiis;  Charles 
C.  Sewall,  Medfleld;  Otis  Cary,  Foxborough;  A.  W.  Cheever,  Wrentham; 
Erastus  L.  Metcalf,  Franklin;  Henry  Grew,  Hyde  Park;  Charles  Breck, 
Milton;  Lucius  Clapp,  Stoughton;  Josiah  P.  Quincy,  Quincy;  Elijah 
Tucker,  Milton;  Henry  Goulding,  Dover;  E.  C.  R.Walker,  Roxbury; 
Charles  F.  Curtis,  West  Roxbury;  A.  F.  Stevens,  Needham ;  Thomas 
B.  Griggs,  Brookline;  Henry  M.  Mack,  Dorchester. 

Committee  of  Arrangements. 

Henry  S.  Russell,  Milton;  William  R.  Mann,  Sharon;  Chauncy  C. 
Churchill,  Henry  O.  Hildreth,  Dedham;  Charles  F.  Curtis,  WestRoxbury; 
A.  P.  Calder,  Dorchester;  William  J.  Stuart,  Hyde  Park;  John  D. 
Bradlee,  Milton;  Albert  B.  Balch,  Medfleld;  Alfred  W.  Whitcomb, 
Randijlph;  Henry  M.  Mack,  Dorchester;  Abel  F.  Stevens,  Needham. 


XOKFOLK  AGRICULTURAL   SOCIETT 


RULES    AND    REGULATIONS. 


It  is  understood  that  all  premiums  will  be  restricted  to  articles 
grown  or  manufactm-ed  in  the  Count}',  or  in  towns  contiguous 
thereto,  unless  otherwise  specified  in  the  premium  list.  Essays 
and  Agricultural  Implements,  being  exempted  from  this  rule,  will 
be  opened  to  general  competition. 

^^ Committees  are  x^i'ohibited  from  aicarding  gratuities,  other 
than  dixilomas,  unless  specified  in  the  jjremium  list. 

^^No  object  or  article  will  be  entitled  to  a  premium,  unless  it 
2)0ssesses  points  of  siqjeriority ;  and  the  Committees  are  prohibited 
Jrom  awarding  premiums,  if  in  their  opinion,  the  articles  or  objects 
are  .not  deemed  worthy. 

Any  gentleman,  not  a  member  of  the  Society,  entitled,  to  a 
premium  of  five  dollars  or  upward,  and  any  lad}-,  not  a  member 
of  the  Society,  entitled  to  a  premium  of  two  dollars  or  upward, 
shall  receive  the  amount  exceeding  the  sum  of  five  dollars  or  two 
dollars,  respectiveh",  and  may  thereafter  become  a  member. 

All  animals  and  articles  intended  for  exhibition  and  premium — 
herds  of  milch  cows  and  bread  and  butter  excepted  —  must  be  on 
the  ground  at  or  before  twelve  o'clock  on  Thursday,  the  first  da}'  of 
the  Exhibition,  to  be  entitled  to  any  premium.  Animals  will 
not  be  allowed  to  be  removed  from  the  pens  before  three  o'clock  on 
Frida}',  the  second  day  ;  and  all  other  articles  not  until  five  o'clock. 

The  same  animal — except  working  oxen  and  draught  horses — 
or  article  shall  not  be  allowed  to  compete  for  more  than  one  pre- 
mium. And  in  fruit,  it  is  understood  that  the  same  varieties  shall 
not  be  included  in  diflTerent  collections  of  the  same  exhibitor,  com- 
peting for  premium. 

In  order  to  extend  liberal  encouragement  to  citizens  of  the 
County  living  remote  from  the  Society's  grounds,  a  sum — not  ex- 
ceeding fift}"  dollars — will  be  appropriated  for  compensation  of 
travel  to  the  owners  of  all  such  neat  cattle,  swine  and  sheep  as 
have  been  brought  or  driven  more  than  five  miles — reckoning  the 
ilistance  from  whence  they  come  to  the  place  of  exhibition — and 


receive  no  premium.  Only  ojic  travel  will  be  allowed  to  the  same 
person.  Payment  will  be  maile  at  the  rate  of  ten  cents  per  mile 
for  a  yoke  of  oxen  or  steers ;  eight  cents  per  mile  for  each  bull, 
cow,  heifer  or  yearling ;  ten  cents  per  mile  for  each  boar,  sow,  or 
litter  of  weaned  pigs  ;  and  eight  cents  per  mile  for  each  flock  of 
shetp.  But  no  such  payment  shall  be  made  for  any  animal  or 
animals  which,  in  the  judgment  of  the  Committee  appointed  to 
manage  them,  are  not  of  a  superior  cliaracter  and  worthy  of  ex- 
hibition, or  have  not  been  entered  in  accordance  with  the  rules 
and  regulations  of  the  Society. 

The  animals,  while  on  the  ground,  will  be  fed  at  the  expense  of 
the  Society. 

All  flowers,  fruits  and  vegetables  are  to  be  grown  by,  and  entered 
in  the  name  of,  the  contributor. 

No  person  serving  on  any  of  the  Committees  shall  have  a  vote 
in  any  case  when  he  shall  1)C  personally  interested  as  a  com- 
petitor. 

After  the  objects  for  exhibition  are  arranged,  they  will  be  under 
the  exclusive  charge  of  tiie  Superintendents,  and  cannot  be  re- 
moved loithont  their  consent. 

All  other  entries  for  premiums  must  be  made  in  writing,  and 
shall  be  placed  in  the  hands  of  the  Recording  Secretar}--  on  or 
before  the  loth  of  November. 

Premiums  awarded  and  not  called  for  on  or  before  the  last 
AVednesday  in  March  following,  will  be  considered  as  given  to  the 
Society,  in  aid  of  its  funds. 

Tiie  trustees  have  carefull}'  revised  and  approved  of  the  follow- 
ing list  of  premiums.  The  respective  Committees  appointed  to 
award  the  same  are  required  to  enforce  a  strict  conformity  to  all 
the  rules  in  relation  to  Entries  and  Certificates. 

As  it  will  become  the  duty  of  the  Society  to  make  to  the 
Legislature  an  exact  report  of  its  doings,  the  trustees  deem  it  of 
the  highest  importance  that  earnest  and  persevering  efforts  be 
made  by  the  citizens  of  everj'  town  in  the  County  to  bring  out  the 
results  of  their  skill  and  industry. 

HENRY  S.  RUSSELL,  President. 

Henry  O.  HiLdreth,  Secretary. 


LIST 


OF 


PREMIUMS  AND  COMMITTEES 

FOR  tup:  year  1874. 


(Successful  Competitors  may  receive  their  rremiums  in  Plate  or  Monei',  at  their  option.) 


Sltekixtexdexts  at  Exiiibitiox. 

Worses.— Augustus  P.  Caldeu,  Dorchester;  Assistant,  Henky  A.  Dar- 
LIXG,  H3'de  Park. 

Cat'tle. — Nathaxiel  S.  "White,  Cautou. 

Sheep  and  Swine. — Henry  Gouldixg,  Dover. 

Fruit.— CiiMiLES  F.  Curtis,  "West  Roxbury. 

Floioers. —RonEm  Watt,  West  Roxbury. 

Vegetables. — David  Hexdersox,  Needham. 

Poultry. — A.  F.  Stevens,  Needham. 

Manufactures,  Carriages,  Agricultural  Implements,  Etc. — "William  Ambs, 
Dedhaiu. 

Ploidng  and  Drawing. — Asahel  S.  Drake,  Sharou. 

Ladies'  Work. — Mrs.  John  Vose,  Hyde  Park. 

Committee  to  Fill  Vacancies  on  Committees  at  Exhibition. 

Otis   Cary,    Foxboro'-,    Henry    0.    Hildretii,  Dedham ;    Albert   B. 
Balcii,  Mtdtield  ;  N.  B.  Wilmartii,  Walpole  ;  J.  Walter  Bradlee,  Miltou. 


FARMS. 

EXPERIMENTS  AND  IMPROVEMENTS  THEREON. 

MANAGEMENT  AND   IMPROVEMENT  OF  FARMS. 

Supervisory  Committee.— Tlie  Presiclent,  Honorary  President  and  Secretary,  ex- 
officiis;  Charles  C.  Sewall,  MedQeld;  Otis  Cary,  Foxborough;  A.  W.  Cheever, 
WrenUi.im;  Erastus  L.  Metcall',  Franklin;  Henry  Grew,  Hyde  Park;  Charles  Ureck, 
Milton;  Lucius  Clapp,  Stoughton  :  Josiah  P.  Quiucy,  Quincy  ;  Elijah  Tucker,  Milton: 
Henry  Goulding,  Dover;  E.  C.  R.  Walker,  Roxbury ;  Charles  F.  Curtis,  West  Roxbury  ; 
A.  F.  Stevens,  Needham;  Thomas  B.  Griggs,  Brookliae;    Henry  M.  Mack.  Dorchester. 

For  the  best  managed  farm,  taking  into  view  the  condition  of 
the  buildings,  fences  and  orchards,  the  cultivation  of  the  lands, 


the  care  and  management  of  the  stock,  the  quantity,  qualit}-  and 
preservation  of  the  crops,  the  expenses  incurred  and  the  improve- 
ments made  during  the  year,  with  a  detailed  statement  of  the 
whole,  to  be  rendered  on  or  before  November  loth,  $25  ;  second 
best,  S20. 

Competitors  must  give  notice  of  their  intention  to  the  Secretary 
on  or  before  June  15th.  Farms  entered  for  premiums  will  be 
viewed  by  the  Supervisory  Committee,  as  they  shall  deem  expe- 
dient, between  June  20th  and  September  20th.  Any  farm  offered 
for  inspection,  without  being  entered  for  a  premium,  will  be  viewed 
and  reported  by  the  Committee,  if  seasonable  application  be  made 
to  the  Chairman. 

PERMANENT  IMPROVEMENTS. 

Committee— Henry  Grew,  Hyde  Park;    Horatio  Boyden,  Walpole;  Charles  E.  C. 
Breck,  Milton;  E.  P.  Carpenter,  Foxborough;  Walter  H.  Fisher,  Xorl'olk. 

Improving  Meadow  and  Swamp  Lands. — For  the  best  exper- 
iment in  reclaiming  wet  meadow  or  swamp  lands,  b}^  drainage  or 
otherwise,  on  not  less  than  one  half-acre,  with  statement  in  detail 
of  the  previous  condition  and  produce  of  the  land,  the  method  and 
expense  of  the  experiment,  and  the  produce  at  the  present  time, 
$8  ;  second  best,  84 

Under-Draining  Land. — For  the  best  experiment  in  under- 
draining  land,  not  less  than  forty  square  rods,  regard  being  had 
to  the  character  of  the  soil  and  subsoil,  the  method,  extent,  ex- 
pense and  result  of  the  experiment,  $10  ;  second  best,  85  ;  third 
best,  83. 

Old  Pasture  and  Unimproved  Lands. — For  the  best  con- 
ducted experiment  in  renovating  and  improving  old  pasture  lands 
and  lands  hitherto  lying  waste,  on  not  less  than  one  acre,  with  or 
without  plowing,  with  a  statement  of  the  previous  condition  of  the 
land,  and  of  the  method,  expense  and  result  of  the  experiment,  88  ; 
second  best,  85  ;  third  best,  $3. 

TURNING  IN   CROPS  AS  MANURE. 

Committee  —  Aaron  D.  Weld,  West  Roxbury;S.W.  Richardson,  Franklin;  Ephriain 
Wilson,  Dover. 

For  the  most  satisfactory  experiment  of  turning  in  crops  as  a 
manure,  either  green  or  diy,  on  not  less  than  one  half-acre  of  land, 
a  detailed  account  of  the  whole  process,  expense  and  result  to  be 
given  in  writing,  80. 


EXPERIMENTS   IN  SUBSOIL  PLOWING. 

For  the  best  experiment,  on  not  less  than  one  acre  of  land,, 
of  the  effect  of  subsoil  plowing,  to  be  determined  by  the  ditference 
in  the  value  of  the  crops  raised  on  equal  portions  of  equally  ma- 
nured land,  of  like  quality,  one-half  of  which  having  been  subsoil- 
plowed,  and  the  other  half  plowed  in  the  usual  manner,  statements 
of  the  depth  of  plowing  in  each  instance,  together  with  all  the  par- 
ticulars of  culture,  required,  $8  ;  second  best.  So. 

FEEDING  AND  FATTENING  STOCK. 

Committee.  —A.  W.Cheever,  Wrenlliam;  John  Sias,  Miltou;  Charles  Mackuitosh, 
Needham. 

Comparative  Value  of  Crops  as  Food  for  Cattle.  —  For  the 
best  experiment  upon  a  stock  of  cattle,  ijot  less  than  four  in  num- 
ber, to  ascertain  the  relative  value  of  the  different  kinds  of  fodder 
used,  with  a  statement  in  detail  of  the  quantity  and  quality  of  the 
same,  as  compared  with  English  hay,  the  experiment  to  be  made 
in  the  three  winter  months,  $12  ;  second  best,  $5. 

Feeding  of  Milch  Cows.  —  For  the  best  experiment  in  the 
feeding  of  milch  cows,  by  soiling,  stall-feeding  or  pasturing,  with 
a  detailed  statement  of  the  comparative  advantages  of  either 
method,  regard  being  had  to  the  saving  of  manure,  comfort  of  the 
animals,  and  produce  of  the  dairy,  $12  ;  second  best,  $8  ;  third 
best,  $3, 

Fattening  Cattle.  —  For  the  best  experiment  in  feeding  cattle, 
with  a  statement  in  detail  of  the  process,  expense  and  result,  $5  ; 
second  best,  $3. 

Fattening  Swine.  —  For  the  best  experiment  in  feeding  swine, 
with  a  statement  in  detail  of  the  process  and  result,  $5  ;  second 
best,  $3. 

HAY; 

Committee. —  Erastus  L.  Metcalf,  Franklin;  Ellis  Tucker,  Canton;  Otis  Cary,  Fox- 
borough. 

For  the  largest  quantity  and  best  quality  of  English  hay  per  acre 
produced  on  any  farm  in  the  County,  regard  being  had  to  the  char- 
acter of  the  soil,  the  mode  and  cost  of  cultivation  and  making, 
$25  ;  second  best,  $10. 


CRANBERRY  VINES. 

For  the  best  experiment  in  transplanting  Cranberry  Vines,  or  in 
growing  them  from  seed,  on  not  less  than  one-eighth  of  an  acre, 
which  shall  be  in  the  most  flourishing  and  productive  state  on  the 
10th  of  September,  $6  ;  second  best,  $3  ;  third  best,  $1. 

Competitors  will  be  required  to  give  an  exact  statement  of  the 
process,  expense  and  result  of  the  experiment. 


grai:n^,  eoot  axd  mixed  crops. 

Committee.— Charles  Breck,  John  Silas,  Charles  E.  C.  Brock,  Milton;    Henry  Bird, 
Stoughtou;  Henry  M.  Mack,  Dorchester. 

Grain  Crops. — For  the  best  experiment  in  raising  "Wheat,  a 
premium  of  810  ;  second  best,  S3. 

For  the  best  experiment  in  raising  Rj'e,  Oats  or  Barle}',  each, 
a  premium  of  810  ;  second  best,  each,  83. 

For  the  best  experiment  in  raising  Indian  Corn,  a  premium  of 
$10  ;  second  best,  S3. 

For  the  best  experiment  in  raising  White  Beans,  Millet  or  Back- 
wheat,  each,  S3. 

Samples  of  each  kind  of  Grain,  not  less  than  half  a  bushel, 
properly  labeled,  must  be  exhibited  at  the  Show.  The  quantity  of 
the  crop  to  be  ascertained  bj^  weight  as  follows  :  Corn  and  Rye, 
5G  pounds  each  to  the  bushel ;  Barley'  and  Buckwheat,  48  pounds 
each  ;  Oats,  32  pounds  ;  AVheat,  60  pounds. 

Root  CROrs. — For  the  best  experiment  in  raising  Potatoes,  85  ; 
second  best,  S3. 

For  the  best  experiment  in  raising  Sugar  Beets,  Carrots,  Pars- 
nips, Mangel-wurzel  or  Ruta-baga,  each,  85  ;  second  best,  each,  S3. 

For  the  best  experiment  in  raising  Onions,  85  ;  second  best,  S3. 

For  the  best  experiment  in  raising  Flat  Turnips,  85  ;  second 
best,  S3. 

Samples  of  roots,  not  less  than  one  bushel,  properly  labeled, 
must  be  exhibited  at  the  Show.  The  (quantity  of  the  crops,  which 
must  be  on  not  less  than  one-quarter  of  an  acre,  shall  be  ascer- 


10 

tained  b}^  weight  of  the  roots  —  freed  from  dirt  and  Avithout  tops  — 
as  follows  :  Potatoes,  Sugar  Beet,  Mangel-wurzel  and  Ruta-bagas, 
GO  pounds  ;  Carrots,  55  pounds  ;  Onions  and  Fkt  Turnips,  50 
pounds  ;  Parsnips,  45  pounds  to  the  bushel. 

Competitors  must  give  notice  of  their  intention  to  compete,  to 
the  Secretary,  on  or  before  June  15th  ;  and  experiments  will  be 
viewed  by  the  Committee  between  July  1st  and  September  20th. 

Claimants  for  premiums  must  render  to  the  Chairman  of  the 
Committee,  on  or  before  November  15th,  a  written  statement  of 
the  character  and  previous  condition  of  the  land,  its  present  value, 
and  the  taxes  upon  it ;  the  kind,  quality  and  value  of  manure  used  ; 
the  quantity  and  cost  of  seed  sown  ;  the  labor  and  expense  of  cul- 
tivating and  harvesting  the  crop  ;  and  the  quantity,  quality  and 
value  of  the  crop.  In  aAvarding  premiums,  regard  will  be  had  to 
all  these  circumstances,  and  to  the  area  of  the  ground  in  cultiva- 
tion. 


YEGETABLES. 

Committee.— Charles  L.  Copeland,  Milton;  John  W.  Richardson,  Franklin;  AVilliam 
J.  Griggs,  Brookline;  William  J.  Hyde,  Brookline;  James  3Iackiutosh,Needham. 

Vegetable  Garden. — For  the  best  Vegetable  Garden,  regard 
being  had  to  the  variety,  excellence  and  quantity  of  the  products 
thereof,  and  the  mode  and  expense  of  cultivation,  first  premium, 
810  ;  second  do.,  $5  ;  third  do,,  $2. 

Entries  must  be  made  before  the  10th  of  June,  and  an  exact 
statement  rendered  before  the  first  of  November. 

Experiments  in  Raising  Vegetables.  —  For  the  best  experi- 
ment in  raising  Squashes  —  one  half-dozen  of  each  variety  to  be 
exhibited  at  the  Show,  $5  ;  second  best.  83. 

For  the  best  experiment  in  raising  Cabbages  —  not  less  than 
six  heads  to  be  exhibited  at  the  Show,  $5  ;  second  best,  83. 

Show  of  Vegetables  at  Exhibition. —  Class  1. —  For  the  best 
and  largest  collection  of  Vegetables  exhibited,  $20  ;  second  best, 
815  ;  third  best,  810. 

For  the  best  and  largest  collection  of  Potatoes,  not  less  than 
one  peck  of  each  variety,  §6  ;  second  best,  83. 


11 

For  the  best  and  largest  collection  of  Winter  Squashes,  not  less 
than  four  of  each  variet}',  S-4  ;  second  best  $3. 

For  the  best  new  variet}-  of  Seedling  Potatoes,  superior  to  any 
kind  now  in  cultivation,  a  premium  of  810. 

Clcfss  2.  —  For  one  half-bushel  best  Tab\e  Potatoes,  $2  ;  second 
best,  81. 

For  one  half-bushel  best  Turnips,  $2  ;  second  best,  81. 

For  one  half-bushel  best  Carrots,  $2  ;  second  best,  81. 

For  one  half-bushel  best  Beets,  82  ;  second  best,  81. 

For  one  half-bushel  best  Tomatoes,  $2  ;  second  best,  Si. 

For  one  half-bushel  best  Onions,  $2  ;  second  best,  81. 

For  one  half-bushel  best  Parsnips,  82  ;  second  best,  81. 

For  one  half-bushel  best  Salsify,  $2  ;  second  best,  81. 

For  two  quarts  best  Lima  Beans,  82  ;  second  best,  81. 

For  four  best  Late  Drumhead  Cabbages,  82  ;  second  best,  81. 

For  four  best  Green  Globe  Savoys,  82  ;  second  best,  81. 

For  four  best  Cauliflowers,  82  ;  second  best,  81. 

For  twelve  best  heads  of  Celery,  $2  ;  second  best,  81- 

For  four  best  Marrow  Squasli£s,  82  ;  second  best,  81. 

For  four  best  Canada  Crookneck  Squashes,  82  ;  second  best,  61. 

For  four  best  Pumpkins,  $2  ;  second  best,  81. 

For  four  best  Musk-Melons,  82  ;  second  best,  81. 

For  four  best  Water-Melons,  82  ;  second  best  81. 

For  twelve  ears  best  Sweet  Corn,  82  ;  second  best,  81- 

Xo  exhibitor  in  class  1  shall  compete  in  class  2  with  the  same 
varieties. 


SEEDS. 

CotMiTTEE.  —  George  E.  Chickenng,  Dover;  John  X.  Smith,  Walpole;  ElbriJge  L. 
Mann,  Dover. 

For  the  best  sample  of  ears  of  Seed  Corn,  not  less  than  forty  in 
number  —  first  premium,  $2  ;  second  do.,  81. 

For  the  best  collection  of  Onion,  Carrot,  Beet,  Parsnip  and  Ru- 
ta-baga  Seeds  —  first  premium,  83  ;  second  do.,  82. 

For  the  best  ten  pounds  of  Timothy,  Redtop  and  Clover  Seed, 
81. 

For  the  best  sample,  not  less  than  one  peck,  of  Wheat,  Rye, 
Barle}'  or  Oats,  81  each. 


12 
TEEE     CULTURE. 

Committee.  —  Edward  S.  Rand,  Jr.,  Eliphalet  Stone,  Dedham  ;  A.  K.  Teele,  Milton ; 
Georue  Craft,  Brookline;  Cheever  Newliall,  Dorchester;  Robert  Watt,  West  Koxbury; 
Charles  r.  Curtis,  West  Roxbury. 

FRUIT  TREES. 

Apple  Orchards. — For  the  best  Apple  Orchard,  of  not  less  than 
fift}'  trees,  which  shall  have  been  set  out  at  least  five  years,  and 
■n'hicli  shall  be  in  the  best  and  most  thriving  condition  in  1874,  $8  ; 
second  best,  $5. 

Pear  Trees.  —  For  the  best  engrafted  or  budded  standard  Pear 
Trees,  set  out  at  least  five  years,  and  which  shall  be  in  the  most 
thriving  condition  in  the  autumn  of  1874,  not  less  than  twenty-five 
trees,  S8  ;  second  best,  $5. 

For  the  best  engrafted  on  budded  Pear  Trees  on  Quince  roots, 
with  same  conditions,  and  not  less  than  fifty  trees,  $8  ;  second, 
best,  $5. 

Peach  Orchards. — For  the  best  Peach  Orchard,  of  not  less  than 
twenty-five  trees,  which  shall  be  in  the  most  thrifty  bearing  condi- 
tion in  the  autumn  of  1874,  $8  ;  second  best,  $5. 

For  the  Peach  Orchard,  of  not  less  than  fifty  trees,  grown  from 
pits  planted  since  1865,  on  the  spot  where  the  trees  stand,  which 
shall  be  in  the  best  condition  in  1874,  $8  ;  second  best  $5. 

Seedling  Apples  or  Pears. — For  the  best  variety  of  new  seed- 
ling apples  or  pears,  of  decidedly  superior  quality,  one  dozen  speci- 
mens to  be  exhibited,  together  with  a  history  of  the  origin  of  the 
tree,  a  description  of  the  growth,  and  its  bearing  character,  88  ; 
second  best,  $o. 

Seedling  Peaches. — For  the  best  variety  of  Seedling  Penches 
of  decidedly  superior  quality,  and  worthy  of  general  cultivation — 
one  dozen  specimens  to  be  exhibited  two  years  in  succession  —  to- 
gether with  a  history  of  its  origin,  a  description  of  its  growth,  and 
the  bearing  character  of  the  tree,  $5  ;  second  best,  $3. 

Note.  —  Notice  of  intention  to  compete  to  be  given  to  tlie  Secretary  on 
or  before  September  1st. 


13 

FOREST  TREES. 

For  the  best  plantation  of  Forest  Trees,  of  either  of  the  follow- 
ing varieties,  namely,  White  Oak,  Yellow  Oak,  Locust,  Birch, 
Wliite  Ash  or  "Walnut,  Scotch  Larch,  Norway  Spruce,  Pitch,  AVhite 
and  Norwaj^  Pine,  or  other  varieties,  not  less  that  three  years  old, 
and  not  less  than  one  thousand  trees,  —  entries  to  be  made  to  the 
Secretar}'  previous  to  June  10th,  —  a  premium  of  $15. 

For  the  best  plantation,  containing  not  less  than  five  hundred 
trees,  $10. 

Orxamental  Plantiko.  — To  an}'  individual  or  society,  regard 
being  had  to  the  number  of  persons  associated,  for  the  larger  num- 
ber and  best  growth  of  ornamental  trees,  not  less  than  fifty,  which 
shall  have  been  planted  in  a  public  square  or  on  the  roadside  at 
least  two  years  —  first  premium,  $10  ;  second  do.,  So. 

HEDGES. 

For  the  best  Live  Hedge  Fence,  not  less  than  five  hundred  feet 
in  length,  $5  ;  second  best,  02. 

For  the  best  Evergreen  Hedge  of  Hemlock  or  Norway  Spruce, 
not  less  than  four  luindred  feet  in  length,  $5  ;  second  best,  $2. 
Premiums  to  be  awarded  in  1874. 

FLOWERS. 

COMMITTEE.  — A.  K.  Teele,  Milton;    Kobert    Watt,  West  Koxbury;   George  Craft, 
Brookliue;  Lyman  Davenport,  Milton;  Miss  Elizabeth  S.  8('\vall,  Mudlield. 

For  the  best  collection  of  Pot  Plants,  $10  ;  second  best,  So. 
For  the  best  collection  of  Cut  Flowers,  S -1 ;  second  best,  $3  ; 
third  best,  $2.  Fur  the  best  and  most  tastefull}-  arranged  baskets 
of  flowers,  not  less  than  four,  §4  ;  second  best,  $3  ;  third  best,  S2. 
For  the  best  and  most  tastefully  arranged  boquets,  not  less  than 
four,  $4  ;  second,  S3  ;  third,  S2.  For  the  best  collection  of  named 
gladiolus  in  spikes,  S4  ;  second  best,  S3  ;  third  best,  S2.  For  the 
best  collection  of  new  seedlings  in  spikes,  $3  ;  second  best,  S2. 
For  the  best  new  seedlings,  Si.  For  the  best  collection  of  Japan 
lilies,  83;  second  best,  $2.  For  the  best  new  seedling.  Si.  For 
the  !)est  collection  of  dahlias,  S2  ;  second  best,  Si.  For  the  best 
new  seedlings,  SI.  For  the  best  collection  of  double  zinnias,  S2  ; 
.second  best,  SI. 


14 


A  statement  in  writing  of  the  sorts  contributed,  and  the  con- 
tributor's name,  will  be  required. 

Gratuities,  in  publications,  to  the  amount  of  $10  may  be  award- 
ed at  the  discretion  of  the  Committee. 


FRUITS. 


Rules  relating  to  the  award  of  premiums  : — 

All  fruits  offered  for  premium  must  be  correctly  named. 

All  fruits  must  be  composed  of  exactly  the  number  of  specimens 
or  quantity  named  in  the  schedule. 

No  exhibitor  taking  a  premium  for  collection  shall  compete  with 
the  same  varieties  in  the  class  for  single  dishes. 

Non-compliance  with  the  rules  will  cause  the  rejection  of  the 
articles  offered  for  a  premium. 

APPLES. 

Committee. -George  Vose,  Milton;  Aaron  D.  Capen,  Dorchester;  'Williara  H.  For- 
bes, Milton;   David  Shaw,  Foxborough;    Lucius  Clapp,  Stoughton. 

For  the  best  collection  of  twelve  varieties  of  Apples,  twelve 
specimens  of  each  variety — first  premium,  $12;  second  do.,  $5; 
third  do.,  $4;  fourth  do.,  $3;  fifth  do.,  $2. 

For  the  best  collection  of  five  varieties  of  Apples,  twelve  speci- 
mens of  each  variet}^ — first  premium,  $6  ;  second  do.,  $4. 

For  the  best  collection  of  the  following  varieties,  twelve  speci- 
mens of  each:  Baldwin  —  first  premium,  $2;  second  do.,  $4. 
Rhode  Island  Greening  —  first  premium,  $2;  second  do.,  $1. 
Gravenstein  —  first  premium,  $2;  second  do.,  $1  ;  Hubbardston 
Nonesuch  —  first  premium,  $2  ;  second  do.,  $1.  Roxbury  Russet 
—  first  premium,  $2;  second  do.,  $1.  Porter  —  first  premium, 
$2  ;  second  do.,  $1.  Tolraan  sweet  —  first  premium,  $2  ;  second 
do.,  $1.     For  any  other  variety  —  first  premium,  $2  ;  second  do., 


15 


PEARS. 


Committee.— Charles  F.  Curtis,  West  Uoxbury;  E.  C.  R.  Walker,  West  Roxbury; 
Otis  Cary,  Foxborough;  John  W.  lirooks,  Milton;  William  J.  Stuart,  Hyde  Park. 

For  the  best  collection  of  twenty  varieties  of  Pears,  twelve  speci- 
mens of  each  variety — first  premium  ^15  ;  second  do.,  ^12. 

For  the  best  collection  of  ten  varieties  of  Pears,  twelve  speci- 
mens  of  each  variety —  first  premium,  $8  ;  second  do.,  $6  ;  third 
do.,  $4. 

For  the  best  collection  of  five  varieties  of  Pears,  twelve  speci- 
mens of  each  variety  — first  premium,  $G  ;  second  do.,  $i:  third 
do.,  $2. 

For  the  best  collection  of  the  following  varieties,  twelve  speci- 
mens of  each  :  Clapp's  Favorite  —  first  premium,  $2  ;  second  do., 
$1.  Bartlett  —  first  premium,  $2  ;  second  do.,  $1.  Beurre 
d'Anjou—  first  premium,  82  ;  second  do.,  $1.  Urbaniste—  first 
premium,  82  ;  second  do.,  U.  Merriam  — first  premium,  82  ;  sec- 
ond do.,  81.  Louise  Bonne  de  Jersey  —  first  premium,  82  ;  second 
do.,  81.  Vicar  of  Winkfield  —  first  premium,  82  ;  second  do.,  81. 
Duchesse  d'Angouleme— first  premium,  82  ;  second  do.,  81.  Seckle 
—  first  premium,  82  ;  second  do.,  81.  Onondaga  —  first  premium, 
$2  ;  second  do.,  81.  Sheldon  —  first  premium,  $2  ;  second  do.,  81. 
Beurre  Bosc—  first  premium,  82  ;  second  do.,  81.  Doyenne  Bou- 
souck—  first  premium,  82  ;  second  do.,  81.  Beurre  ciairgeau  — 
first  premium,  82  ;  second  do.,  81.  Lawrence  —first  premium,  82  ; 
second  do.,  81.  Winter  Nellis  —  first  premium,  82  ;  second  do.,  81. 
Beurre  Hardy  —  first  premium,  82  ;  second  do.,  81.  Buffum  — 
first  premium,  82  ;  second  do.,  81.  Maria  Louise  —  first  premium, 
82;  second  do.,  81.  Dana's  Hovey  —  first  premium,  82  ;  second 
do.,  81.  Mount  Vernon  — first  premium,  82;  second  do.,  81. 
For  other  varieties,  not  exceeding  three  —  first  premium,  Z2  ;  sec- 
ond do.,  81. 

GRAPES   AND   OTHER  FRUITS. 

Committee.  -Abel  F.  Stevens,  Neeaham ;  Eliphalet  Stone,  Dedliam ;  Joseph  W.  Page, 
West  Roxbury ;  George  Cartvvright,  Dedhaui ;  Charles  F.  Gerry,  Hyde  Parjc. 

For  the  best  collection  of  Foreign  Grapes  —  first  premium,  $6  ; 
second  do.,  84. 

For  the  best  four  bunches  of  the  following  varieties,  four  bunches 
of  each   variety :   Black   Hamburg  —  first  premium,   83  ;  Second 


16 

•lo.,  $2.  Wilmot's  No.  16  —  first  premium,  $3  ;  second  do.,  $2. 
Victoria — first  premium,  S3  ;  second  do.,  $2.  For  the  best  four 
bunches  of  uny  white  variety,  $3. 

For  a  new  variety  of  Native  or  Seedling  Grape,  equal  or  superior 
to  the  Isabella,  ripening  in  this  County  in  the  open  air  by  the 
middle  of  September,  prolific  and  suitable  for  tlie  table  —  first  pre- 
mium, 620;  second  do.,  $10. 

For  the  best  collection  of  Native  Grapes,  six  bunches  of  each 
variety,  —  first  premium,  $4  ;  second  do.,  S3  ;  third  do.,  $2.  Dela- 
wai-e  —  first  premium,  $2  ;  second  do.,  SI  •  Diana  —  first  premium, 
82;  second  do.,  SI.  Concord  —  first  premium,  S2  ;  second  do., 
SI.  Hartford  Prolific  —  first  premium,  S2  ;  second  do.,  Si.  Wil- 
der—  first  premium,  S2  ;  second  do.,  $1.  Agawam  —  first  pre- 
mium, S2  ;  second  do.,  Si.  Merrimac  — first  premium,  $2  ;  second 
do.,  $1.  Salem  —  first  premium  S2  ;  second  do.,  $1.  Any  other 
variet}^  first  premium,  $2  ;  second  do.,  $1. 

For  the  best  collection  of  Peaches,  twelve  specimens  of  each 
variety — first  premium,  $3  ;  second  do.,  $2  ;  third  do.,$l. 

For  the  best  collection  of  Plums,  twelve  specimens  of  each  vari- 
ety —  first  premium,  $3  ;  second  do.,  $1. 

Quinces.  — For  the  best  peck  of  Quinces,  S2  ;  second  best,  Si. 
Cranberries.  —  For  the  best  peck  of  Cranberries,  S3  ;  second 
best,  S2;   third  best.  Si. 

COLD  VINERIES. 

COMMiTTKE.  — Eliphalct  stone,  Dedham ;  John  Pearce,  West  Eoxbury:  Edward  S. 
Hand,  Jr.,  Dedham:  Henry  S.  Clarke,  Walpole. 

For  the  best  crop,  and  the  most  economically  kept  Cold  Vinery, 
not  less  than  thirty  feet — first  premium,  S4  ;  second  best,  S3. 


PLOWmG  MATCH. 

Double   Ox   Teams.—  With  Michigan  PIoiv. 

Committee.  — Nathan  Longfellow,  Needham;  William  J.  Hyde,  Brookliue;   Uriah 
Capen  Porter,  Stoughton. 

For  best  performance  in  plowing  sward  land,  at  least  one-eighth 
of  an  acre,  eight  inches  in  depth,  S15  ;  second  best,  SlO ;  third 
best,  S5. 


17 

With  (iny  other  pi 010.  —  Same  coiulitions.  Best,  $1;");  second 
best,  SIO  ;  third  best,  65. 

Double  House  Teams. —  With  Michiijan  Plow. 

Committee.  — Joliu  E.  Wetherbee,  Dcilham;  Charles  Hartshorn,  Walpole;  .Tames  T. 
Sumner,  Canton;  James  Capen,  Foxboro'. 

Same  conditions.     Best,  $15  ;  second  best,  810  ;  third  best,  S5. 
With  any  other  ploio.  —  Same  conditions.     Best,  §15;  second 
best,  SIO  ;  third  best,  §5. 

Single  Ox  Teams.  —  With  any  Ploio. 

Committee.  — B.  N.  Sawin,  Dover;  Charles  A.  Bigelow,  Medwaj-;  Henrj-  Blacknian, 
Xeedham. 

For  the  best  performance  in  plowing  sward  land,  at  least  one- 
eighth  of  an  acre,  six  inches  in  depth,  within  an  hour,  §10  ;  second 
best,  $8  ;  third  best,  ^b. 

Single   Horse  Teams. 

Committee. —  Lewis  W.  Morse,  Sharon;  Adam  Mcintosh,  Canton;  Edward  Sumner, 
Dedham. 

Same  conditions.     Best,  810  ;  second  best,  85. 

Note. — A  Douijlk  Team  will  consist  of  two  yokes  of  oxen  with  or 
without  a  driver;  oi  a  team  of  one  yolvc  of  oxen  and  a  liorse,  with  or  with- 
out a  driver.  Single  Te.vm,  one  yolie  of  oxen  or  one  pair  of  horses  witli- 
out  a  driver.  Each  competitor  must  own  his  team  and  plow,  and  euter  the 
same  iu  his  own  name.  Plows  must  be  held  and  driven  by  their  owners, 
or  by  persons  statedly  in  their  employ.  In  awardius^  premiums,  one  hour 
will  be  allowed  for  the  performance  of  the  work,  regard  being  had  to  the 
width  and  depth  of  the  furrow  slicn,  aud  the  evenness,  ease  aud  quiet  with 
which  the  work  is  performed. 


ANIMALS. 

All  animals  to  be  entered  in  the  name  of  the  owner,  who  nuist 
have  had  them  in  his  possession  at  least  six  months  before  the  Ex- 
hibition. 

All  animals,  entered  in  accordance  with  the  rnles  and  resrula- 
tions,  will  be  fed,  during  the  Kxhibition,  at  the  expense  of  the 
Societ}'. 


18 

For  an}'  animal  worthy  of  the  first  preniuira,  having  received  a 
similar  one  at  an}'  previous  Exhibition,  a  diploma,  certifying  tlic 
rank  of  such  animal  at  the  present  Exhibition,  shall  be  awarded 
instead  of  a  premium. 

A  diploma  may  also  be  awarded,  at  the  discretion  of  the  several 
Committees,  for  any  animal,  worthy  of  Exhibition,  from  without 
the  limits  of  the  Society. 

HORSES. 

In  awarding  the  premium  on  Roadsters,  the  general  good  quali- 
ties   such  as  style,  action,  constitution  and  enduring  properties  — 

as  well  as  speed  of  the  animals,  will  receive  special  consideration. 

In  testing  the  speed  of  horses,  each  animal  —  four  years  old  and 
over — will  be  required  to  draw  a  carriage  weighing,  with  driver 
included,  not  less  than  350  pounds. 

It  is  understood  that  horses  which  have  heretofore  been  classed 
under  the  head  of  ''Thoroughbred  and  part  Thoroughbred,"  may 
compete  as  Roadsters,  or  in  any  other  class. 

Colts  and  fillies  will  compete  in  separate  classes,  as  heretofore, 
the  premiums  being  the  same  for  either  sex. 

No  stallion  will  be  entitled  to  a  premium  without  a  guarantee  of 
his  remaining  for  service  in  the  County  six  months. 

In  testing  the  strength,  docility  and  training  of  Draught  or 
Team  Horses,  the  load  shall  not  be  less  than  2000  pounds  for  a 
single  horse,  and  3500  pounds  for  a  pair  of  horses. 

Every  entry  for  premium  must  be  made  before  12  o'clock  of  the 
first  day  of  the  Exhibition,  and  the  Stock  must  be  present  the  sec- 
ond day  on  or  before  9  o'clock  a.m. 

It  must  be  distinctly  understood  that  premiums  will  not  be 
awarded  to  any  animal  that  does  not,  in  the  opinion  of  the  Com- 
mittee, possess  decided  merit  and  a  sound  constitution. 

Augustus  P.  Caldek,  Dorchester,  General  Chairman. 
Class  A.  —  Roadsters. 

COMMITTEE.  —  William  T.  Thacher,  Hyde  Park ;  William  Porter,  Randolph ;  J.  Free- 
man Ellis,  Stoiighton. 

\st  Division.  —  Stallions. 
For  the  best  Stallion,  4  years  old  and  upwards,  a  premium  of  $10  00 
2d  best    "  "  "  7  00 


19 


2d  Division. 
For  the  best  brood  mare,  with  a  foal  at  her  side,  a  premium 
2d  best  "  '■  *i  u 

3d  Division. — Colts  and  FiUies. 
For  the  best  4  years  old,  a  premium  of    . 
For  the  2d  best  4  years  old,  a  premium  of 
best  3  years  old,  " 

2d  best       "  " 

best  2  j^ears  old,  " 

2d  best      "  " 

best  1  year  old,  " 

2i\  best     "  " 

4:th  Division. — Pairs  in  Harness. 
For  the  best  pair  of  Roadsters,  a  premium  of 
2d  best  "  " 

5th  Division. — Harness  Horses. 
For  the  best  Gelding  or  Mare,  a  premium  of 
2d  best    "  "  u 

3d  best    "  «  " 

4th  best  "  "  " 


of$7 

00 

5 

00 

$5 

00 

3 

00 

5 

00 

3 

00 

3 

00 

2 

00 

3 

00 

2 

00 

$10 

00 

7 

00 

$8  00 

6 

00 

4 

00 

2 

00 

Class  B. — Horses  of  all  Work. 


CoMMiTTEE.-OliverDeane,  Canton;  Francis  B.  Kay,  Franklin;  William  T.  Cook 
Foxborough.  ' 


1st  Division. — Stallions. 
For  the  best  Stallion,  4  years  old  and  upwards,  a  premium  of  $10  00 
2d  best     "  "  «  «  7  qq 

2d  Division. — Brood  Mares. 
For  the  best  Brood  Mare,  with  a  Foal  at  her  side,  a  premium  of  $7  00 
2d  best  "  '»  4*  u  5  qq, 

M  Division.  —  Colts  and  Fillies. 
For  the  best  4  years  old,  a  premium  of  .         .         .         .       $5  00 


2d  best 
best  3  years  old, 
2d  best         " 
best  2  years  old, 
2d  best        " 
best  1  year  old, 
2d  best        " 


3  00 
5  00 
3  00 
3  00 

2  00 

3  00 
2  00 


20 


Ath  Division.  —  Pairs  in  Harness. 
For  the  best,  a  premium  of      . 

2d  best,       "  .... 

oth  Division.  —  Horses  in  Harness. 
For  the  best  Gelding  or  Mare,  a  premium  of 
2d  best  " 

Class  C.  —  Family  Horses. 


$7  00 
5  00 

$6  00 
4  00 


COMMITTEE. -George  R.  Mann,  Sharon;  Erastus  Nash,  Weymouth;  Henry  Trow- 
bridge, Norfolk. 

1st  Division.  —  Stallions. 
For  the  best  Stallions,  4  years  old  and  upwards,  a  premium  of  $10  00 
2d  best     "  "  "  7  00 

2d  Division.  —  Brood  Mares. 
For  the  best  Brood  Mare,  with  Foal  at  her  side,  a  premium  of  $7  00 


2d  best         ''  " 

M  Division.  —  Colts  and  Fillies. 
For  the  best  4  years  old,  a  premium  of 
2d  best 

best  3  years  old,       " 
2d  best         "  " 

For  the  best  2  years  old,        '• 
2d  best        "  " 

best  1  year  old         " 
2d  best         "  '' 

Ath  Division.  —  Carriage  Horses  15  to  16  hands  high. 
For  the  best  pair  of  Carriage  Horses,  a  premium  of 
2d  best  "  '^  " 

bth  Division.  —  Buggy  or  Chaise  Horses. 
For  the  best  Buggy  or  Chaise  Horse,  a  premium  of 
2d  best  "  '•         " 

3d  best  "  "         "  " 

<6th  Division.  —  Saddle  Horses. 
For  the  best  Saddle  Horse,  a  premium  of 

2d  best  "         "  "  .         • 

3d  best  "         "  "  .         • 

7th  Division.  —  Ponies. 
For  the  best  matched  Ponies,  a  premium  of 
2d  best  "  "  " 

best  single  Pony,  " 

2d  best  "        "  " 


5  00 

$0  00 
3  00 
5  00 
3  00 
3  00 

2  00 

3  00 

2  00 

$10  00 
7  00 

S8  00 
6  00 

4  00 

$6  00 
4  00 

3  00 

$6  00 

4  00 
3  00 
2  00 


21 

Class  D.  —  DuAUGnx  or  Team  Horses. 

CoiraiTTEE.  — Everett  J.Eaton,  Noedham;  Allen  Uolburn.Detlham;  EphiiamMann, 
Randolph. 

1st  Division.  —  Single  Dranght  or  Team  Horses. 

For  the  best  Draught  Horse,  a  premium  of  .         .         $7  00 

2d  best  "  "  "  .         .  5  00 

2d  Division.  —  Pairs  of  Draught  or  Team  Horses. 

For  the  best  pair  of  Draught  or  Team  Horses  a  premium  of  SlO  00 

2d  best  "  "  "  "  7  00 

CATTLE. 

Bulls. 

Committee.  —  Asahel  S.  Drake,  Sharon ;  Nathaniel  S.  White,  Canton ;  James  M.  Cod- 
man,  Brookline;  Edward  M.  Cary,  Milton;  Elijah  Tucker,  Canton. 

For  the  best  thoroughbred  Bull,  one  year  old  and  upwards,  of 
either  Jerse}^  Durham,  Devon,  A3'rshire,  Hereford,  Kerry,  or 
other  foreign  stock  —  in  each  class,  $10  ;  second  best,  $-5. 

For  the  best  Bull  Calf  under  one  year  old,  foreign  stock  —  $5  ; 
second  best,  S2. 

Cows. 

COMJiiTTEE.  — Jeremiah  W.  Gay,  Dedham ;  Aaron  Bacon,  Dover;  Ellis  Tucker,  Can- 
ton; Samuel  Cook, Milton;  Jesse Fenno, Canton;  Augustus  Lowell,  Brookline;  Charles 
F.  Howard,  Fo.xboro'. 

For  the  best  Cow,  three  j-ears  old  and  upwards,  of  foreign  stock, 
of  either  class,  each,  SlO  ;  second  best,  $5  ;  third  best,  §4. 

Grade,  SlO  ;  second  best,  $5  ;  third  best,  $4. 

For  the  best  Milch  Heifer,  less  than  three  years  old,  $4  ;  second 
best,  S2. 

Herds  of  Milch  Cows.  —  For  the  best  herd  of  Milch  Cows  — 
not  less  than  six  —  kept  on  any  farm  in  the  County,  and  exhibited 
at  the  Show,  regard  being  had  to  the  breed,  age  and  milking  prop- 
erties — first  premium  the  Wilder  Cup,  of  the  value  of  825  ;  sec- 
ond premium,  $12  ;  third  premium,  $8  ;  fourth  premium,  $6. 

Note.  —  No  Competitor  for  the  premiums  offered  for  herds  .shall  be  al- 
lowed to  offer  the  same  animals  for  any  premium  of  a  different  class. 


22 


Heifers. 

CoMinxTEE.  —  Edward  P.  Burgess,  Dedham;  Lemuel  Billings,  Quincy;  Solomon 
Flagg,  Needhara, 

For  the  best  Heifer,  two  years  old  and  under  three,  foreign 
stock,  of  either  class,  each,  $5  ;  second  best,  $4  ;  third  best,  $2. 

Grade  or  Native,  $5  ;  second  best,  $4  ;  third  best,  $2. 

For  the  best  Heifer,  one  year  old,  of  any  stock,  ^4  ;  second  best, 
$2. 

For  the  best  Heifer  Calf,  under  one  j^ear  old,  of  an}^  stock,  S4  ; 
second  best,  $2. 

"Working  Oxen,  Town  Teams  and  Steers. 

Committee.— Robert  Mansfield,  Needham ;  Henry  M,  Mack,  Dorchester;  John  Bat- 
telle,  Dover;  Charles  Hartshorn,  Walpole. 

For  the  best  yoke,  four  years  old  and  upwards,  $10;  second 
best,  $7  ;  third  best,  $4. 

For  the  largest  and  best  team,  of  not  less  than  ten  yokes  of  Oxen 
or  Steers,  from  any  city  or  town  in  the  County  —  first  premium, 
$12  ;  second  best,  $8. 

For  the  best  yoke  of  Steers,  well  broken,  three  years  old  and 
under  four,  $6  ;  second  best,  $4  ;  third  best,  $3. 

For  the  best  yoke  of  Steers,  well  broken,  two  years  old  and  un- 
der three,  $4  ;  second  best,  $3. 

Note.  — For  Oxen  or  Steers,  and  also  for  Herds  of  Milch  Cows,  bred 
and  raised  by  the  exhibitor,  twenty  per  cent  additional.  In  testing  the 
strength,  docility,  and  training  of  Working  Oxen,  the  load  shall  not  be 
less  than  2500  pounds  for  oxen  of  five  years  old  and  upwards;  and  not 
less  than  2000  pounds  for  oxen  under  five  years  old.  In  testing  the  char- 
acter of  Steers,  as  the  Committee  niay  direct,  special  regard  will  be  paid 
to  their  docility  and  proper  training. 

Fat  Cattle. 

Committee. —  A.  W.  Cheever,  Wreuthaiu;  John  Sias,  Milton;  Charles  Mackintosh, 
Needham. 

For  the  best  beef  animal  fattened  by  the  exhibitor,  within  the 
County,  regard  being  had  to  the  manner  and  expense  of  feed- 
ing—  of  which  a  written  statement  will  be  required  —  first  pre- 
mium, $8  ;  second  do.,  $6. 


23 
SWINE. 

CoMSUTTEE.  —  Samuel  B.  Xoyes,  Canton;  Thomas  B.  Griggs,  Brookline;  Henry 
Gouldiug,  Dover;  Solomon  Flagg,  Nee<lham;  J.  B.  Tilley,  Brookline. 

For  the  largest  and  best  collection  of  Swine  —  not  less  than  six 
hogs  in  number — first  premium,  $15  ;  second  do.,  SlO  ;  third  do., 
$7. 

Boars.  —  For  the  best  Boar,  not  less  than  six  months  old,  $6  ; 
second  best,  $4. 

Sows.  —  For  the  best  Sow,  not  less  than  six  months  old,  S6  ; 
second  best,  $4. 

Weaned  Pigs.  —  For  the  best  litter,  not  less  tlian  four  in  num- 
ber and  not  more  than  six  months  old,  $6  ;  second  best,  $4. 

Fat  Hogs  —  For  the  best  Fat  Hog,  regard  being  had  to  breed, 
age  and  feeding,  $10  ;  second  best,  §G. 

Note.  —  No  competitor  for  the  largest  collection  of  swine  will  be  al- 
lowed  to  offer  the  same  for  any  premium  of  a  cliflfereut  class. 

SHEEP. 

Committee.  —Charles Breck, Milton ;  John S.  Mackintosh,  West  Roxbury ;  Theodore 
Harding,  Medway. 

For  the  largest  and  best  lot  of  Sheep  —  not  less  than  six  in 
number  —  $10  ;  second  best,  $8. 

For  the  best  lot  of  Lambs  —  not  less  than  six  in  number  —  bred 
by  the  exhibitor,  $8  ;  second  best,  ^o. 

For  the  best  Ram  —  Cots  wold,  Leicester,  Oxford  Down,  or  South- 
down—  not  less  than  one  year  old,  §5  ;  second  best,  $3. 

POULTRY. 

Committee.  —Abel  F.  Stevens,  Xeedham;  Albert  IX.  Drake,  Stoughton;  J.  F.  Cow- 
ell,  Wrentham. 

Special. 

For  the  largest  and  best  collection  of  Gallinaceous  Fowls,  first 
premium  of  $15  ;  second  do.,  $10. 

For  the  best  collection  of  Water  Fowls,  first  premium,  $10; 
second  do.,  $5. 

For  the  best  trio  of  any  variety,  of  either  old  fowls  or  chickens, 
first  premium,  $3  ;  second  do.,  $2  ;  third  do.,  $1. 

For  the  best  pair  of  Turkeys,  first  i)remium,  $3  ;  second  do.,S2. 


21 


For  the  best  pair  of  Geese,  first  premium,  $3  ;  second  do.,  $2. 

For  the  best  pair  of  Ducks,  first  premium,  $B  ;  second  do.,  $2. 

For  the  best  collection  of  Pigeons,  first  premium,  S3  ;  second 
do.,  62. 

Ten  dollars  in  gratuities  may  be  awarded,  at  the  discretion  of 
the  Committee. 

Note.  — Poultry  must  be  entered  on  the  first  daj'of  ihe  Exhibition,  be- 
fore 12  o'clock, to  be  entitled  to  a  premium. 


DAIRY. 

Committee.— Milton  M.  Fisher,  Medwny ;  Henry  Grew,  Hyde  Park;  Lucius  Clapp, 
Stoughton;  Mrs.  George  Vose,  Milton;  Mrs.  William  R.  Mann,  Sharon;  Charles  H. 
Mansfield,  Needham. 

Butter.  —  For  the  best  produce  of  Butter,  on  any  farm  within 
the  County,  for  four  months,  from  tiie  20th  of  May  to  the  20th  of 
September  —  a  sample  of  not  less  than  ten  pounds  to  be  exhibited 
—  quantity  as  well  as  quality  to  be  taken  into  view, — first  pre- 
mium, $10  ;  second  do.,  $8  ;  third  do.,  So  ;  fourth  do.,  $4. 

Note.  It  will  be  seen  than  these  premiums  are  offered  for  the  best 
produce  on  the  Farms,  a  full  statement  of  which  will  be  required,  and  not 
simply  for  the  best  specimens  exhibited.  Each  lot  must  be  numbered,  but 
not  marked;  any  public  or  known  mark  must  be  completely  concealed, 
nor  must  the  competitors  be  present  at  the  examination. 

For  the  best  box  of  Butter  —  not  less  than  six  pounds  — first  pre- 
mium, $0  ;  second  do.,  S3  ;  third  do.,  S2. 

g^^^NoTE.  — Butter  must  be  presented  only  on  the  morning  of  the  sec- 
ond day  before  9  o'clock. 

Cheese. — For  the  best  lot  of  Cheese — not  less  than  twenty-five 
pounds — first  premium.  So  ;  second  do.,  $3  ;  third  do.,  S2. 

BREAD. 

Committee.  — .J.  White  Belcher,  Randolph;  Albert  B.  Balch,  Medfleld;  Elijah 
Tucker,  Milton  ;  Mrs.  A.  S.  Drake,  Sharon;  Mrs.  B.  F.  Radford,  Hyde  Park. 

For  the  best  loaf  of  Wheat  and  Indian,  of  not  less  than  two 
pounds  weight  —  first  premium  S3  ;  second  do.,  S2. 

For  the  best  loaf  made  of  Unbolted  AVheat,   which  has  been 


gro\vn  in  the  Count}-,  of  not  less  than  two  pounds  weight  —  first 
preraiuin,  S3  ;  second  do.,  S2. 

For  the  best  loaf  of  Rye  and  ludiari,  of  not  less  than  four  pounds 
weight  —  first  premium,  83  ;  second  do.,  62. 

For  the  best  loaf  of  Wheat  Bread,  of  not  less  than  two  pounds 
weight  —  first  premium,  ?3  ;  second  do.,  82. 

For  the  best  specimens  of  of  each  or  any  of  the  aforementioned 
kinds  of  bread,  made  by  any  young  woman  under  eighteen  years 
of  age,  an  additional  premium  of  twenty -five  per  cent. 

The  bread  presented  for  premium  mnst  be  made  on  the  first  day 
of  the  Kxhibiiion,  by  some  member  of  a  family,  in  whose  name  the 
entry  shall  be  made,  and  to  whom  the  premium  shall  be  awarded. 
The  bread  shall  be  made  without  the  use  of  saleratus  or  other  al- 
kaline substance,  and  made  in  the  family,  and  be  presented  onl}- 
on  the  second  day  of  the  Exhibition,  before  9  o'clock  in  the  morn- 
ing. Xo  name  or  mark  shall  be  put  on  the  loaves,  except  the 
number  of  the  entry  on  the  Committee's  Book. 

The  names  of  contributors  shall  not  be  known  to  the  Committee, 
and  no  person  shall  serve  on  the  same  if  any  member  of  his  family 
shall  be  a  competitor. 

HONEY. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Honey  in  the  Comb,  not  less  than  six 
pounds,  $2  ;  second  best,  $1. 


MAIS^UFACTURES. 

AGRICULTURAL  IMPLEMENTS. 

Committee.— William  Ames, 2d,  Dedham;  Ileni-y  Goulding,  Dover;  Horace  Guild, 
Canton. 

For  the  largest  and  best  collection.  Si 2  ;  second,  S6. 

For  any  new  or  improved  Plow,  which  on  trial  shall  be  found 
best  adapted  for  the  thorough  pulverization  of  old  plowed  land,  a 
premium  of  86. 

New  Inventions.  —  For  any  new  invention  of  decided  superiorit}- 
and  usefulness  to  the  farmer,  a  premium  or  gratuit3\  at  the  discre- 
tion of  the  Committee. 


26 

DOMESTIC  MANUFACTURES. 
Fancy  Articles. 

CosmiTTEE.— Mrs.  John  Vose,  Hyde  Park;  Mrs,  W.  T.  Thacher,  Hyde  Park;  Mrs. 
Jeese  Yose,  Milton. 

Including  Needlework,  Crochetwork,  Shelhvork,  Milliner}', 
Drawings,  Paintings,  &c. 

For  such  articles  in  this  department  as  may  be  deemed  worthy,  a 
sum  not  exceeding  seventy-five  dollars  shall  be  appropriated,  to  be 
paid  in  premiums  or  gratuities,  proportioned  to  the  cost  and  value 
of  the  article,  at  the  discretion  of  the  Committee. 

Note. — It  should  be  uuderstood  that  in  this  department  of  Ladies 
work  —  while  other  thinjis  will  receive  due  consideration  —  the  premiums 
ai'e  intendec*  solely  for  newly  made  articles  which  are  really  useful  or 
particularly  beautiful.  For  well  made  garments  of  any  kind;  for  stock- 
ing knitting  of  wool,  cotton  or  silk;  for  bonnet  and  cap  making;  for  all 
articles  for  children's  wear,  well  made  or  tastefully  embroidered;  for  neat 
and  thorough  mending,  patching  and  darning;  for  drawing,  designing,  or 
painting  in  oil  or  water  colors;  for  models  in  plaster,  wood  or  marble, 
&c. 

Any  article  well  and  tastefuly  wrought,  offered  by  children  under 
twelve  years  of  age,  will  receive  particular  attention. 

Manufactures  of  Straw. 

CoMsnTTEE.— A.  S.  Harding,  Medway;  J.  A.  Turner,  Medfleld;  Charles  C.  Sumner, 
Foxboro'. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Straw  Bonnets,  wholly  of  domestic 
manufacture,  $8  ;  second  best,  $5. 

For  the  best  specimens  of  Straw  Braid  of  domestic  straw,  not 
less  than  100  yards,  $5  ;  second  best,  $3. 

Manufactures  of  Cloth,  Flannels,  Hosiery,  &c. 

Committee.  —  Charles  H.  French,  Canton;  Naaman  B.  Wilmarth,  Walpole;  Luther 
Metcalf,  Medway;  Ezra  W.  Taft,  Dedham. 

Cotton  Cloth.  —  For  the  best  specimen  of  Cotton  Cloth,  of  any 
description,  not  less  than  twenty-eight  yards  in  quantity,  a  pre- 
mium or  gratuity,  at  the  discretion  of  the  Committee. 

Woolen  Cloth.  —  For  the  best  specimen  of  Woolen  Cloth,  of  any 
description,  not  less  than  twent}-  yards  in  quantity,  a  premium  or 
gratuity,  at  the  discretion  of  the  Committee. 

Cotton  and  Woolen  Mixed.  —  For  the  best  specimen  of  Cotton 
and  Woolen  Cloth,  of  any  description,  not  less  than  twenty  yards 


27 

in  quantity,  a  premium  or  gratuit}',  at  the  discretion  of  the  Com- 
mittee. 

Flannels.  —  For  the  best  specimens  of  Flannel,  not  less  than 
twenty  yards  in  quantity,  a  premium  or  gratuity,  at  the  discretion 
of  the  Committee. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Cotton  Flannel,  not  less  than  twenty 
yards  in  quantity,  a  premium  or  gratuity,  at  the  discretion  of  the 
Committee. 

For  the  best  pair  of  AVoolen  Blankets,  a  premium  or  gratuity,  at 
the  discretion  of  the  Committee. 

Hosiery,  &c. —  For  the  best  specimen  of  Woolen  Hose,  a  premi- 
um of  SI. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Woolen  Half  Hose,  a  premium  of  50 
cents. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Cotton  Hose,  a  premium  of  50  cents. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Cotton  Half  Hose,  a  premium  of  25 
cents. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Worsted  Hose,  a  premium  of  $1. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Worsted  Half  Hose,  a  premium  of  50 
(;ents. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Sewing  Silk,  not  less  than  one  pound,  a 
premium  of  $2. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Knitting  Yarn,  not  less  than  one  pound, 
a  premium  of  $1. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Spool  Thread,  not  less  than  one  pound, 
a  premium  of  $1. 

For  the  best  Fleece  of  Wool,  a  premium  of  $1. 

For  the  best  dozen  seamless  Grain  Bags,  a  premium  of  61. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  neat  and  thorough  mending,  patching  or 
darning  of  garments,  hose,  &c.,  a  premium  of  81. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  covered  bonnet  wire,  $3. 

CouKTERFANES.  —  I  or  tlic  bost  Couutcrpauc  —  regard  being  had 
to  the  quality  aud  expense  of  materials  —  first  premium, $3;  sec- 
ond do.,  §2. 

Carpetings,  Rugs  and  Floor  Clotii. 

For  the  best  "Common"   Ingrain  2-ply  Carpeting. 
u         u         ''Fine"  "  "  " 

"         "Superfine"     "  "  " 

"         "         "Common,"   "Fine"  or   "Superfine"  Ingrain  3-ply 
Carpeting. 


28 

Foi'  the  best  Brussels  Floor  Carpeling. 

"         "         Tapeshy     "  " 

"         "         Velvet  Carpeting. 
For  each  of  these  descriptions  of  Carpeting,  a   premium  or   the 
Society's  diploma,  at  the  discretion  of  the  Committee. 

Note. — Ingrain  3-ply  Carpeting  will  be  judged  by  the  comparative 
merits  of  pieces  of  similar  weight;  or  disregarding  weight,  by  the  quality 
of  color,  the  taste  of  shading,  and  evenness  in  spinning  and  weaving. 

For  the  best  piece  of  Stair  Carpeting,  the  Society's  diploma. 
For  the  best  Hearth  Rug,  the  Society's  diploma. 
For  the  best  specimen  of  painted  Floor  Cloth,  a  premium  or  the 
Society's  diploma,  at  the  discretion  of  the  Committee. 

Note.  —  Any  articles  in  either  of  the  foregoing  departments,  which 
sliall  have  been  manufactured  in  the  family  of  the  person  presenting  it, 
will  receive  the  particular  consideration  of  the  Committee,  and,  if  worthy, 
a  suitable  premium. 

Glass,  Stone,  Earthen,  Wooden  and  Iron  Ware. 

CoMJriTTEE.— Frank  M.  Ames,  Canton;  Alexander  Dickson,  West Roxbury;  Curtis 
G.  Morse,  Norwood;  Manly  W.  Cain,  Dorchester. 

Glass,  Stone,  Earthen,  AND  Wooden  Ware.  —  For  the  finest 
collection  and  best  specimen  of  articles  in  each  of  these  depart- 
ments, a  premium  or  gratuity,  at  the  discretion  of  the  Committee. 

Brass,  Copper,  Tin,  Iron  and  Brittannia  Ware.  —  For  the 
finest  collection  and  best  specimen  of  articles  in  each  of  these  de- 
partments, a  premium  or  gratuity,  at  the  discretion  of  the  Com- 
mittee. 

Cabinet  Work.  —  For  the  best  specimen  of  Cabinet  Work,  a 
premium  or  the  Society's  diploma. 

Iron  Fencing,  Gates  and  Posts.  —  For  the  best  specimen  of 
each  —  regard  being  had  to  cost  and  utility,  as  well  as  ornament — a 
premium  or  gratuity,  at  the  discretion  of  the  Committee. 

Stoves.  —  For  the  best  Farmer's  Cauldron  Stove  ; 
"  "  "         Cooking         " 

"  "  "         Parlor  " 

— a  premium  of  $2  each. 

Horse  and  Ox  Shoes. —  For  the  best  set  of  Horse  and  Ox  Shoes, 
a  premium  of  $1. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Horse  Shoes,  for  meadoiv  lands,  a 
premium  of  SI. 


$■2 

00 

3 

00 

2 

GO 

2 

00 

1 

00 

1 

00 

1 

00 

29 

Leather,  axd  Articles  Manufactured  Therefrom,  India   Rub- 
ber Goods.,  t&c. 

Committee.— John   Mann,  Walpole;    Jonathan   R.    Gay,  Stoughton;  P.  H.  Ba- 
ker, Sharon. 

Ikdia  Rubber  Goods.  — For  the  finest  collection  of  India  Rub- 
ber goods,  a  premium  or  gratuity,  at  the  discretion  ot  the  Com- 
mittee 

Brushes,  Combs,  Hats,  Caps  and  Gloves. —  For  the  finest  col- 
lection and  best  specimen  of  each  of  these  articles,  a  premium  or 
gratuitj',  at  the  discretion  of  the  Commitee. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Thick  lioots,  a  premium  of 
"         ''  "  Calfskia,  '' 

"         "  "  Thin  Boots,  other 

than  Calfskin, " 
"         •'  "  Kipskin,  " 

"         "  "  Thick  Brogans,      " 

'•         "  "  Fine  Brogans,       " 

"         "  "  Ladies'  Boots,       "• 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Upper  or  Sole  Leather,  or  Morocco,  a 
premium  or  gratuity,  each,  at  the  discretion  of  the  Committee. 
For  the  best  single  Carriage  Harness  ; 
"         "        double         "  " 

"         "        Cart  Harness  —  a  premium  or  gratuity,  each,  at  the 
discretion  of  the  Committee 

For  the  best  Riding  Bridle,  a  premium  of  .  $1  00 

Saddle,  "  .     2  00 

"  "  "   Carriage  or  Cart  Whip,  a  premium  of  .     1  00 

Carriages,  Wagons,  Carts,  «S:c. 

Committee  —  George  K.  Gannett,  Milton ;  Sauford  Carroll,  Dedham ;  Joseph  E.  Fiske, 
Needham. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Family  Carriages,  for  one  horse  or  two 
horses. 

For  the  best  Covered  Wagon  ; 
"         "         Open 
"         "         Farm  " 

"         "  "     Cart; 

•'        "  "     Wheelbarrow  —  either  a  premium   or   gratu- 

ity, at  the  discretion  of  the  Committee. 


30 

Jellies,  Preserves,  Pickles,  Ketchup,  &c. 

CojfjiiTTEE— Mrs.  George  Vose,  Milton ;  Mrs.  Elizabetli  F.  Wilmarth,  Walpole;  Mrs. 
James  Mackintosh,  Needham ;  Mrs.  Massenna  Southworth,  Stoughton , 

For  the  finest  collection  and  best  specimen  of  each,  made  of 
articles  of  domestic  growth,  first  premium,  $5  ;  second,  $3  ;  third, 

$2. 

Canned  Fruits  and  Vegetables. —  For  the  finest  collection  and 
best  specimens  of  each,  made  of  articles  of  domestic  growth,  first 
premium,  $5  ;  second,  $3  ;  third,  $2, 

Note. —  It  is  to  be  understood  that  all  articles  presented  for  premium, 
in  each  of  the  foregoing  departments,  except  Agricultural  Implements^ 
shall  have  been  manufactured  or  produced  within  the  County,  and  by  the 
person  presenting  them.  Also,  that  in  every  case,  the  Examining  Com- 
mittee shall  have  the  right  to  substitute  the  Society's  diploma  for  a  pre- 
mium or  gratuity,  or  to  give  it  where  no  premium  or  gratuity  has  been 
offered,  at  their  discretion. 

All  discretionary  premiums  or  gratuities  shall  be  proportioned  to  the 
actual  value  and  utility  of  the  articles. 

Articles  in  either  of  the  above  departments,  contributed  to  the  Exhibi- 
tion by  persons  not  resident  in  the  County,  shall  receive  suitable  attention 
from  the  Committee,  and,  if  worthy,  be  awarded  the  Society's  diploma. 

CABINETS  OF   BIRDS  AND   INSECTS. 

Committee.— A.  W.  Cheever,  Wrentham;  Edward  Howe,  West  Roxbury;  A.  F. 
Stevens,  Needham. 

For  the  largest  and  best  collection  of  Insects  found  within  the 
County,  beneficial  or  injurious  to  vegetation,  properly  arranged 
and  classified,  to  be  exhibited  on  the  Society's  tables,  at  the  An- 
nual Exhibition,  first  premium,  $5  ;  second  best,  $3  ;  third  best,  $1. 

For  the  largest  and  best  collection  of  Birds  found  within  the 
County,  beneficial  or  injurious  to  vegetation,  properly  arranged 
and  classified,  to  be  exhibited  on  the  Society's  tables,  at  the  An- 
nual Exhibition,  first  premium,  $5  ;  second  best,  $3  ;  third  best,  $1. 

AGRICULTURAL  LABORERS. 

For  a  certificate  —  signed  by  his  employer,  and  countersigned  b}' 
any  two  of  the  Trustees  residing  nearest  to  the  applicant  —  of  the 
superior  qualifications  of  any  man  or  youth,  in  the  emplo3anent  of 
any  member  of  the  Society  for  a  period  next  preceding,  of  not  less 
than  two  years,  attesting  the  industry,  integrity,  respectful  de- 
maenor  and  general  good  habits,  during  the  time,  of  the  bearer  of 


31 

such  certificate,  a  premium  of  membership  of  the   Society   and  a 
diploma. 

AGRICULTURAL  ESSAYS. 

Committee.— Henry  S.  Russell,  Milton;  Marshall  P.  Wilder,  Dorchester;  Charles 
C.  Sewdl,  Medfield;  Henry  O.  Hildreth,  Dedham;  Albert  K.  Teele,  Milton;  Theodore 
Lymau,  Brookline. 

For  the  best  Report  of  Committees  which  recommend  the  award 
of  premiums.     First  premium,  S8  ;  second,  $6  ;  third,  S4. 

For  the  best  Essay  on  tlie  relative  importance  and  vahie,  as 
sources  of  profit,  of  the  various  grasses,  or  cereal,  fruit  or  vegeta- 
ble crops,  a  premium  not  exceeding  $25. 

For  the  best  Essay  on  the  relative  importance  and  value,  as 
sources  of  profit,  of  the  breeding  and  raising  of  the  different  classes 
of  farm  stock,  a  premium  not  exceeding  825. 

For  the  best  Essa}'  on  the  fattening  of  cattle,  swine  or  sheep, 
detailing  the  process  and  expense  of  the  same,  a  premium  not  ex- 
ceeding §25. 

Forest  Trees.  —  For  the  best  Essay  on  the  raising  and  cultiva- 
tion of  Forest  Trees,  a  premium  not  exceeding  $25. 

Insects. — For  the  best  Essay  on  the  destruction  of  Insects  inju- 
rious to  vegetation,  such  as  CurcuUo,  Borer,  Canker-Worm,  Cater- 
pillar, Cut-Worm,  Squash-Bug,  Striped-Bug,  Rose-Bug,  etc.,  etc.,  a 
premium  not  exceeding  $25. 

Preservation  of  Winter  Fruit. — For  the  best  Essaj'  on  the 
preservation  of  Apples  and  other  Winter  Fruits,  a  premium  not 
exceeding  S25. 

Preservation  of  Vegetables.  —  For  the  best  Essay  on  the 
preservation  of  Vegetables,  a  premium  not  exceeding  825. 

Agricultural  Education. — For  the  best  Essay  on  Argicultural 
Education,  a  premium  not  exceeding  $25. 

Farm  Accounts. — For  the  best  Essay  on  a  system  of  Farm  Ac- 
counts, a  premium  not  exceeding  825. 

For  the  best  Essay  on  Domestic  Poultry,  a  premium  not  exceed- 
ing 825. 

For  the  best  Essa}'  on  Fences  for  Farms,  uniting  economj', 
strength  and  appearance,  a  premium  not  exceeding  825. 

For  the  be^t  Essay  on  the  Extermination  of  Weeds  and  Plants, 
destructive  to  crops,  a  premium  not  exceeding  825. 

For  the  best  Essay  on  the  Preservation  and  Application  of 
Liquid  Manure,  a  premium  not  exceeding  825. 


32 

For  the  best  Essay  on  the  introduction  of  new  Fruits,  or  of  new 
articles  of  Field  Culture,  a  premium  not  exceeding  $25. 

For  the  best  Essay  on  the  value  and  application  of  Phosphate  of 
Lime,  or  any  fertilizer  of  the  soil,  a  premium  not  exceeding  $25. 

For  the  best  Essa^^  on  Bees  and  Structure  of  Hives,  with  partic- 
ular reference  to  feeding  Bees  and  guarding  against  the  spoliation 
of  the  Bee  Moth,  a  premium  not  exceeding  $25. 

For  the  best  plan  for  a  Barn  and  Barn3'ard,  with  regard  to  the 
keeping  of  the  Hay,  the  comfox-t  of  the  Cattle,  the  ease  and  con- 
venience of  tending  them,  and  the  making  and  preserving  the 
Manure,  a  premium  not  exceeding  $25. 

These  premiums  will  not  be  awarded  unless  the  Essays  offered 
shall,  in  the  judgment  of  the  Committee  appointed  to  decide  upon 
them,  be  deemed  worthy  of  an  award,  without  reference  to  their 
comparative  merit. 

FARM    BUILDINGS. 

For  the  best  planned  house  and  out-buildings — regard  being  had 
to  the  cost  and  economy  of  labor — the  house  to  be  warm,  well 
lighted  and  ventilated,  with  a  cellar  protected  from  frost  and  ver- 
min, and  the  whole  not  to  cost  over  $2500 — to  be  examined  bv  the 
Supervisory  Committee — a  premium  to  be  adjudged  by  said  Com- 
mittee. 


TRANSACTIONS 


Norfolk  Agricultural  Society 


1874. 


PUBLISHED    BY    THE    SOCIETY. 


CONTENTS. 


PAGE. 

Address,  by  John  Quincy  Adams, 5 

Report  of  the  President  and  Secretary 15 

on  Horses, jg 

on  Races, jg 

on  Rural  Sports, 2g 

on  Plowing, jg 

on  Working  Oxen, 19 

on  Fat  Cattle, jg 

on  Bulls, jg 

on  Cows, 20 

on  Heifers, 20 

on  Poultry, 21 

on  Swine, 23 

on  Pears, 28 

on  Apples 29 

on  Grapes  and  other  Fruits, 29 

on  Flowers, 3q 

on  Vegetables 31 

on  Bread, 33 

on  Dairy, 33 

on  Jellies,  Pickles,  Preserves,  &c. , 34, 

on  Seeds, 34. 

on  Straw  Manufactures, 34 

on  Manufactures  of  Cloth,  Hosiery,  &c 34 

on  Manufactures 35 

on  Leather  Work, 35 

on  Carriages,  Wagons,  &c., 36 

on  Ladies'  Work 3G 

on  Cabinets  of  Birds,  Insects,  &c., 37 

Recapitulation  of  Premiums 38 

Report  of  the  Treasurer, 41 

Proceedings  of  the  Twenty-Si.\th  Anniversary, 42 

Officers  of  the  Society, 45 

Names  of  Members 48 


ADDRESS. 


BY  JOHN  QUINCY  ADAMS,  OF  QUINCY. 


Ladies  and  Gentlemen,  —  When  your  admirable  presi- 
dent asked  me  to  address  you,  I  confess  to  having  been 
somewhat  alarmed.  My  strongest  impression  about  agricul- 
ture in  my  vicinity  has  been  that  it  was  an  expensive  luxury. 
I  felt  that  I  had  nothing  to  say  which  could  profitably  occupy 
your  time  ;  but  it  did  occur  to  me,  I  must  say,  that  if  I  could 
not  teach  I  might  certainly  learn.  If  I  was  unable  to  offer 
valuable  advice  to  the  practical  farmers  I  should  meet  here, 
yet  they  might  have  a  plenty  for  me.  At  least,  like  a  true 
Yankee,  I  could  ask  questions.  Now  my  question  is  this. 
How  are  you  to  farm  it  profitably,  close  about  the  city  here, 
say  within  ten  miles  of  City  Hall  ?  It  is  twenty-five  years 
since  this  society  was  incorporated,  and  in  that  small  space  of 
time  the  change  of  circumstances  has  been  great.  The 
answer  to  my  question  was  comparatively  easy  then,  but 
every  year  seems  to  me  to  make  it  more  difficult.  Now  I 
want  some  assistance  on  this  point.  I  have,  in  fact,  very 
urgent  reasons  of  my  own  for  wishing  to  get  a  satisfactory 
reply  to  my  question.  I  carry  on  just  such  a  farm  ;  but  to 
show  that  I  am  ready  to  do  my  part,  I  will,  if  you  like,  Yankee 
fashion,  make  my  guess  at  it. 

Bearing  in  mind,  if  you  please,  then,  that  it  is  only  my 
guess  ;  and  taking  fair  warning,  besides,  at  the  outset,  that  I 
am  not  talking  to  my  friends  who  cultivate  their  lands  as  an 
amusement,  or  enjoy  it  as  a  luxury,  nor  to  those  who  turn  to 
the  land  as  a  mere  make-shift  to  eke  out  some  trade  ;  and 
especially  that  I  do  not  refer  to  gentlemen  who  buy  and  hold 


6 

large  tracts  of  farming  lands  for  a  speculation  and  not  to 
farm  —  bear  with  me  as  I  hasten  to  my  subject.  Of  course  I 
fully  appreciate  that  these  and  many  other  reasons  for  the 
application  of  labor  to  land  may  be  very  excellent,  and  yet  not 
come  within  my  scope.  I  wish  you  only  to  assume  with  me 
that  we  have  a  farmer  who  makes  farming  his  business,  and 
who,  having  a  certain  capital  to  invest,  selects  land  within 
ten  miles  of  the  City  Hall,  to  farm,  with  a  view  solely  to  get 
from  the  land  and  his  capital  and  labor  the  usual  return 
earned  by  an  equal  capital  and  like  industry  in  other  invest- 
ments in  this  vicinity.  How  can  he  manage  it  ?  What  new 
elements  have  made  this  problem  a  substantially  new  one 
since  this  society  was  founded  .'' 

Twenty-five  years  ago  Boston,  as  many  of  us  gentlemen 
can  very  well  remember,  was  a  thriving  little  city,  lying  snug 
in  a  small  and  compact  territory  and  surrounded  on  the  side 
of  Norfolk  at  least  by  tracts  of  sparsely  inhabited  land,  which 
were  in  great  part  occupied  by  regular  old-fashioned  farms. 
Even  Roxbury  in  those  days  might  almost  have  been  called 
an  agricultural  region.  For  ten  years  later  the  larger  part  of 
Dorchester  was  actually  farming  land.  Within  ten  years 
West  Roxbury  rejoiced  in  one  hundred  and  eight  (  io8  ) 
farms,  which  embraced  seven  thousand  acres  of  her  charming 
territory.  These  places,  to  be  sure,  are  now  the  city  ;  but  it 
is  not  that  alone  which  has  cooled  their  agricultural  ardor. 
They  ceased  to  be  agricultural  not  so  much  because  they 
were  devoured,  as  because  they  were  transfigured.  Of  course 
I  speak  generally.  Market  gardening,  floriculture,  horticul- 
ture, and  some  milk-farming  doubtless  still  survive,  and  pos- 
sibly a  general  farm  or  two  in  some  remoter  district ;  but  I 
fancy  that  farming  as  a  profitable  pursuit  is  pretty  well 
finished  in  most  of  that  region.  So  it  is,  I  suppose,  in  our 
faithful  Brookline,  which  still  holds  fast  to  her  old  county 
friends.  For  a  multitude  of  people,  whose  business  confined 
them  from  morning  till  night  in  the  city,  found  it  both  pleasant 
and  economical  to  have  homes  in  the  country.  They  worked 
all  day  in  the  noise  of  Boston  streets,  but  they  were  glad  at 


night  to  seek  the  quiet  of  the  neighboring  villages.  They  over- 
ran all  the  region  round  about.  Beyond  our  county  they  spread 
over  Brighton,  Cambridge,  Charlestown,  and  indeed  a  great 
part  of  this  ten  mile  metropolitan  circuit.  From  about 
200,000,  in  1850,  the  population  of  Boston  and  these  places 
have  swelled,  in  1870,  to  more  than  400,000  souls,  and  was 
still  growing  faster  than  ever.  An  inevitable  consequence  of 
this  rapid  influx  of  people  was  an  enormous  demand  for  home- 
steads. The  prices  of  convenient  house  lots  rose  with  a  rush. 
Suburban  farms  which  in  1850  were  dear  at  one  hun- 
dred dollars  an  acre,  in  1870  were  cheap  at  a  thousand.  The 
fortunes  of  the  lucky  farmers  were  made,  —  provided  they 
ceased  to  farm.  Their  ancient  means  of  livelihood  had  be- 
come an  expensive  amusement.  Their  crops  did  not  pay  the 
taxes,  and  the  more  produce  a  man  raised  the  poorer  he 
became. 

So,  too,  wherever  a  canal  was  opened  for  the  easy  flow  of 
this  flood  of  surplus  citizens  to  more  remote  and  less  expen- 
sive seats,  the  same  process  was  repeated,  and  the  same 
phenomena  were  seen.  Instances  are  familiar  to  all  of  you,  and 
are  manifest  in  most  of  the  towns  around  us.  Look,  for  in- 
stance, at  Hyde  Park  yonder  ;  why,  when  I  was  a  young 
man,  which  I  assure  you  was  but  a  very  few  years  ago,  and 
first  began  to  drive  over  the  road  to  court  at  Dedham,  all 
that  territory  was  a  wide  stretch  of  pleasant  farming  land, 
supporting  a  good  many  old  apple  trees,  and  affording  pas- 
ture to  some  cows  and  horses  for  a  few  excellent  people. 
Now  I  drive  through  a  smart  little  city,  which  seems  to 
me  to  'double  its  people  once  a  year  at  least  ;  but  the  cows 
are  gone.  And  as  to  our  old  associate,  Dorchester,  since  her 
annexation,  a  careful  observation  would  seem  to  indicate  that 
the  crop  which  flourishes  best  upon  her  city  soil  is  a  post  hold- 
ing a  board,  upon  which  is  inscribed,  "  This  land  for  sale  in 
house  lots  ;  apply  to  John  Brown,  State  street."  But  I  surely 
need  not  dwell  upon  a  fact  so  patent  as  that  it  has  generally 
proved  more  profitable  to  sell  your  farm  than  to  work  it  in  a 
*'bed-roon  town."     Indeed,  how  can  the  man  who    pav.«;   citv 


a 


8 

rates  of  taxation  upon  almost  a  city  valuation  of  his  barren 
hill-side,  compete  with  him  whose  best  arable  land  pays  a 
tax  not  exceeding  one  dollar  to  the  acre  ?  How  can  yon  pas- 
ture your  cows  upon  land  valued  and  taxed  by  the  foot? 
What  general  crop  so  profitable  as  a  dwelling-house  ?  Indeed, 
we  may  almost  state  it  as  an  axiom  that  when  land  comes 
to  be  sold  off  the  principal  streets  of  a  village  by  the  foot, 
the  day  of  general  farming  is  done  in  that  vicinity.  In  a 
word,  then,  the  land  in  a  considerable  part  of  Norfolk  Coun- 
ty has  become  so  much  more  valuable  for  cutting  into  small 
homesteads  than  for  use  in  the  broad  fields  and  wide  ran- 
ges, required  for  what  I  call,  for  want  of  a  better  name, 
the  old,  general,  ample-skirted  farming,  that  no  one,  solely 
as  matter  of  gain,  cares  to  undertake  it. 

The  old,  familiar,  homely  ways,  familiar  to  our  boyish  rec- 
ollections, may,  to  be  sure,  linger  here  and  there  in  some  se- 
cluded or  favorable  nooks  ;  for  farming  is  a  good  conservative 
pursuit,  but  we  of  the  metropolitan  circle,  if  I  may  be  per- 
mitted the  term,  must  soon  go  further  a-field  to  refresh  the 
rustic  reminiscences  of  those  pleasant  summers  when  we  were 
young.  For  in  the  old-fashioned  methods  there  seemed,  at 
least,  to  dwell  something  of  sweetness  and  poetry  which  lends 
a   certain    touch    of    sentiment  even    to   grave    agricultural 

addresses* 

You  are  all  familiar  with  the  picture,  —  its  golden  lights,  — 
its  cool,  gray  shadows,  —  its  mellow,  tender  tones.  You  see 
the  old  brown  farm-house,  overshadowed  by  the  giant  elms  in 
the  door-yard  ;  you  catch  a  delicious  glimpse  of  the  cool,  shady 
orchard  behind  it,  —  there  yonder  is  the  great  barn,  with  its 
red  doors,  its  dusty,  cob-webbed  beams,  and  deep  hay-mows, 
and  the  swallows  flittering  and  twittering  back  and  forth. 
There,  too,  is  the  rocky  hill-side  pasture,  with  its  patches  of 
short  velvet  turf,  and  the  calm,  contented  cows  winking  and 
chewing  lazily  in  the  shade,  or  dozing  peacefully  as  they  stand 
mid-leg  deep  in  the  brook,  taking  their  noon-tide  rest.  How 
familiar  it  all  is  to  us,  and  how  pleasant ;  but  it  is  not  busi- 
ness.    The  fact  is  that  the  poetry  and  the  charms,  the  fascina- 


9 

tions  and  the  loveliness,  arc  bccominc^  too  expensive  around 
us  here  for  any  but  wealthy  men  to  indulge  in. 

Frankly  turning  our  back,  then,  upon  our  old  familiar 
friend,  the  farmer  of  the  past,  let  us  turn  to  greet  the  coming 
man  for  our  purpose, —  the  farmer  of  the  future. 

For  certainly  this  vast  city  population  at  our  doors,  if  it 
occupies  the  land,  creates,  too,  an  enormous  daily  demand  for 
certain  products  of  the  land.  If  the  ground  is  enhanced  in 
value,  so  are  the  vegetables  which  grow  on  it  sold  to  more  ad- 
vantage. To  be  sure,  the  far  greater  part  of  the  agricultural 
produce  consumed  in  the  city  can  be  supplied  more  cheaply 
from  a  distance.  But  experience  seems  to  show  that  there  are 
some  necessary  luxuries,  if  you  will  pardon  the  phrase,  which 
are  so  much  more  prized  fresh  froni  the  farm-wagon  than  from 
the  car,  that  they  can  bear  the  tax  incident  to  growing  within 
an  easy  drive  of  the  city.  Take  the  professional  florist,  for'one 
case.  The  market  gardeners,  especially  the  hot-bed  gardeners, 
are  another.  Both  of  them  seem  to  derive  a  sufficient  advantage 
from  being  within  wagon-reach  of  the  markets,  to  enable  them 
to  compete  with  the  rail-borne  article.  Many  early  vegetables, 
for  instance,  are  almost  as  rapidly  spoiled  by  handling  and 
keeping  as  most  fish  are.  Like  oysters,  they  are  best  eaten 
alive.  One  wants  to  stretch  out  one's  hands,  as  it  were,  and 
pluck  them  crisp  and  tender  from  the  earth.  But  this  near- 
ness means  dear  land,  high  taxes,  and  a  big  fi.xed  capital  to 
pay  a  profit  on.  And  the  only  way  to  meet  the  difficulty  is 
to  use  but  little  land.  We  must  raise  the  largest  possible 
crop  on  the  smallest  possible  space.  For  this  only  one  thing 
is  absolutely  necessary,  a  cheap  and  plentiful  supply  of  stimu- 
lating dressing.  Where  shall  we  get  it .?  Why.  out  of  Bos- 
ton harbor,  to  be  sure.  Are  we  not  yearly  throwing  half  a 
million  of  dollar's  worth  of  the  very  thing  our  market-garden- 
ers most  need,  into  its  bosom  }  The  ocean,  which  stretches 
frequent  arms  through  this  dense  population,  occupying  the 
space  swept  by  a  radius  of  ten  miles  from  the  State  House,  is 
made  a  nuisance  and  dangerous  sewer  by  the  foul  and  waste- 
ful uses  to  which  it  is  subjected  in  this  regard.     P.nt  the  diffi- 


10 

culty  of  thus  disposing  of  the  sewac^e  of  the  multitude  des- 
tined to  dwell  in  all  this  basin,  is  fast  making  imperative  some 
more  sensible  and  systematic  plan. 

Not  much  longer  will  a  cleanly  and  a  thrifty  people  suffer 
what  Dr.  Bowditch  most  justly  terms: — "  Such  wide-spread 
recklessness  of  spend*-thrift  prodigality  as  this  throwing  away 
of  such  vast  amounts  of  excellent  manure  is."  Then  this 
wonderfully  effective  servant  will  be  enlisted  in  the  service  of 
the  market-gardeners,  and  the  whole  "  garden  sauce  "  of  the 
city  will  be  manufactured,  as  it  were,  on  the  cheapest  possible 
terms  from  the  refuse  which  is  now  thrown  away  as  an  un- 
mangeable  nuisance.  Then  consider  another  important  pro- 
duct,— milk.  The  farmer  of  the  future,  hereabouts,  will  be 
forced  to  regard  similar  circumstances  if  he  hopes  to  live  by 
the  milk  business.  To  be  sure,  his  market  will  be  handy,  and 
his  customers  many,  but  where  can  he  pasture  his  cows  .''  On 
land  which  is  assessed  at  one  thousand  dollars  per  acre,  and 
taxed  fifteen  or  twenty  dollars  a  year  }  I  should  like  to  see 
him  compete  with  railroad  milk  upon  those  terms.  No, — he 
must  feed  scientifically.  Just  reversing  the  system  to  which 
he  has  been  accustomed,  he  must  keep  his  cows  in  the  barn 
all  summer  ;  cut  and  eat  his  grass  crop  before  it  is  ripe,  and 
buy  every  pound  of  hay  he  feeds  in  winter.  His  most  telling 
economy  will  be  retrenchment  of  land,  and  his  most  essential 
saving  a  reduction  of  rent.  The  cost  of  his  hay-fields  would 
render  it  far  less  costly  to  buy  than  to  make  his  hay. 

For  the  same  reason,  he  will  forbear  to  breed  his  own  stock. 
The  wide  ranges  and  breezy  pasture  of  a  stock-farm  would 
make  his  own  cows  too  expensive  for  profit.  As  fast  as  cows 
cease  to  average  eight  or  nine  quarts  per  day  yearly,  they  must 
be  fatted  and  sold,  to  be  replaced  by  fresh  ones.  But,  as  I 
have  tried  to  recall  the  traditional  farm  of  the  past,  let  me 
also  endeavor  to  sketch  the  impending  farm  of  our 
future. 

And  first  of  all  you  must  assume  with  me  that  our  farmer 
has  obtained  a  compact  tract  of  land,  of  about  fifty  or  sixty 
acres  of  good,  plain,  arable  land,  within  ten  miles,  by  the  high- 


11 

way,  from  City  Hall.  That  neither  fences,  hedges,  ditches 
nor  trees  interrupt  the  free  course  of  the  plough  from  one 
bounding  wall  to  the  other.  It  is  within  easy  reach  of  a  rail- 
road, by  means  of  a  short  track  on  one  side,  and  has  for  a 
neighbor  on  the  other,  a  brewery,  cheaply  accessible  by  a  con- 
venient tram-way.  Then  our  "enterprising  proprietor,"  as 
the  newspaper  will  call  him,  goes  about  building. 

At  the  most  easily  accessible  spot  near  the  front  and  centre 
of  his  lot  he  erects  a  plain  brick  factory,  four  or  five  stories  in 
height,  and  covering  an  area  sufficient  to  accommodate  easily 
about  two  hundred  cows  and  twenty  horses  upon  a  single 
floor.  With  this  building  there  will  connect  on  the  one  hand 
a  boiler-house  and  engine-room  ;  upon  the  other,  refrigerating- 
room,  can-rooms,  wagon-shed,  a  counting-house,  and  all  the 
paraphernalia  necessary  for  the  handling  and  delivery  of  milk. 
Close  by  a  second  brick  house  of  less  size  will  serve  for  a 
dwelling  for  the  owner  or  manager  and  his  foreman,  and  as  a 
boarding-house  for  his  drivers,  clerk,  and  regular  farm-hands. 
The  space  around  the  barn  not  required  for  these  buildings 
will  be  divided  into  large  yards,  provided  with  sheds  and 
other  suitable  shelter  from  sun  or  storm,  and  strewn  with 
litter  where  the  stock  may  take  their  daily  constitutional 
promenade  in  all  weathers.  But  let  us  walk  into  the  big 
barn  and  look  at  our  friend's  cows.  They  will  stand  one 
story,  or  say  half  a  story,  from  the  ground.  Beneath  them  a 
well-lighted,  dry  hall,  half  basement  and  half  cellar,  will  be 
carefully  prepared  for  the  reception,  "preservation  and  prepara- 
tion of  the  mainspring,  of  our  machine,  manure.  We  find  the 
two  hundred  cows  arranged  in  rows  facing  each  other,  with 
tram-ways  or  rails  for  fodder-cars  in  front  of  them.  Flowing 
water  of  the  purest  and  freshest  is  carried  within  their  reach, 
and  spouts  and  sacks  from  above  lead  down  to  each  feed- 
trough.  But  it  is  time  to  go  up  stairs.  There  we  find  great 
vats  for  steaming  all  the  hay  after  it  has  been  chopped  fine 
by  the  machines  over  head,  large  troughs  for  mixing  the 
steamed  hay  with  meal  or  shorts  from  vast  bins,  in  which 
they  are  stored,  and  monstrous  receptacles  for  the  chopped 


12 

turnips,  beets,  cabbages,  etc.,  into  which  they  tumble  from  the 
busy  machines  above.  If  we  mount  up  stairs  further  we 
shall  find  the  chopping  machines  already  referred  to  in  full 
activity,  driven  by  shafting  turned  by  the  engine  below.  The 
space  not  required  for  their  use,  and  the  lots  above,  are  de- 
voted to  the  storage  of  hay  and  roots.  All  the  hoisting, 
pumping,  steaming  and  moving  of  food  is  done  by  the  engine. 
A  side-track  from  the  railroad  delivers  all  straw,  hay,  grain  or 
meal  beneath  the  steam  crane.  The  most  perfect  ventilation 
is  secured  by  a  fan  driven  by  the  same  power.  In  a  word, 
every  appliance  which  ingenuity  can  suggest,  and  every  de- 
vice which  skill  can  invent  for  the  saving  of  labor  and  econ- 
omy of  force,  will  be  impressed  into  the  service.  Neither 
will  any  pains  be  spared  to  ensure  the  health  and  happiness 
of  the  "  milky  mothers."  It  is  true  that  to  pasture  they  will 
never  again  return  ;  but  then  they  will  be  assiduously  served 
at  their  stalls  with  all  the  most  varied,  succulent  and  nourish- 
ing food  "  which  the  market  affords  "  or  the  season  will  sup- 
ply. From  the  first  moment  that  the  returning  sun  can  coax 
out  the  earliest  oats  or  rye  from  the  rich  hollow  of  the  sun- 
niest southern  slope,  until  the  savage  frost  cuts  down  even 
the  hardiest  cabbage,  they  will  be  feasted  upon  the  most  ten- 
der and  delicious  fresh  vegetables.  The  best  of  the  grain, 
and  grasses  juicy  and  green,  turnips,  beets,  potatoes,  and  I 
know  not  what  other  kinds  of  luxurious  living,  will  be  theirs. 
But  you  ask,  where  is  all  this  green  stuff"  to  come  from  ? 
Surely,  not  from  the  Httle  plot  of  fifty  acres,  which  is  left  us  to 
farm  ?  True,  it  is  small,  but  remember  that  every  foot  is 
available,  clear,  clean  land  in  the  very  highest  profitable  con- 
dition. Our  supply  of  manure  will  be  magnificent  ;  and  I 
need  not  tell  you  farmers  that  manure  can  work  miracles. 
But  if  you  still  doubt,  although  I  don't  dare  now  to  detail  the 
precise  rotation  of  crops,  and  close,  sharp  handling  by  which 
it  may  be  effected,  yet  I  can  confidently  refer  you  to  the 
authorities  on  soiling  of  cattle  for  verification.  Then,  even  if 
you  find  I  have  overstated  it,  at  least  you  will  be  sure  to  de- 
rive great  benefit  from  your  studies. 


13 

But,  after  all,  it  is  of  very  little  consequence  to  my  present 
purpose,  whether  I  am  accurately  exact  as  to  my  details.  At 
all  events,  you  are  convinced  that  my  farmer  must  be  a  very 
shrewd  and  energetic  and  skilful  man,  and  you  must  be  sat- 
isfied that  he  will  require  all  his  capacity,  industry  and  skill 
to  manage  his  business  successfully.  What  with  his  corn  to 
buy  in  Illinois  ;  his  grain  in  Iowa  ;  his  hay  in  Maine  ;  his 
cows  in  New  Hampshire  and  Vermont  ;  and  his  straw  and 
the  hundred  other  supplies  in  constant  use  to  be  bought  each 
in  the  best  market,  his  mercantile  faculty  must  be  good,  and 
with  the  supervision  of  his  stock  and  business,  he  will  find 
the  longest  day  too  short  for  his  labors. 

And  so  you  see,  my  friends,  the  old  brown  house  and  the 
poetic  barn,  the  sunny  pasture  and  the  shady  brook,  haying 
and  harvest,  all  have  disappeared,  swallowed  up  by  the  insati- 
able and  relentless  maw  of  progress.  And  as  the  whirling 
spinning-wheel  of  the  cottage  has  been  turned  into  the  lum- 
bering mule  of  the  factory,  so  the  picturesque  farm  of  im- 
memorial literature  and  art  is  transformed  into  a  milk-mill. 

And  now,  I  need  hardly  remind  you,  that  I  intend  this  crude 
and  hasty  sketch  merely  as  a  suggestion.  Is  the  narrow  view 
I  have  taken  capable  of  a  wider  range  .-'  Is  it  not  desirable 
to  call  to  our  aid  the  close  calculation  of  small  economies  and 
exact  application  of  the  most  approved  means  to  ends  which 
characterize  the  plans  of  successful  manufacturers  .-*  Would 
it  not  pay  us  here  near  Boston  to  abandon  the  old,  wide- 
spread system  of  half  cultivating  a  teijitory  and  turn  to  the 
careful  high  tillage  of  a  field  .-' 

I  am  not  ignorant  that  many  of  our  keen  Yankee  farmers 
have  long  ago  found  this  out.  They  have  almost  instinctive- 
ly turned  to  take  the  only  way  out  of  the  dilemma  into  which 
all  general  farming  in  New  England  was  thrown,  when 
millions  of  acres  of  such  land,  as  many  of  you  never  dreamed 
of,  were  thrown  open  to  the  plough  at  the  West,  and  moved, 
as  it  were,  within  competing  distance  by  the  railroads.  It  is 
a  matter  of  common  fame,  that  four  hundred  thousand  acres 
of  the  improved  land,  in  farms  in  our  State,  twenty-five  years 


14 

ago,  are  now  run  wild.  A  handsome  principality  has  been 
laid  waste,  during  the  life-time  of  our  society  in  this  Common- 
wealth, and  it  was  well  and  wisely  done.  If  another  like  it 
could  be  turned  out  of  cultivation,  and  the  labor  wasted  upon 
its  slovenly  neglect  applied  to  an  increased  care  and  culture  of 
more  fertile  or  more  favored  sites,  I  believe  it  would  be  whole- 
some for  our  wallets  and  strengthening  to  our  agriculture. 

And  now  let  me  crave  your  pardon  for  dwelling  so  tediously 
upon  matters  so  trite  and  so  dry.  It  would  seem  as  if  the 
dry  "  spell "  which  has  just  been  broken  by  the  storm  still 
stretched  its  drowsy  influence  over  me.  However,  I  think  it 
is  only  fair  to  say  that  I  feel  so  much  pleased  with  my  model 
farm  of  the  future,  that  I  am  pondering  the  possibility  of 
building  a  milk  factory  and  going  into  the  scientific  manufac- 
ture of  milk  on  purely  business  principles,  when  I  have  noth- 
ing else  on  my  hands.  Meantime  I  shall  doubtless  continue 
to  exemplify  the  old  discordance  between  precept  and  prac- 
tice, by  pasturing  my  cows  and  mowing  my  hay,  and  raising 
my  potatoes  and  cabbages,  as  my  great-grandfather  did  before 
me.  But,  gentlemen,  mark  well  the  sequel  ;  mark,  and  in- 
wardly digest  the  fate  of  men  who  have  not  the  courage  of 
their  opinions,  as  the  French  say,  —  ponder,  in  short,  I  pray 
you,  the  moral  of  my  discourse. 

/  net  a  dead  loss  every  year. 


1/5 


Report  of  the  President  and  Secretary. 


To  the  Secretary  of  the  State  Board  of  Agriculture  : 

SiK, —  In  accordance  with  the  requirements  of  the 
statute,  the  following  statement  of  the  Transactions 
of  the  Norfolk  Agricultural  Society  foi-  the  year 
1874,  embodied  in  the  subjoined  Reports  of  the 
several  Committees  of  the  Society,  is  respectfully 
submitted. 

HENRY  S.  RUSSELL,  President. 
Henry  O.  Hildp.eth,  Secretary. 


16 


REPORTS    OF    COMMITTEES. 


HORSES 

Class  A. 


Best  Stallion,  Four  Years  Old  and  nprvards.— Jason  Houghton, 
Milton,  1st  premium,  ten  dollars. 

Best  Brood  Mare,  with  Foal  at  side.—W.  T.  Cook,  Foxboro',  1st 
premium,  seven  dollars  ;  S.  K.  Bailey,  Milton,  2d  premium,  five. 

Best  Four  Years  Old.— Oliver  Dean,  Canton,  1st  premium,  five 
dollars  ;  Jason  Houghton,  Milton,  2d  premium,  three. 

Best  Three  Years  Old.—W.  T.  Cook,  Foxboro',  1st  premium, 
five  dollars  ;  J.  H.  McKendry,  Dorchester,  2d  pi-emium,  three. 

Best  Two  Years  Old.—W.  T.  Cook,  Foxboro',  1st  premium, 
three  dollars  ;  Charles  Cook,  West  Roxbury,  2d  premium,  two. 

Best  One  Year  Old.—W.  T.  Cook,  Foxboro',  1st  premium,  three 
dollars  ;  Jason  Houghton,  Milton,  2d  premium,  two. 

Best  Fair  Roadsters.— C  L.  Farnsworth,  Hyde  Park,  1st  pre- 
mium, ten  dollars. 

Best  Gelding  or  Mare.— JohnW.  Thomas,  Dedham,  1st  premium, 
eight  dollars  ;  F.  B.  Ray,  Franklin,  2d  premium,  six  ;  H.  R.  Bird' 
Canton,  3d  premium,  four. 

Class  B. 

Stallions. — No  premiums  awarded. 

Best  Brood  Mare,  with  Foal  at  Side.—W.  T.  Cook,  Foxl)oro', 
1st  premiiun,  seven  dollais ;  Wisner  Park,  Hyde  Park,  2d  pre- 
mium, five. 

Be.'it  Four  Years  Old.— J.  W.  Bradlee,  Milton,  1st  premium,  five 
dollars. 

Best  Three  Years  Old.—  No  premium  awarded. 

Best  Two  Years  Old.—W.  T.  Cook,  Foxboro',  1st  premium, 
three  dollars. 


17 

Best  One  Tear  Old. — No  premium  awarded. 

Best  Pair  in  Harness. — W.  T.  Cook,  Foxboro',  1st  premium, 
seven  dollars. 

Best  Gelding  or  Mare. — W.  T.  Cook,  Foxboro',  1st  premium,  six 
dollars ;  Silas  A.  Stone,  Sharon,  2d  premium,  four. 

Class  C. 

Best  Stallion.  —  W.  T.  Cook,  Foxboro',  1st  premium,  ten 
dollars. 

Best  Brood  Mare,  loitli  Foal  at  side.  —  J.  II.  Farringtou,  Milton, 
1st  premium,  seven  dollars  ;  J.  L.  Kendall,  Foxboro',  2d  premium, 
five. 

Best  Four   Yeais  Old.  —  None  awarded.  * 

Best  Three  Years  Old.  —  C.  E.Tucker,  Randolph,  1st  premium, 
five  dollars  ;  J.  H.  Farrington,  Milton,  2d  premium,  three. 

Best  Two  Years  Old.  —  W.  T.Cook,  Foxboro',  1st  premium, 
three  dollars. 

Best  One  Year  Old. — Joseph  Dix,  Dorchester,  1st  premium, 
three  dollars  ;  W.  T.  Cook,  Foxboro',  2d  premium,  two. 

Best  Pair  in  Harness.  —  J.  H.  Farrington,  Milton,  1st  premium, 
ten  dollars  ;  Joseph  Dix,  Dorchester,  2d  premium,  seven. 

Best  Gelding  or  Mare.  —  A.  T.  Carpenter,  Foxboro',  1st  pre- 
mium, eight  dollars  ;  W.  H.  Morrill,  Dedham,  2d  premium,  six  ; 
E.  C.  R.  Walker,  West  Roxbur}',  3d  premium,  four. 

Best  Saddle  Horse.  —  E.  P.  Tileston,  Dorchester,  iHt  premium, 
six  dollars  ;  W.  II.  Morrill,  Dedham,  2d  premium,  four ;  F.  D. 
White,  Milton,  3d  premium,  three. 

Best  Single  Pony.  —  G.  W.  Gunnison,  IIy<lc  Park,  1st  premium, 
three  dollars  ;  J.  W.  Bradlee,  Milton,  2d  premium,  two. 

The  Committee  recommend  a  diploma  to  Willard  Lewis  of  Wal- 
pole,  for  th  roughbred  mare,  and  Francis  B.  Ray,  of  Franklin,  for 
Morgan  Grey  mare. 

Class  D. 

Best  Drauglit  or  Team  Horse. —  C.  &  C.  Mackintosh,  Need- 
ham,  1st  premium,  seven  dollars;  N.  Farrington,  Jr.,  Canton,  2d 
premium,  live. 

Best  Pair  Team  Horses. — N.  Farrington.  Jr.,  Canton.  1st 
premium,  ten  dollars ;  Freeman  Fisher,  Uedham,  2d  premium, 
seven. 


18 

RACES. 

Thursday — Trials  of  Speed. 

First  Race. — F.  B.  Ray,  Franklin,  1st  prize,  twent3'-five  dollars  ; 
P.  S.  Allen,  Brookline,  2d  prize,  ten. 

Second  Race. — F.  B.  Riiy,  Franklin,  1st  prize,  twenty-five  dol- 
lars. 

Third  Race. — R.  W.  Hambliu,  Hyde  Park,  1st  prize,  twenty 
dollars  ;  Wisner  Park,  Hyde  Park,  2d  prize,  ten. 

Fourth  Race. — ^Y.  Park,  Hyde  Park,  1st  prize,  thirty  dollars  ; 
J.  C.  Bancroft,  Milton,  2d  prize,  fifteen. 

Exhibition  of  Ladies'  Horsemanship. — Miss  A.  Dickson,  .Jamaica 
Plain,  1st  prize,  twenty  dollars. 

Friday — Trials  of  Speed. 

First  Race. — B.  R.  Ballon,  Stonghton,  1st  prize,  fifty  dollars  ; 
Turner,  Dedham,  2d  prize,  thirty  ;  W.  E.  Coffin,  Dorcliester,  3d 
prize,  ten. 

Second  Race. — W.  E.  Coffin,  Dorchester,  1st  prize,  fifty  dollars  ; 
Harper  &  Stone,  Sharon,  2d  prize,  twenty-five. 

Third  Race. — Jason  Houghton,  Milton,  1st  prize,  twenty-five 
dollars ;  W.  B.  Kendall,  Milton.  2d  prize,  fifteen. 

Fourth  Race. — No  entries. 

Augustus  P.  Calder,  Chairman. 


RURAL   SPORTS. 

Foot  Race. — John  Powers,  1st  prize,  eight  dollars  ;  John  Man- 
ning, 2d  prize,  five  ;  Dennis  Mahony,  3d  prize,  two. 

Bag  Race. — Charles  Cushing,  1st  prize,  eight  dollars;  Bernard 
"West,  2d  pi-ize,  five ;  John  Manning,  3d  prize,  two. 

Potatoe  Race. — J.  A.  Manning,  1st  prize,  eight  dollars  ;  Charles 
Cushing,  2d  prize,  five  ;  Joseph  Bass,  3d  prize,  two. 

W.  R.  Mann,  Chairman. 


19 

PLOWING. 

Double  Ox  Teams  —  One  ontry.  Willitim  Fiilcs,  Dodliam,  2(1 
preiuiuin,  teu  dollars. 

Nathan  Longfellow,  Chairmun. 

Double  Horse  Teams — Two  entries.  Blackman  Brothers,  Need- 
ham,  1st  premium,  fifteen  dollars. 

John  E.  Weatherbee,  Chairman. 

Single  Horse  Teams — Five  entries.  B.  N.  Sawin,  and  Aaron 
Bacon,  of  Dover,  Plow,  Prouty  and  Mears,  No.  155,  1st  premium, 
ten  dollars;  D.  F.  Decatur,  West  Dedham,  Ilussey  Plow,  No  IG, 
2il  premium,  five. 

Lewis  W.  Mouse,  Chairman. 


WORKING  OXEN. 

Three  entries.  —  O.  T.  Rogers,  Milton,  1st  premium,  ten  dollars. 
The  Committee  were  most  highly  gratified  with  the  team  and 
driver.  A.  T.  Brown,  Brookline,  2d  premium,  seven  ;  William 
Fales,  Dedham,  3d  premium,  four. 

Henry  M.  Mack,  Chairman. 


FAT  CATTLE. 

Your  Committee  on  Fat  Cattle  find  no  entries  in  this  department, 
but  O.  T.  Rogers  &  Co.,  East  Milton,  showed  a  noble  pair  of  work- 
ing oxen,  weighing  4540  lbs.,  which  would  have  stood  second  to 
few  if  they  had  been  entered  in  this  department. 

A.  W.  Cheever,  Chairman. 


BULLS. 


William  T.  Cook,  Foxboro',  for  Jersey  Bull,  two  years  old,  1st 
[)r(;mium,  ten  dollars. 

Henry  L.  Pierce,  Dorchester,  for  Jersey  Bull  Calf,  six  months 
old,  1st  premium,  five. 


20 

C.  &  C.  Mackintosh,  Needham,  for  Ayrshii'e   Bull,  three  years 
and  ten  months  old,  1st  premium,  ten. 

James   Galloway,  Qnincy,  for  Bull  Calf,  ten   months  old,    1st 
premium,  five. 

AsAHEL  S    Drake,"] 

E.  M.  Gary,  ( ^,         ... 

N.  S.  Whit^,  ^Committee. 

J.  N.  Smith,  j 


COWS. 


Herds. — Henry  M.  Mack,  Dorchester,  1st  premium,  twenty-five 
dollars ;  Henry  L.  Pierce,  Dorchester,  2d  premium,  twelve. 

Jersey.  —  A.  K.  Teele,  Milton,  1st  premium,  ten  dollai's  ;  A.  T. 
Brown,  Brookline,  2d  premium,  five  ;  William  T.  Cook,  Foxboro', 
3d  premium,  four. 

Ayrshire.  —  C.  &  C.  Mackintosh,  Needham,  1st  premium,  ten 
dollars. 

Grade — Henry  Chaffin,  Brookline,  1st  premium,  ten  dollars  ; 
Dennis  Haley,  Dedham,  2d  premium,  five ;  Owen  Husjhes,  Hyde 
Park,  3d  premium,  four. 

Heifers  in  Milk. — N.  T.  Davenport,  Milton,  1st  premium,  four 
dollars  ;  William  T.  Cook,  Foxboro',  2d  premium,  two. 

J.  W.  Gay.  Chairman. 


HEIFERS. 
The  Committee  on  Heifers  award  the  following  premiums : — 

Jersey  Heifers. — Wm.  T.  Cook,  Foxboro,'  1st  premium,  five 
dollars  ;  A.  T.  Brown,  Brookline,  2d  premium,  four ;  J.  H.  Wol- 
cott,  Milton,  3d  premium,  two. 

Ayrshire  Heifers. — C.  &  C.  Mackintosh,  Needham,  1st  premium, 
five  dollars  ;  F.  Parker,  West  Roxbury,  2d  premium,  four  ;  James 
Galloway,  Quincy,  3d  premium,  two. 

Grade  or  Native //eifers. — C.  &  C.  Mackintosh,  Needham,  1st 
premium,  five  dollars  ;  Wm.  MacDonald,  Milton,  2d  premium, 
four  ;  J.  Fisher,  West  Dedham,  3d  premium,  two. 


21 

Calves. — C.  &  C.  Mackintosh,  Needliam,  1st  premiuui,  lour 
dollars  ;  A.  T,  Brown,  Brookline,  2cl  premium,  two. 

To  Hon.  Henry  L.  Pierce,  the  Committee  award  the  Society's 
Diploma,  for  his  fine  herd  of  young  Jerseys,  and  to  several  other 
exhibitors  of  meritorious  young  stock,  premiums  would  gladly  be 
awarded  if  the  Committee  were  allowed  so  to  do. 

Edward  P.  Bukgess,  1 

Lemuel  Billings,       )>  Committee. 

Solomon  Flagg,        j 


POULTRY. 

Collection  Gallinaceous  Fowls. — M.  I.  Ellis,  Norwood,  2d  pre- 
mium, ten  dollars. 

Collection  Water  Foids. — M.  I.  Ellis,  Norwood,  1st  premium,  fif- 
teen dollars. 

VARIETIES. 

Liglit  Bralimas. — A.  Starkweather,  Brookline,  1st  premium, 
three  dollars ;  A.  Starkweather,  Brookline,  2d  premium,  two ; 
Horace  N.  Plummer,  Boston,  3d  premium,  one. 

Dark  Brahmas — Chicks. — Frtyicis  Codman,  Brookline,  1st  pre- 
mium, three  dollars  ;  ditto  same,  2d  premium,  two  ;  ditto  same,  3d 
premium,  one. 

Dark  Brahmas — Foivls. — Francis  Codman,  Brookline,  1st  pre- 
mium, three  dollars. 

Partridge  Cochin — Chicks. — M.  I.  P^llis,  Norwood,  1st  premium, 
three  dollars  ;  C.  L.  Copeland,  Milton,  2d  premium,  two  ;  M.  I. 
Ellis,  Norwood,  3d  premium,  one. 

Partridge  Cochin — Foivls. — M.  I.  FAVis,  Norwood,  1st  premium, 
three  dollars  ;  ditto  same,  2d  premium,  two. 

Mhite  Cochin — Chicks. — M.  L  Ellis,  Norwood,  1st  premium, 
three  dollars  ;  C.  L.  Copeland,  Milton,  2d  premium,  two  ;  M.  1. 
Ellis,  Norwood,  3d  premium,  one. 

White  Cochin — Fowls. — M.  I.  Ellis,  Norwood,  1st  premium, 
three  dollars. 

Pbjmouth  Rock — Chicks. — A.  H.  Drake,  Stoughton,  1st  pre- 
mium, three  dollars  ;  ditto  same,  2d  premium,  two ;  ditto  same, 
3d  premium,  one. 


22 

Plymouth  Rock — Foivls. — A.  H.  Drake,  Stongliton,lst  premium, 
three  dollars  ;  L.  E.  Gray,  Foxboro',  2d  premium,  two. 

White  Leghorn — Foiols. — L.  E.  Gray,  Foxboro',  1st  premium, 
three  dollars. 

Brown  Leghorn — Fowls. — L.  E.  Gray,  Foxboro',  2d  premium, 
two  dollars ;  A.  F.  Stevens,  Wellesley,  3d  premium,  one. 

Brown  Leghorn — Chicks. — J.  E.  Sherman,  Foxboro'.  1st  pre- 
mium, three  dollars  ;  L.  E.  Gray,  Foxboro',  2d  premium,  two  ;  J. 
E.  Sherman,  Foxboro',  3d  premium,  one. 

Silver  Spangled  Polish — Chicks. — L.  E.  Graj?-,  Foxboro',  1st 
premium,  tlu'ee  dollars. 

Silver  Spangled  Polish — Fowls. — J.  E.  Sherman,  Foxboro',  1st 
premium,  three  dollars. 

White  Crested  Black  Polish. — M.  I.  Ellis,  Norwood,  2d  premium, 
two  dollars. 

Houda,ns — Chicks. — E.  C.  Aldrich,  Hyde  Park,  1st  premium, 
three  dollars  ;  ditto  same,  2d  premium,  two ;  ditto  same,  3d  pre- 
mium, one. 

Houdons — Fowls. — E.  C.  Aldrich,  Hyde  Park,  1st  premium, 
three  dollars  ;  ditto  same,  2d  premium,  two  ;  ditto  same,  3d  pre- 
mium, one. 

Dom.  Jjeghorn — Fowls. — A.  F.  Stevens,  "Wellesley,  1st  premium, 
three  dollars. 

Bo7n.  Leghorn — Chick. — M.  I.  Ellis,  Norwood,  1st  premium, 
three  dollars. 

Dominique — Chicks. — M.  I.  Ellis,  Norwood,  1st  premium,  three 
dollars  ;  ditto  same,  2d  premium,  two. 

Dominique — Foiols. — M.  I.  Ellis,  Norwood,  1st  premium,  three 
dollars  ;  ditto  same,  2d  premium,  two. 

Dom.  Game — Fowls. — M.  I.  Ellis,  Norwood,  1st  premium,  three 
dollars. 

Black  Bed  Game—CUcks, — George  Miles,  Hyde  Park,  1st  pre- 
mium, three  dollars. 

Black  Spanish  Fowls. — C.  &  F.  Spring,  Needham,  1st  premium, 
three  dollars  ;  C.  &  F.  Spring,  Needham,  2d  premium,  two  dollars. 

Black  Sj^anish — Chicks. — C.  &  F.  Spring,  Needham,  1st  pre- 
mium, three  dollars  ;  C.  &  F.  Spring,  Needham,  2d  premium,  two  ; 
C.  &  F.  Spring,  Needham,  3d  premium,  one. 

WJiite  Bantam — Foiols. — A.  F.  Stevens,  Wellesley,  1st  premium, 
three  dollars. 


23 

White  Bantam — Chicks. — A.  F,  Stevens,  Welleslo}-,  1st  pre- 
mium, three  dollars. 

Silver  Sebright  Bantams. — A.  F.  Stevens,  Wellesley,  1st  pre- 
mium, three  dolliirs. 

Gold  Sebright  Bantams — Foiols. — J.  F.  Cowell,  Wrenlham,  1st 
premium,  three  dollars;  J.  F.  Cowell,  Wrentliam,  2d  premium, 
two  ;  S.  W.  Mitchell,  Milton,  3d  premium,  one. 

Game  Bantams — Fowls. — H.  B.  Slade,  Chestnut  Ilill,  1st  pre- 
mium, three  dollars. 

Game  Bantams — Chicks. — J.  F.  Mooar,  Ilj-de  Park,  1st  pre- 
mium, three  dollars  ;  ditto,  same,  2d  premium,  two ;  ditto,  same, 
3d  premium,  one. 

Black  Cayuga — Ducks. — M.  I.  Ellis,  Norwood,  1st  premium, 
three  dollars  ;  ditto  same,  second  premium,  two. 

Aylesbury  Ducks — Old. — M.  I.  Ellis,  Norwood,  1st  i)remium, 
three  dollars. 

Ayle.sbiu-y  Ducks — Young. — M.  I.  P^llis,  Norwood,  1st  premium, 
three  dollars. 

Mallard  Ducks. — M.  I.  Ellis,  Norwood,  1st  premium,  thi-ee  dol- 
lars. 

Geese. — M.  I.  Ellis,  Norwood,  1st  premium,  tlu'ee  dollars. 

Rouen  Ducks. — William  E  Sumnei",  Milton,  1st  premium,  three 
dollars. 

White  Holland — Turkeys. — A.  F,  Stevens,  Wellesley,  1st  pre- 
mium, three  dollars. 

Col.  Pigeons. — James  J.  Stuart,  Hyde  Park,  1st  premium,  three 
dollars. 

Gratuities. — Miss  Nettie  Engling,  Hyde  Park,  for  Canaiies,  one 
dollar  ;  John  J.  Smith,  Dedham,  i^oat,  one  dollar  and  ni'ty  cents  ; 
J.  Cartwri<4lit,  Wellesley,  lval)i>its,  fifty  cents  ;  John  J.  Smilli, 
Dedham,  Owls,  fifty  cents  ;  F.  Slade,  West  Dedham,  li.  Lcohfirii, 
one  dollar;  C.  &  C.  Mackintosh,  Needham,  P>ulf  Cochin,  one  dol- 
lar; M.  I.  Ellis,  Norwood,  Cock  Cochin,  one  dollar. 

A.  F.  Stevens,  Chairman. 


SWINE. 


It  is  relat(Hl   of   a  oei'tain  County  Stpiiri'  Sturt.  in  Old  Mnuland, 
that,  at  an  aiiricultural  diuncr,  in    Dorselshirc,  he  ij,:ivi'  this  toast. 


24 

"  I  prefer  tlio  grunting  of  a  hog  in  a  cottager's  sty  to  tlie  song  of  a 
nigbtingaie,  and  I  think  sides  of  bacon  the  ver}^  best  furniture  of  a 
laborer's  cottage."  For  as  has  been  many  times  written,  in  point 
of  utilit\',  as  far  as  man  is  concerned,  the  hog  claims  precedence  of 
every  member  of  the  pachydermatous  order,  excluding  the  horse 
and  ass.  Fresh  or  salted  it  is  seen  as  an  article  of  diet,  alike  on 
the  tables  of  the  rich  and  the  poor,  and  the  raising  and  fattening  of 
the  hog,  and  the  preparation  of  it  when  killed  for  public  consump- 
tion, and  for  transportation,  employ  capital  and  labor  in  the  Unit- 
ed States  of  no  trifling  amount. 

The  hog  has  come  to  be  regarded  as  an  unclean  animal.  He  is 
the  t^^pe  of  uncleanness  and  of  disgustful,  distasteful  vulgarit}^ 
of  gluttony,  of  filth,  of  indolence,  of  the  lowest  kind  of  brutality. 

We  say,  that  man  is  a  hog  who  seeks  to  obtain  for  himself,  by 
unfair  means,  more  than  his  share  of  what  belongs  to  him  in  any 
division  of  property.  We  call  him  a  hog,  who  makes  his  own  in- 
dividual comfort  of  more  consequence  than  the  comfort  of  his  " 
famil}'^  or  of  his  friends.  "  Hoggishness  "  is  the  term  used,  when 
we  would  describe  the  acts  of  those  persons  who  seek  to  take  the 
best  places  at  feasts,  at  the  lecture-room,  in  the  street  cars,  or  the 
steam  cars. 

We  call  him  "  Pig  Headed  "  who  asserts  opinions  unsupported 
by  reasons  and  sticks  to  them.  This  is  all  wrong  and  is  unjust  to 
the  character  of  the  hog.  There  is  to  us  consolation  in  the  thought 
that  there  are  man}^  great  hogs,  who  are  n<)t  in  our  pens.  But 
they  exhibit  themselves  daily,  and  no  doubt  to  the  enjoyment  of 
themselves,  if  not  to  their  friends. 

But  your  Committee  are  of  the  opinion,  that  in  this,  great  in- 
justice and  great  wrong  is  done  to  the  character  of  the  hog.  They 
have  carefull}^  studied  the  natural  history  of  the  animal.  They 
have  done  this  with  minds  more  or  less  perverted  by  their  early 
education  and  prejudices.  They  have  been  t£<,ught  from  their  very 
infancy  to  believe,  that  "  a  hog  is  a  hog  and  will  be  a  hog  no  matter 
where  you  put  him."  But  they  nevertheless  have  come  to  the  con- 
clusion that  the  hog  is  just  what  man  his  master  makes  him. 

Plutarch  remarks  that  Hesiod  exhorted  the  husbandman  to  pray 
for  the  harvest,  but  to  do  so  with  his  hand  upon  the  plough.  So 
he  that  would  pray  for  fat  hogs  must  do  so  with  his  hand  upon  the 
open  corn  crib.  A  hog  is  like  any  other  animal,  or  any  human 
being  ;  he  cannot  become  fat  on  air.  Provender  is  what  will  do  the 
business  for  either  hog  or  man.  What  gives  the  members  of  this 
societ}^  around  me  their  rotundity  of  stomach?  Provender,  A 
round,  fat  belly,  with  good  capon  must  be  lined,  not  to  mention 
the  other  good  things. 

Your  Committee  are  human,  and  therefore  may  err.  But  from  a 
life-long  study  of  the  characteristics  of  the  nature  of  the  hog  ;  from 
a  careful  perusal  of  the  writings  of  Cuvier  and  Bulfon,  and  even  of 
Linneaus  and  of  Sir  Cliarles  Bell,  not  to  mention  what  they  have 


25 

« 

read  in  th'  ir  days  (and  nights)  of  classical  study  in  Virgil  and 
Ovid  and  Horace,  and  the  purest  poets  of  the  Old  Testament,  and 
the  "writers  of  the  New  Testament,  and  what  they  have  heard  their 
fathers  say,  the}'  have  come  to  the  conclusion  tliat  the  hog  in  these 
days  is  not  held  in  that  degree  of  esteem  to  which  he  is  justly 
entitled. 

Among  the  ancient  Greeks  and  Romans  the  flesh  of  the  pig  was 
held  in  great  estimation.  The  rearing,  breeding  or  fattening  these 
animals  was  made  a  complete  study  ;  and  the  dishes  prepared  from 
the  meat  were  dressed  with  epicurean  refinement  and  in  many 
modes.  The  dish  consisted  of  a  3'oung  pig  whole,  stuffed  with 
beccaflcoes  and  other  small  birds,  together  with  oysters,  and  served 
with  wine  and  rich  gravy.  This  dish  was  termed  Porcus  Trojanus, 
in  allusion  to  the  wooden  horse  filled  with  men,  which  the  Trojans 
introduced  into  their  city.  An  unpleasant  allusion,  one  would 
think,  seeing  that  the  Romans  boasted  of  their  Trojan  descent. 
And  although  we  find  from  the  perusal  of  the  writings  of  Homer 
and  Herrodotus  and  Theocritus  and  other  Greek  writers,  familiar 
to  your  committee,  and  from  the  writings  of  Biblical  writers,  not 
so  familiar  to  j'our  committee  perhaps,  that  the  hog  was  not  held 
in  high  estimation,  your  committee  do  find  that,  as  a  general  rule, 
a  chine  of  pork,  or  a  rasher  of  bacon,  or  a  boiled  ham,  or  a  leg  of 
pork,  or  a  hog's  liead  stuffed,  or  a  pig's  foot  soused,  or  a  pickled 
shoulder  was  always  a  welcome  dish,  whether  to  Jew  or  Gentile, 
to  Greek  or  Barbarian. 

It  is  gratifying  to  find  that,  among  the  early  and  pious  Catholic 
Saints,  the  hog  was  not  without  its  patron.  This  life  is  full  of 
surprises.  Every  good  deed  of  the  present  day,  as  well  as  every 
bad  deed,  has  had  its  parallel  in  the  past  ages.  There  was  inhu- 
manity to  man,  and  cruelty  to  beast  in  the  older  days,  and  so 
there  was  hunianit}',  and  tender,  kindly  care  and  S3'mpath3'  with 
suffering.  Which  of  you  seeing  an  ass  fallen  into  a  pit  will  not 
take  him  out.  Sabbath  day  or  no  day,  was  the  sentin:»ent — all 
kindl}'  and  sympathetic  —  which  animated  the  minds  of  the  holy 
Christian  fathers. 

St.  Anthony,  was  the  protector  of  hogs,  which  were  usually  in- 
troduced into  his  picture.  St.  Bridget  kept  i)igs,  and  a  wild  boar 
came  from  the  forest  to  subject  itself  to  her  rule. 

In  the  tropical  regions  of  the  hot  India  Islands,  on  the  islands 
of  Cuba,  every  negro  has  his  pig.  In  Florida,  and  Southern 
Georgia,  before  the  war,  every  negro  family  had  its  colony  of  l)igs. 

And  if  you  ask 
What  more  wa.s  thi-re,  I'd  speak  of  luscious  chine, 
Aud  loin  of  p(jrk,  and  liead  of  boar,  all  hot! 

Pork  !  Your  Committee  are  old  enough  to  look  backward  to  the 
days  of  country  militia  musters,  and  to  the  times  when  these  mus- 
ters were  held,  now  in  one  town,  and  now  in  another,  and  when  the 


26 

"  soldiers,"  or  tlie  visitors  were  billetted  on  tlie  neigliboring  farm- 
ers. What  did  you  have  for  supper  and  breakfast,  were  the  in- 
quiries of  each  on  returning  to  eanip  at  sunrise.  •'  Fi  csh  pork," 
said  one  guest.  "■  Sausages,"  said  another.  "  Boiled  Leg  of 
Pork,"  said  another.  "Cold  Roast  Spanish."  iVom  another.  "Ham 
and  Eggs,"  from  another.  "  Pigs  Feet  Souse,"  from  another. 
"  Hogs  Head,"  from  another.  "  Pork  and  Beans,"  from  another. 
And  so  on.  And  it  was  a  standing  joke  among  the  young  men, 
who  mustered  on  Tiot  Plain,  that  the  people  of  that  region  lived 
on  pork. 

The  Committee  on  Swine  make  the  following  awards  : — 

For  the  Best  Collection  of  Swine.  —  N.  Farrington,  Jr.,  Canton, 
1st  premium,  fifteen  dollars  ;  J.  H.  Farrington,  Milton,  2d  pre- 
mium, ten  ;  N.  Farrington,  Jr.,  Canlon,  3d  premium,  seven. 

For  the  Best  Boar.  —  D.  F.  Decatur,  West  Dedham,  1st  pre- 
mium, six  dollais  ;  John  Sias,  Milton,  2d  premium,  four;  National 
Sailors'  Home,  Quincy,  gratuit}',  two  ;  C.  L.  Copeland,  Milton, 
gratuity,  two. 

For  the  Best  Soio. —  C.  L.  Copeland,  Milton,  1st  premium,  six 
dollars;  f^dward  Cotter,  Canton,  2d  premium,  four;  Lawrence 
McCarty,  Brookline,  gratuity,  two;  A.  T.  Brown,  Brookline, 
gratuity,  two. 

For  the  Best  Litter  of  Weaned  Pigs.  —  J.  H.  Davenport,  Canton. 
1st  premium,  six  dollars  ;  A.  T.  Brown,  Brookline,  2d  premium, 
four. 

For  the  rest  Fat  Hog.  —  Edmund  Cotter,  Canton,  1st  premium, 
ten  dollars  ;  John  Sias,  Milton,  2d  premium,  six  ;  J.  H.  Daven- 
port, Canton,  gratuity,  two. 

The  Committee  would  recommend  the  covering  of  several  more 
pens,  to  better  accommodate  the  increased  number  of  contributors. 


CYES,  ) 
DING,  ) 


Samukl  B.  Ncyes, 

T.  B.  Gkiggs,  )■  Committee. 

Henry  Gouldin( 


PEARS. 

The  Committee  on  Pears  report  the  following  list  of  premiums  : — 

Twenty  Varieties.  —  1st  premium  not  awarded.     J.  D.  Bradlee, 
Milton,  2d  premium,  twelve  dollars. 

Ten  Varieties. — W.  J.  Griggs,  Brookline,  1st  premium,  eight 


27 

dollars ;  J.  R.  Tilley,  Brookline,  2cl  premium,  six ;  B.  F.  Radford, 
Hyde  Park,  3d  premium,  four. 

Five  Varieties.  —  J.  B.  Tilley,  Brookline,  1st  premium,  six  dol- 
lars ;  B.  C.  Vose,  Hyde  Park,  3d  premium,  four. 

Single  Dishes. 

Bartlett.  —  J.  D.  Bradlee,  Milton,  1st  premium,  two  dollars  ;  R. 
D.  Newton,  Milton,  2d  premium,  one. 

Beurre  de  Anjou. — J.  W.  Vose,  Milton,  1st  premium,  two  dol- 
lars ;  J.  P.  S.  Chureliill,  Milton,  2d  premium,  one. 

Urbanistc.  — J.  U.  Bradlee,  Milton,  1st  premium,  two  dollars  ; 
H.  P.  Kidder,  Milton,  2d  premium,  one. 

Merriam.  —  J.  W.  Page,  Jamaica  Plain,  1st  premium,  two 
dollars  ;  N.  T.  Davenport,  Milton,  2d  premium,  one. 

Louise  Bon  de  Jersey. —  A..  S.  Brown,  Jamaica  Plain,  1st  pre- 
mium, two  dollars  ;  Lorenzo  Smith,  Jamaica  Plain,  2d  premium, 
one. 

Vicar. — J.  II.  "Wolcott,  Milton,  1st  premium,  two  dollars  ;  J. 
D.  Bradlee,  Milton,  2d  premium,  one. 

Duchess  de  Angonleme.  —  Joshua  W.  Vose,  Milton,  1st  premium, 
two  dollars ;  Captain  Ra3-nes,  H3Tle  Park,  1st  premium,  one. 

Seckle.  —  H.  P.  Kidder,  Milton,  1st  premium,  two*  dollars  ;  B. 
C.  Vose,  H3ale  Park,  2d  premium,  one. 

Onondar/a.  —  Joseph  Colburn,  West  Dedham,  1st  premium,  two 
dollars ;  G.  D.  Hicks,  Milton,  2d  premium,  one. 

Shekloii.  — B.  F,  Radford,  Hyde  Park,  1st  premium,  two  dollars  ; 
Col.  Theo.  Lyman,  Brookline,  2d  premium,  one. 

Beurre  Base.  —  Geo.  S.  Curtis,  Jamaica  Plain,  1st  premium,  two 
dollars  ;  Joseph  W.  Page,  Jamaica  Plain,  2d  premium,  one. 

Doyenne  Boussock.  — J.  B.  Tilley,  Brookline,  1st  premium,  two 
dollars  ;  J.  II.  Wolcott,  Milton,  2d  premium,  one. 

Beurre  Clairf/ean.. — B.  F.  Radford,  Hyde  Park,  1st  premium, 
two  dollars  ;  Joseph  Cull)urn,  West  Dedham,  2d  premium,  one. 

Laivrence.  —  J.  B.  Tilley,  Brookline,  1st  premium,  two  dollars; 
H.  P.  Kidder,  Milton,  2d  premium,  one. 

Winter  Xelis.  —  Col.  Theo.  Lyman,  Brookline,  1st  premium,  two 
dollars;  J.  II.  Wolcott,  Milton,  2d  premuim,  one. 

Beurre  Hardy.  —  II.  W.  Vose,  Milton,  1st  premium,  two  dollars  ; 
2d  not  awanled. 

Buffum. — J.  P.  S.Churchill,  Milton,  1st  premium,  two  dollars  ; 
Col.  Theo.  Lyman,  Brookline,  2d  premium,  one. 


28 

Maria  Louise.  —  Timothy   Smith,  Dedham,    1st  premium,  two 
dollm's  ;  Col.  Theo.  Lyman,  Brookline,  2d  premium,  one. 

Dana's  Hovey. — Col.    Theo.  Lyman,   Brookline,  1st  premium, 
two  ;  2d  not  awarded. 

Mount  Vernon.  —  Walker  «&  Co.,  Roxbury,  1st  premium,   two 
dollars  ;   2d  not  awarded. 

Glout   Morcmu.  —  H.    P.   Kidder,    Milton,    1st   premium,    two 
dollars. 

Howell.  —  J.  D.  Bradlee,  Milton,  1st  premium,  two  dollars. 

Colonel  Wilder  entered    one  hundred  and  twenty  varieties  of 
Pears,  and  C.  &  F*.  Curtis,  twenty  varieties,  not  for  competition. 

C.  F.  Curtis,  Chairman. 


APPLES. 


Best  Collection  of  Twelve.  Varieties. — J.  W.  Talbot,  Norwood, 
1st  premiuiti,  twelve  dollars  ;  C.  &  C.  Mackintosh,  Needham,  2d 
premium,  five  ;  E.  Polley,  Walpole,  od  premium,  four ;  E.  Sum- 
ner, Dedham,  4th  premium,  three. 

Best  Collection  of  Five  Varieties.  —  Joseph  Crane,  West  Ded- 
ham, 1st  premium,  six  dollars  ;  J.  B.  Tilley,  Brookline,  2d  pre- 
mium, four. 

Single   Dishes. 

Baldwin.  —  A.  D.  Capen,  Dorchester.  1st  pi-emium,  two  dollars, 
J.  Breck,  Milton,  2d  premium,  one. 

Hhode  Island  Greenings.  —  S.  Bagley,  Norwood,  1st  premium, 
two  dollars  ;  J.  F.  Cowell,  Wrentham,  2d  premium,  one. 

Gravenstein.  —  Henry  Bird,  Stoughton,  1st  premium,  two  dol- 
lars ;  Mrs.  F.  Eish,  Dedham,  2d  premium,  one. 

Huhhardston  Nonesuch. — Mrs.  Dr.  Talbot,  Norwood,  1st  pre- 
mium, two  dollars  ;  IL  P.  Kidder.  Milton,  2d  premium,  one. 

Roxhnry  Russett.  —  Eben  Paul,  Dedham,  1st  premium,  two 
dollars  ;  D.  H.  Elkins,  Milton,  2d  premium,  one. 

Tdlman's  S>reet.  —  D.  II.  Elkins,  Milton,  1st  i)remium,  two 
dollars  ;  Eben  Paul,  Dedham,  2d  premium,  one. 


29 

Coijsivdl.  —  Edward  Sumner,  DcLlham,   1st  premium,  two  dol- 
lars ;  Joseph  Crane,  Dedham,  2d  premium,  one. 

Peck's  Pleasant.  —  A.  D.  Capen,  Dorchester,  1st  premium,  two 
dollars. 

Black  Oxford.  —  J.  "W.   Talbot,  Norwood,    1st  premium,   two 
dollars. 

Porter.  —  D.  F.  Decatur,  Dedham,   1st  premium,  two  dollars; 
Henry  Bird,  Stoughton,  2d  premium,  one. 

Crane's   Siceet.  —  Joseph   Crane,   Dedham,    1st   premium,    two 
dollars. 

A.  D.  Capen,  Chairman. 


GRAPES  AND  OTHER  FRUITS. 

Native  Grapes.  —  Best  Collection.  —  Six  Bunches,  C.  F.  Gerr}^ 
Hyde  Park,  1st  premium,  four  dollars  ;  Edwin  Reed,  Hyde  Park, 
2d  premium,  three. 

Sinijle  Dishes.  —  Delaware.  —  J  B.  Tilley,  Brooklinc,  1st  pre- 
miums, two  dollars. 

Concord. — B.  F.  Radford,  Hyde  Park,  1st  premium,  two 
dollars;  Lorenzo  Smith,  Jamaica  Plain,  2d  premium,  one. 

Hartford.  —  .J.  W.  Page,  Jamaica  Plain,  1st  premium,  two  dol- 
lars ;  B.  C.  Vose,  Hyde  Park,  2d  premium,  one. 

Clinton.  —  J.  W.  Cowell,  Wrentham,  1st  premium,  two  dollars. 

Isabella.  —  Robert  R.  Mitchell,  Needham,  1st  premium,  t^YO 
dollars. 

Maderia  Seedliwj.  —  N.  B.  White,  Norwood,  gratuity,  one 
dollar. 

Mr.  N.  B.  White,  of  Norwood,  exhibited  a  dish  of  Seedling 
Grapes,  for  the  first  prize  of  twenty  dollars.  While  the  Committee 
considered  the  specimens  as  superior  in  quality  and  bunch,  yet 
they  did  not  feel  warranted  in  awarding  the  premium,  with  their 
limited  knowledge  of  the  habits  and  growth  of  the  vine. 

The  Committee  would  recommend  that  the  Society  apjioint  a 
Conunittee  of  two  from  the  Grape  Connuittec,  to  visit  INIr.  White's 
place,  at  dillerent  times  during  the  coming  year,  and  re[)ort  at  the 
next  annual  exhibition. 


30 

Exotic  Grapes. 

Black  I/ambicrg.  —  William  J.  Stuart,  Hyde  Park,  1st  premium, 
three  dollars. 

Victoria  Hamburg.  —  William  J.  Stuart,  Hyde  Park,  1st  pre- 
mium, three  dollars. 

Black  Barbara.  —  Henrj^  P.  Kidder,  Milton,  gratuity,  two 
dollars. 

Peaches. 

Collection. — Joseph  Colburn,  West  Dedham,  1st  premium, 
three  dollars  ;  E.  U.  Sewell,  Medfield,  2d  premium,  two ;  Henry 
Goulding,  Dover,  3d  premium,  one. 

Gratuities.  —  J.  B.  Tilley,  Brookline,  "Late  Crawford,"  one 
dollar ;  B.  C.  Vose,  Hyde  Park,  "  Late  Crawford,"  one  ;  H.  W. 
Vose,  Milton,  "  Late  Crawford,"  one  ;  Eben  Paul,  Dedham,  "  Old 
Mixon,"  one. 

Cranberries.  —  C.  &  C.  Mackintosh,  Needham,  1st  premium, 
three  dollars  ;  Nathan  Longfellow,  Needham,  2d  premium,  two  ; 
John  Vose,  Milton,  3d  premium,  one. 

Abel  F.  Stevens,  Chairman. 


FLOWERS. 

Pot  Plants.  —  E.  Roberts,  Hyde  Park,  1st  premium,  ten  dollars  ; 
H.  P.  Kidder,  Milton,  2d  premium,  five  ;  B.  C.  Vose,  Hyde  Park, 
gratuity,  four,  and  Society's  Diploma ;  G.  W.  Halliday,  Hyde 
Park,  gratuity,  one ;  N.  T.  Davenport,  Milton,  gratuity,  one ; 
John  Vose,  Milton,  gratuity,  one. 

Cut  Floivers.  —  Mrs.  John  Vose,  Milton,  1st  premium,  four 
doUai's  ;  N.  T.  Davenport,  Milton,  2d  premium,  three  ;  B.  C.  Vose, 
Hyde  Park,  3d  premium,  two. 

Named  Gladioli.  —  A.  McLaren,  Forest  Hills,  3d  premium,  two 
dollars ;  A.  McLaren,  Forest  Hills,  best  new  seedlings,  one. 

Dahlias.  —  Mrs.  Jos.  Crane,  West  Dedham,  1st  premium,  two 
dollars  ;  Mary  B.  Leseur,  Hyde  Park,  2d  premium,  one. 

Double  Ziimias.  —  G.  A.  Law,  Roslindale,  2d  premium,  one 
dollar. 


31 

Four  Baskets  of  Floicers.  —  Miss  II.  G.  Davenport,  Milton,  1st 
premium,  four  dollars. 

Gratuities. 

Townsend  &  Co.,  Hyde  Park,  three  Baskets  Flowers,  three 
dollars. 

(Jarrie  Vose,  Milton,  one  Basket  Flowers,  one  dollar. 
Louise  Leown,  Milton,  one  Basket  Flowers,  fifty  cents. 
Ida  Thomas,  Dedham,  one  Basket  Flowers,  fifty  cents. 
Mrs.  Mackintosh,  Needham,  two  Baskets  Flowers,  one  dollar. 
Mrs.  C.  H.  Shute,  Hyde  Park,  one  Basket  Flowers,  fifty  cents. 
Mrs.  Bolton,  East  Dedham,  one  Basket  Flowers,  fifty  cents. 
E.  Roberts,  H^-de  Park,  two  Rustic  Baskets,  one  dollar. 
John  Vose,  Milton,  one  Rustic  Basket,  fifty  cents. 

Bouquets.  —  Miss  H.  G.  Davenport,  Milton,  1st  premium,  four 
dollars  ;  B.  C.  Vose,  Hyde  Park,  2d  premium,  three  ;  J.  D.  Daven- 
port, Milton,  od  premium,  two. 

Rose  Buds.  —  Lj^nan  Davenport,  Milton,  gratuity  for  choice 
collection  of  Rose  Buds,  three  dollars,  and  Society's  Diploma. 

Seedling  Verbenas.  —  Alice  B.  Sewell,  Medflcld,  gratuity, 
three  dollars,  and  Society's  Diploma. 

Gratuity.  —  Mrs.  Joseph  Britton,  Stoughton,  Seedling  Verbena, 
and  Basket  of  Verbena  Flowers,  one  dollar. 

Societifs  Diploma. —  C.  C.  Cutter,  South  Walpole,  choice  collec- 
tion of  Dried  Flowers,  one  dollar. 

The  Committee  were  highly  pleased  with  the  specimens  of  Rose 
Buds  from  the  green-house  of  Mr.  Lj-rnan  Davenport,  of  Milton, 
and  would  recommend  a  special  premium  for  Rose  Buds  hereafter, 
and  would  also  state,  that  as,  owing  to  insulHcient  accommoda- 
tion, Mr.  G.  Crafts,  of  Brookline,  was  unable  to  give  a  fair  display 
of  his  choice  (collection  of  cut  flowers,  they  would  recommend  that 
ths  Society's  Diploma  be  awarded  to  him. 

The  display  of  pot  plants  was  unusually  fine,  and  the  Committee 
regret  that  they  were  unable  to  award  higher  premiums  therefor. 

John  Vose,  Chairman. 


VEGETABLES. 

Largest  and  Best  Collection. — James  Mackintosh,  Needham,  1st 
premium,  twenty  dollars ;  J.  B.  Tilley,  Brookline,  2d  premium, 
fifteen  ;  L.  J.  McCarthy,  Brookliuo,  .'M  premium,  ten. 


32 

Largest  and  Best  Collection  of  Potatoes.  —  John  Vose,  Milton, 
1st  premium,  six  dollars  ;  A.  F.  Stevens,  Wellesley,  2d  premium, 
three. 

Largest  and  Best  Collection  of  Winter  Scpiashes.  —  C.  &  C. 
Mackintosh,  Needham,  1st  premium,  four  dollars;  G.  M.  Mellon, 
Brookline,  2d  premium,  three. 

Class  Second. 

Table  Potatoes.  —  J,  H.  Farrington,  Milton,  1st  premium,  two 
dollars  ;  Patrick  Nolen,  Hyde  Park,  2d  premium,  one. 

Turnips.  —  C.  &  C.  Mackintosh.  Needham,  1st  premium,  two 
dollars  ;  Wm.  McDonald,  Milton,  2d  premium,  one. 

Carrots.  —  C.  &  C.  Mackintosh,  Needham,  1st  premium,  two 
dollars ;  John  Sias,  Milton,  2d  premium,  one. 

Beets. —  Gilbert  Sumner,  Milton,  1st  premium,  two  dollars;  C. 
&  C.  Mackintosh,  Needham,  2d  premium,  one. 

Tomatoes.  —  N.  T.  Davenport,  Milton,  1st  premium,  two  dol- 
lars ;  Geo.  Craft,  Brookline,  2  premium,  one. 

Onions.  —  Charles  Spring,  H3Tle  Park,  1st  premium,  two  dol- 
lars ;  C.  &  C.  Mackintosh,  Needham,  2d  premium,  one. 

Parsnips.  — John  Sias,  Milton,  1st  premium,  two  dollars  ;  Gil- 
bert Sumner,  Milton,  2d  premium,  one. 

Lima  Beans.  —  Mrs.  Dr.  Talbot,  Norwood,  1st  premium,  two 
dollars  ;  Jolin  Vose,  Milton,  2d  premium,  one. 

Drumhead  Cabbage.  — John  Sias,  Milton,  1st  premium,  two  dol- 
lars ;  J.  H.  Farrington,  Milton,  2d  premium,  one. 

Globe  Savoys.  —  Eben  Paul,  Dedham,  1st  premium,  two  dollars; 
C.  &  C.  Mackintosh,  Needham,  2d  premium,  one. 

Caidijlowers.  —  Robert  R.  Mitchell,  Needham,  1st  premium,  two 
dollars  ;  Mrs.  Dr.  Talbot,  Norwood,  2d  premium,  one. 

Celery.  —  Thomas  B.  Griggs,  Brookline,  1st  premium,  two  dol- 
lars ;  Gilbert  Sumner,  Milton,  2d  premium,  one. 

Marroiu  SquasJies.  —  Thomas  B.  Griggs,  Brookline,  1st  pre- 
mium, two  dollars  ;  Gilbert  Sumner,  Milton,  2d  premium,  one. 

Canada  Crook  Neck  SquasJi.  —  Eben  Paul,  Dedham,  1st  pre- 
mium, two  dollars  ;  Gilbert  Sumner,  Milton,  2d  premium,  one. 

Sioeet  Corn.  —  vS.  S.  Somes,  Milton,  1st  pi'emiuDi,  two  dollars; 
J.  H.  Wolcott,  Milton,  2d  premium,  one. 

Mr.  D.  F.  Decatur  of  West  Dedham,  offered  for  exhibition  sev- 
eral stalks  of   Sweet  Corn,  with  their  full  ears   upon   each    stalk. 


33 

raised  from  seed  furnisilicd  from  the  Agricultural  Bureau,  which  the 
committee  regard  as  a  vahiable  variety  for  geueral  cultivation,  and 
accordingly  recommenil  a  gratuity  of  two  dollars. 

The  committee  are  pleased  to  report  that  the  show  of  vegetables 
was  very  large  and  of  excellent  quality. 

Charles  L.  Copeland,  '] 

William  J.  Ilvn.:,  I    Committee. 

William  J.  Gkiggs,        }■ 

David  F.  Hexdeuson,    j 


BREAD. 


Tioenfy-eh/ht  entries. — A  much  larger  number  than  usual,  and 
quality  generally  good. 

Wheat. — Mrs.  B.  N.  Sawiu,  Dover,  1st  premium,  three  dollars; 
!Miss  Ellen  Dray,  Dedham,  2d  premium,  two. 

Wheat  and  Indian.  —  Miss  Alice  O.  Sewnll,  Medfield,  1st  pre- 
mium, three  dollars  ;  none  worthy  of  2d  premium. 

Unbolted  Wheat.  —  Miss  Sadie  E.  Everett,  Dover,  twelve  years 
old,  1st  premium,  three  dollars  and  seventy-five  cents;  Miss  Alice 
O.  Sewall,  Medfield,  2d  premium,  two. 

Ii>/e  and  Indian.  —  Mrs.  E.  W.  Houghton,  Milton,  1st  premium, 
three  dollars  ;  Miss  Sadie  E.  Everett,  Dover,  twelve  years  old,  2d 
premium,  two  dollars  and  fifty  cents. 

J.  White  Belcher,  Chairman. 


DAIRY 


Butter.  —  J.  R.  Fishor,  Norwood,  for  best  product,  2d  premium, 
five  dollars. 

J.  ir.  Wolcott,  I\Iilton,  for  the  best  box  of  not  less  than  H  ll)s, 
l&t  premiuui,  live  dollars. 

Cheese.  —  Nathaniel  (Jay,  Stougliton,   1st  [)remium,  tlu'ce  dol- 
lars. 

M.  M.  FisniCK,  Chairman. 


34 

JELLIES,  PICKLES,  PRESERVES,  Etc. 

Mrs.  Edward  Sumner,  West  Dedliam,  twelve  jars  Preserves,  1st 
prciuium,  five  dollars ;  Mrs.  John  Vose,  H3'de  Park,  twelve 
cans  preserves,  2d  premiinn,  three  ;  Mrs.  Charles  H.  Mansfieldj 
Wellesley,  3d  premium,  two ;  Mrs.  E.  Davis,  Readville,  eight 
glasses  Apple  Jell}',  Diploma,  Dr.  Henry  Marsli,  Providence, 
R.  I.,  Wahoo  Wine  for  medicinal  purposes.  Diploma. 

Mrs.  Elizabeth  F.  Wilmartii,  Chairman. 


SEEDS. 


Eugene  Batchelder,  of  Dover,  for  Batchelder  Corn,  2d  premium, 
one  dollar. 

YoiVr  Committee  noticed  a  very  fine  specimen  of  Corn,  con- 
tributed by  J.  B.  Tilley,  of  Brookline,  but  there  not  being  enough 
according  to  the  rules  of  the  Society  to  entitle  it  to  a  premium,  it 
was  necessarily  debarred. 

Geo.  E.  Chickering.  Chairman. 


STRAW  MANUFACTURES. 

Domestic  Strmu  Hats.  —  W.  T.  Cook  &  Co.,  Foxboro',  1st  pre- 
mium, eight  dollars. 

Straw    Braid. — W.  T.  Cook  &  Co.,  Foxboro',  1st  premium, 
five  dollars. 

Velvet  Hats.  —  W.  T.  Cook  &  Co.,  Foxboro',  Diploma. 

Charles  C.  Sumner,  Chairman. 


MANUFACTURES   OF  CLOTH,  HOSIERY,  &c. 

The  Committee  regret  that  so  little  interest  is  taken  by  the  man- 
ufacturers of  the  county,  in  the  exhibition  of  their  products,  and 


35 

express  the  hope,  that  hereafter  more  attention  will  be   given  to 
this  matter. 

The  Committee  renew  the  expression  of  their  satisfaction  at  the 
show  of  Sponge  Car{)et  Lining,  moth  proof,  l)y  Messrs.  \V.  T. 
Cook  &  Co.,  Foxboro*,  to  which  they  award  a  Diploma. 

Charles  H.  French,  Chairman. 


MANUFACTURES. 

Geo.  M.  Snow  &  Co.,  Troy,  N.  Y.,  entered  "Universal  Rope 
Clutch."  The  Committee  have  no  premiums  to  offer  on  this  article, 
but  they  feel  that  they  can  recommend  it  to  the  public,  as  an  ar- 
ticle that  will  meet  the  wants  of  housekeepers. 

Timothy  Smith,  Dedham,  entered  Spring  Bed,  of  many  springs. 
Mr.  Smith,  has  a  good  bed  in  the  opinion  of  your  Committee.  It 
has  received  the  attention  of  the  Society. 

Charles  B.  Tower  &  Co.,  Hyde  Park,  exhibited  a  case  of  Writing 
Ink,  This  Ink  may  be  the  best  ink  in  the  world  so  far  as  any 
knowledge  of  the  Committee  is  concerned.  There  was  no  test  sam- 
ple for  trial.     It  looked  well. 

Charles  Frizzle,  Boston,  entered  two  Step  Ladders.  Mr.  Friz- 
zle has  here  introduced  a  very  neat,  light,  and  strong  article, 
w^orthy  of  attention  and  our  favorable  notice. 

Manuel  &  Bradt,  Rcadville,  entered  a  Coal  Sifter,  adjusted  for  a 
barrel.  Well  adapted  for  those  who  have  but  little  room  to 
■work  in. 

E.  F.  Green,  West  Roxl)Mry,  entered  Relief  Washing  Machine. 
It  has  many  good  qualities.  A  woman  who  has  to  do  this  work 
could  test  its  virtues  l)etter.  A  bachelor  who  has  to  do  his  own 
work  had  better  give  it  a  trial. 

Wm.  R,  Mann,  Chairman. 


LEATHER  WORK.  ' 

Robert  N.  Beunison,  Randolph,  for  Buggy  Harness,  gratuity, 
two  dollars. 

Geo.   Fowkes,   Randolph,   for   Buggy   Harness,   gratuit}',   two 
dollars. 

William  R.  Mann,  Chairman. 


3G 

CARRIAGES,  WAGONS,  &c. 

J.  W.  Robie  &  Co.,  Norwood,   for  best   Express  Wagon,   five 
dollars. 

J.  W.  Robie  &  Co.,  Norwood,   for  best  Covered  Wagon,  three 
dollars. 

Harper  &  Stone,  Sharon,  for   Side  Spring  Open  Buggy,  (there 
being  no  premium  offered,)  a  gratuity  of  three  dollars. 

George  K.  Gannett,^ 

JosKpn  E.  FisKE,         y   Committee. 

Alexander  Dickson,  j 


LADIES'  WORK. 

Of  the  one  hundred  and  four  articles  contributed,  fifty  received 
especial  notice.  Besides  the  usual  contribution  of  Ladies'  Work 
we  have  the  pleasure  of  calling  the  attention  of  the  public  to  the 
superior  Piano  from  the  manufactory  of  J.  Ivers  &  Son,  of  Ded- 
ham,  to  whicJi  we  cheerfully  awaid  a  Diploma.  Also  the  Victor 
Sewing  Machine,  with  Tisdale  Ti'eadle  attached,  to  which  the  Com- 
mittee award  a  Diploma.  A  Carpet  Sweeper,  exhibited  by  Mr. 
Joseph  J.  Hatliuger,  of  Hyde  Park,  is  considered  worthy  of  par- 
ticular notice  as  being  superior  to  any  in  use. 

We  award  the  following  premiums  :  — 

Mrs.  R.  Whiting,  Dedham,  Bedquilt,  $1. 

Mrs.  C.  Coulter,  Needham,  Transferred  Quilt,  SI. 

Mrs.  M.  A.  Mason,  Needham,  Knit  Quilt,  $1.25. 

Mrs.  Susan  Harrow,  Hyde  Park,  Knit  Quilt,  $1. 

Mrs.  W.  Paul,  Dedham,  Quilt,  50  cents. 

Mrs.  A.  A.  Wheeler,  Dedham,  Worsted  work,  50  cents. 

Miss  M.  B.  Jones,  Dedham,  Affghan,  Si. 50. 

Miss  G.  H.  Johnson,  Sharon,  Affghan,  $1. 

Mrs.  A.  H.  Drake,  Stoughion,  Rug,  $2. 

Mrs.  John  Soule,  Readville,  Rug,  $1. 

Miss  S.  H.  Gushing,  Readville.  Mat,  75  cents. 

Mr.  James  Clark,  Readville,  Model  of  Ship,  $3. 

Miss  S.  M.  Vose,  Hyde  Park,  Oil  Paintings,  $3. 

Mrs.  M.  E.  I-ewis,  Milton,  Oil  Paintings,  $1. 

Miss  O.  J.  McCullough,  Hyde  Park,  Pencil  Drawings,  $3. 

Mrs.  S.  Babcock,  Milton,  Ottomiin,  $1. 


37 

Mrs.  S.  N.  Piper,  Ilydc  Park,  Sofa  Pillow,  81. 

]Mrs.  A.  A.  PoUey,  East  Walpole,  Braided  vSack,  $1. 

Mrs.  B.  F.  Brown,  Dorchester,  Crotchet  work,  S3. 

Miss  Fanny  Brown,  Jamaica  Plain,  Slipper  Case,  $1. 

Mrs.  L.  G.  Britton,  Stoughton,  Silk  J^nibroider}',  $1. 

INIrs.  Jennie  O'Conncll,  Hyde  Park,  Hair  Work,  $1. 

Miss  Minnie  Spring,  Hyde  Park,  Wax  Cross,  Si. 

Mrs.  Daisy  Spring,  Hyde  Park,  Tidy,  50  cents. 

P^lias  Taylor,  Dedham,  Worsted  Wreath,  75  cents. 

Mrs.  G.  E.  Smith,  Walpole,  Needle  Work,  S3. 

Mrs.  F.  Smith,  Walpole,  Sorrento  Carving,  SI. 

Bliss  Grace  Vose,  Milton,  Tatting-Tidy,  S2. 

Miss  J.  Talbot,  Norwood,  Scrap  Bags,  $1. 

Mrs.  Sarah  Tucker,  Dedham,  Knitted  Gloves  and  Mittens,  Si. 

Mrs.  H.  M.  A.  Laurison,  Hyde  Park,  Mats,  25  cents. 

Miss  A.  Chapin,  Ph^ie  Park,  Mats,  25  cents. 

T.  E.  Harlow,  Hyde  Park,  Bread  Basket,  Si. 

Miss  H.  Bonney,  Hyde  Park,  Tidy,  25  cents. 

Miss  Edith  Brainard,  Hyde  Park,  Crotchet  Sack,  25  cents. 

Mrs.  E.  Davis,  Readville,  Perfume  Case,  50  cents. 

Miss  Edna  Brainard,  Hyde  Park,  Mats,  25  cents. 

Miss  Ella  Bragdon,  Hj'de  Park,  Mats,  25  cents. 

Miss  G.  B.  Sumner,  Milton,  Tidy,  50  cents. 

Mrs.  A.  Holmes,  Milton,  Yarn,  Si. 

Miss  E.  Hall,  Readville,  Tatting,  50  cents. 

Mrs.  Bragdon,  Readville,  Crape  Shawl,  Diploma. 

Miss  M.  F.  Clark,  Sharon,  Mats,  50  cents. 

Mrs.  Spring,  Hyde  Park,  Picture,  Diploma. 

Miss  H.  Bradlee,  Milton,  Fancy  Work,  75  cents. 

Miss  Mabel  Morse,  Milton,  Toilet  Set,  50  cents. 

Miss  R.  Egan,  Hj'de  Park,  Paintings,  Diploma. 

Miss  M.  Prescott,  Sharon,  Cushion  and  Mats,  50  cents. 

Mrs.  W.  Goss,  Hyde  Park,  Braiding,  SI. 

Mrs.  J.  Walter  Biadlee,  Milton,  Embroidered  Slippers,  50  cents. 

Amount  awarded,  S47.00. 

Mrs.  John  Vose,  \ 

Mrs.  W.  T.  Tiiacher,  >  Committee. 

Mrs.  Jesse  Vose,  j 


CABINETS  OF  BIRDS  AND  INSECTS. 

Your  Committee  find  but  one  entry  in  this  department  the  pre- 
sent year.  Wm.  M.  Hinckley,  Milton,  Mass.,  presented  a  case  of 
moths,  butterflies,  and  beetles,  containing  one  hundred  and  twenty- 
five  specimens,  wiiich  were  arranged  in  a  tasteful  manner,  and 
correctly  named.  Wc  rcconnnend  an  award  of  the  second  pre- 
mium of  three  dollars.  A.  W.  Cheever,  Chairman. 


38 


Recapitulation   of   Premiums 
awarded  by  the 

NORFOLK    AGRICULTURAL     SOCIETY, 

FOR   1874. 


HORSES. 

William  T.  Cook $56  00 

J.  H.  Fairinatou 20  00 

Jasou  Houjihton 15  00 

N.  Farriiigtou,  Jr 15  00 

C.  L.-  Farnsvvortli 10  00 

Joseph  Dix 10  00 

W.  H.  Morrill 10  00 

John  W.  Thomas 8  00 

A.  T.  Carpenter 8  00 

J.  W.  Bradlee 7  00 

C.  &  C.   Mackintosh 7  00 

Freeman  Fisher 7  00 

F.  B.  Ray 6  00 

E.  P.  Tileslon 6  00 

S.  K.  Bailey 5  00 

Oliver  Deaue 5  00 

Wisuer  Park 6  00 

J.  L.  Kendall 5  00 

C.  E.  Tucker 5  00 

H.  K.  Bird 4  00 

E.  C.  R.  Walker 4  00 

Silas  A.  Stone 4  00 

J.  II.  McKendry :}  00 

F.  U.  White 3  00 

G.  W.  Gunnison 3  00 

Charles  Cook 2  00 


HORSES.  —  ExTP.A  Premiums. 

W.  E.  Coffin $60  00 

F.  B.  Ray 50  00 

B.  R.  Ballou 50  00 

Wisner  Park 40  00 

H.G.Turner 30  00 

Harper  &  Stone 25  00 

Jason  Houghton 25  00 

R.  W.  Hamblin 20  00 

Miss  A.  Dickson S'O  00 

J.  C.  Bancroft 15  00 

W.  B.  Kendall 15  00 

P.  S.  Allen 10  00 

RURAL  SPORTS. 

J.  E.  Manning $16  (0 

Charles  Cashing 15  00 

John  Powers 8  00 

Barney  West 6  00 

Dennis  Mahoney 4  00 

Moses   Bass 2  00 

PLOWING. 

Blackman  Brothers $16  00 

William  Fales 10  00 


:J9 


B.  N.  Sawiii  &  A.  Biicon ifilO  00 

D.F.Decatur ii  00 

WORKING  OXEN. 

O.  T.  Rogers $10  00 

A.  T.  Browu 7  00 

William  Fales 4  00 

BULLS. 

William  T.  Cook, $10  00 

C.  &  C.  MacUintosh 10  00 

Henry  L.  Pierce 5  00 

James  Galloway 5  00 

COWS. 

Henry  M.  Mack $25  00 

Henry  L.  Pierce 12  00 

A.  K.  Teele 10  00 

C.  &  C.  Mackintosh 10  00 

Hrnry  Chatlin 10  00 

William  T.  Cook 6  00 

A.  T.  Brown 5  00 

Dennis  Hiiley 6  00 

Owen  Hufilies 4  00 

N.  T.  Davenport 4  00 

HEIFERS. 

C.  &  C.  Mackintosh $14  00 

A.  T.  Brown G  00 

William  T.  Cook 5  00 

F.   Parker 4  00 

William  McDonald 4  00 

J.  H.  Wolcott 2  00 

J.imes  Galloway 2  00 

J.  Fisher 2  00 

SWINE. 

N.  Farrin-rton.  Jr  $22  00 

Edward  Cotter 14  00 

J.  II.  Farringlon 10  00 

John  Sia.s 10  00 

C.  L.  Copeland 8  00 

J.  II.  Davenport 8  00 

D.F.Decatur GOO 

A.  T.  Brown G  00 

Lawrence   McCarty 2  00 

National  Sailor's  Home 2  00 

POULTRY. 

M.  I.Ellis $77  00 

A.  F.  Stevens 1(!  00 

L.  E.  Gray 12  00 


E.  C.  Aldrich $12  00 

C.  &  F.  Spriusi 11  00 

Francis  Coduuin "J  OO 

A.  11.  Drake 9  00 

J.  E.  Slierman 7, 00 

J.  F.  Mooar G  00 

A.  Starkweather   5  00 

J.  F.  Co  well 5  00 

C.   L.  Copeland 4  00 

George  Miles 3  00 

H.  B.  Slade 3  00 

William  E.  Sumner 3  00 

James  J.  Sluart 3  00 

John  J.  Smith 2  00 

Horace  H.  Plummer 1  00 

J.  W.  Mitchell 1  00 

Miss  Nettie  Eyling 1  00 

F.  Slade 1  00 

C.  &  C.  Mackintosh 100 

J.  Cartwright 50 

VEGETABLES. 

James  Mackintosh $20  00 

J.  B.  Tilley 15  00 

C.  &  C.  Mackintosh 11  00 

L.  J.  McCarty 10  00 

John  Vdse 7  00 

Gilbert  Sumner 6  00 

John   Sias 5  00 

Eben  Paul 4  00 

Thomas  B.  Griggs 4  00 

A.  F.  Stevens 3  00 

G.  M.  Mellen 3  00 

J.  II.  Farrington 3  00 

Mrs.   Dr.  Tulbot 3  00 

N.  T.  Davenport   2  00 

Churlcs  Spring 2  00 

Robert  R.  Mitchell 2  00 

S.  S.  Somes 2  00 

I).  F.  Decatur 2  00 

Patrick  Nolen 1  00 

William  McDonald 1  00 

George  Craft 1  00 

J.  H.  Wolcott 1  00 

PEARS. 

Jdlin  D.  Bradlee $10  00 

J.  B.  Tilley 10  00 

W.  J.  Gri::gs 8  00 

B.  F.  Radford 8  00 

Theodore    Lyman ;  "00 

H.  P.  Kidder (I  00 

B.  C.   Vose 5  00 

J.  VV.  Vose 4  00 

J.  H.  Wolcott 4  00 

,1.  P.  S.  Chiirchill -A  00 


40 


J.  W.  Page $3  00 

Joseph  Colburn 3  00 

A.  S.  Bicnvn 2  00 

Geo.  S.  Curtis 2  00 

H.'W.  Vose 2  00 

Timothy  Smith 2  00 

Wallver  &  Co 2  00 

R.  D.  Newtou 1  OO 

N.  T.  Davenport 1  00 

Lorenzo   Smith 100 

Capt.  Raynes 1  00 

G.  D.  Hicks 1  00 

APPLES. 

J.  W.  Talbot $14  00 

Joseph  Crane 8  00 

C.  &  C.  Maciiintoslr. 5  00 

E.  Sumner 5  00 

E.  Polley 4  oo 

J.  B.  Tiliey 4  00 

A.  D.  Capon 4  00 

Henry  Bird 3  00 

Ebeu  Pawl 3  oO 

D.  H.  Elliins 3  09 

S.  Bagioy 2  00 

Mrs.  Dr.  Talbot 2  00 

D.  F.  Decatur 2  00 

J.   Breck 100 

J.  F.  Cowell 1  00 

Mrs.  F.  Fish 1  oO 

H.  P.  Kidder. •• 1  00 

GRAPES  AND  OTHER  FRUITS. 

W.  J.  Stuart $6  00 

C.  F.  Gerry 4  00 

Edwin  Reed 3  00 

J.  B.  Tiiley 3  00 

Joseph  Colburn 3  00 

C  &  C.  Mackintosh 3  00 

B.  F.  Ra<lf.a-d 2  00 

J.  W.   Page 2  00 

B.  C.  Vose 2  00 

J.  F.  Cowell 2  00 

Robert  R.  Mitchell 2  00 

Henry  P.  Ki<lder 2  00 

E.  U.  Scwall 2  00 

Nathan  Lonulellow 2  00 

Lorenzo   Smith 100 

N.  B.  White 1  00 

Henry  Goukliiig 1  00 

H.  W.  Vo8C 100 

Eben  Paul 1  00 

Johu  Vose . .  1  00 

FLOWERS. 

E.  Roberts $11  00 

B.  C.  Vose 9  00 

Miss  H.  G.  Davenport 8  00 

H.  P.  Kidder 5  00 

N.  T.  Davenport 4  00 


Mrs.  John  Vose $4  00 

A.  McLaren 3  00 

Townsend  &  Co 3  00 

Lyman  Davenport 3  00 

Alice  B.  Sewall 3  00 

Mrs.  Josepii  Crane 2  00 

J.  0.  Davenport. 2  00 

John  Vose 1  50 

G.  W.  Halliday 1  00 

Mary  B.  Leseur 1  00 

G.  A.  Law 1  00 

Carrie  Vose 1  00 

Mrs.  Mackintosh 1  00 

Mrs.  Joseph  Britton 1  00 

C.  C.  Cutler 1  00 

Louisa  Lewin 50 

Ida  Thomas 50 

Mrs.  C.  H.  Shute 50 

Mrs.  Bolton 50 

DAIRY. 

J.  R.  Fisher §5  00 

J.  H.  Wolcott 5  00 

Nathaniel  Gay 3  00 

BREAD. 

Miss  Sadie  E.  Everett $fi  25 

Miss  Alice  O.  Sewall 5  00 

Mrs.  B.  N.  Sawin 3  00 

Mrs.  E.  W.  Hougliton 3  00 

Miss  Ellen  Dray 2  00 

JELLIES,  PRESERVES,  Etc. 

Mrs.  Edward  Sumner, $5  00 

Mrs.  John  Vose 3  00 

Mrs.  Charles  H.  Mansfield 2  00 

SEEDS. 
Eugene  Batchelder .$1  00 


STRAW   MANUFACTURES. 

W.  T.  Cook  &  Co $13  00 

LEATHER  WORK. 

Robert  N.  Bennison $2  00 

Geo.  Fowkes 2  00 

CARRIAGES,  WAGONS,  Ere. 

J.  W.  Robie  &  Co iSS  00 

Harper  &  Stone 3  00 

BIRDS  AND  INSECTS. 

W.  M.  Hinckley $3  00 

LADIES'    WORK. 
(See  pages  3G-37) 849  50 


$1,G40  75 


41 


Tl\EASUF\EF\'s     fiEPOI\T. 


C.  C.  Churchill,  in  account  icith  Norfolk  AyricnUural  Society. 

Du. 

To  balance  Nov.  30,  1873 §17  31 

ciish  of  new  members i;iO  00 

"     '•      Comiuouwealth COO  00 

•'  proceeds  of  Fair,  l,s7-t 3,024  GO  . 

"  from  all  other  sources 3,!)  17  39 

$7,689  30 

Contra.        Cit. 

By  cash  paid  incidental  expenses $2,545  46 

"        "      [jremiums 1,590  50 

"       '<      Secretary's  salary 100  00 

"        "      Treasurer's     "      100  00 

•'        "      Interest  on  debt 2,200  00 

Balance  in  Treasury 1,153  34 

$7,689  30 

C.  C.  CHURCHILL,  Treasurer. 
Dkdiiam,  D.'C.  31,   1874. 


42 


I^ROCEEDITSraS 

on  the  occasion  of  the 
Twenty-Sixth       Anniversary 

OF  THE 

:norfolk   ageicultural   society, 

THURSDAY  AND  FRIDAY,  September  24th  and  25th,  1874. 


The  2Ctli  Annual  Exhibition  of  the  Norfolk  Agricultural  Society 
was  held  at  Readville,  on  Thursday  and  Friday,  September  2-lth 
and  25th,  1874.  Tlie  weather  was  very  favorable,  the  attendance 
large  and  the  show  of  products  in  the  several  departments  un- 
usually fine.  The  following  is  a  brief  recapitulation  of  the  leading 
features : — 

Of  Horses,  the  leading  contributor  was  Col.  Henrj^  S.  Russell, 
President  of  the  Society,  who  sent  a  large  number  of  represen- 
tatives of  his  famous  Fearnaught  stock.  A  show  of  fine  animals 
was  also  made  bj^  William  T.  Cook  of  Foxboro'.  The  display  of 
good  horses  was  one  of  the  largest  ever  made  by  the  Society. 

Among  the  many  contributors  of  stock  were  fine  herds  of  Jersey 
stock  from  the  Lawrence  farm  in  Dorchester,  and  from  Messrs. 
William  T.  Cook  of  Foxboro,'  and  Henry  L  Pierce  of  Dorchester. 
Contributions  of  choice  stock  were  also  made  by  Henry  Chaflin 
and  A.  T.  Brown,  Brookline,  J.  H.  Wolcott  and  W.  R,  Robeson, 
Milton,  C  &  C.  Mackintosh,  Needhara,  and  others. 

The  principal  exhibition  of  Swine,  of  which  there  were  a  large 
number  on  tlie  grounds,  were  the  Messrs.  Farrington  of  Milton 


43 

and  Canton,  (■.  L.  Copeland  and  Jofin  Sias  of  Milton;  D.  F. 
Decatur,  West  Dedham,  and  A.  T.  Brown  and  L.  McCasty,  Brook- 
line. 

Of  Poultry,  M.  I.  Ellis  of  Norwood,  was  the  laro;est  contri- 
butor, having  nearly  50  coops  of  superior  fowls.  Other  leading 
contributors  were  A.  H.  Drake,  Stoughton,  L.  E.  Gay  of  tox- 
boro',  E.  C.  Aldrich,  Hyde  Park,  and  A.  F.  Stevens  and  the 
Messrs.  Spring  of  Needhani. 

The  display  of  Fruit  was  very  fine,  embracing  contributions  of  Pears 
from  Col.  Marshall  P.  Wilder  ;  John  D.  Bradlee  and  H.  P.  Kidder, 
Milton,  C.  F.  &  George  S.  Curtis,  Jamaica  Plain,  Theodore  Lyman, 
W.  J.  Griggs  and  J.  B.  Tilley  of  Brookline,  and  others ;  of 
Apples,  from  J.  W.  Talbot,  Norwood,  C.  &  C.  Mackintosh,  Need- 
ham,  K.  Polley,  AValpole,  Edwcird  Sumner  and  Joseph  Crane,  West 
Dedham,  J.  B.  Tilley,  Brookline,  A.  D.  Capen,  Dorchester,  and 
others.  Of  Grapes,  fine  displays  were  made  by  William  J.  Stuart, 
C.  F.  Gerry,  PMwin  Reed  and  B.  C.  Vose,  Hyde  Park,  and  others. 
Joseph  Colburn  of  West  Dedham,  exhibited  a  fine  collection  of 
Peaches,  as  also  did  E.  U.  Sewall  of  Medfield,  and  Henry  Gould- 
iug  of  Dover. 

The  display  of  Plants  and  Flowers  was  very  fine  and  attracted 
much  attention.  The  leading  contributors  were  E.  Roberts,  B.  C. 
.Vose,  G.  W.  Hallidny  and  Townsend  &  Co.,  Hyde  Park;  H.  P. 
Kidder,  N.  T.  Davenport,  Lyman  Daveport,  Miss  H.  G.  Daven- 
port, John  Vose,  Milton  ;  Miss  Sewall,  Medfield,  A.  McLaren, 
Forest  Hills,  and  others. 

Of  Vegetables,  James  Mackintosh  of  Needham,  was  the  leading 
contributor,  and  a  fine  display  was  also  made  by  C  &  C.  Mackin- 
tosh, of  the  same  town.  Large  contributions  were  also  made  by 
J.  B.  Tilley,  Thomas  B.  Griggs  and  L.  J.  McCarthy,  Brookline, 
John  Vose,  John  Sias,  Gilbert  Sumner,  Milton,  Mrs.  Dr.  Talbot, 
Norwood,  and  others. 

The  disi)lay  of  Ladies'  Work  was  very  large,  many  of  the  con- 
tributions evincing  decided  taste  and  skill.  To  this  department 
Messrs.  William  T.  Cook  &  Co.,  Foxboro',  contributed  several 
cases  of  elegant  Str^w  and  Velvet  Hats,  fine  specimens  of  Straw 
Braid  and  specimens  of  their  celebrated  Carpet  Lining. 

The  show  of  Bread  was  larger  than  for  several  years,  whilst  that 
of  Butter  was  less,  though  of  excellent  quality. 

To  the  department  of  Manufactures  contributions  were  made  by 
Ivors  &  Son,  Dedham,  of  Pianos  ;  J.  W.  Roby  &  Co.,  Norwood, 
and  Harper  and  Stone,  Sharon,  of  Carriages ;  Timothy  Smith, 
Dedham  of  Spring  Beds  ;  Josiah  Tisdale,  Norwood,  of  Tisdale 
Treadle  on  Sewing  Machines  ;  Joseph  J.  Hatlinger,  Hyde  Park,  of 
Car[)et  Sweeper,  and  others. 

On  riiursilay  forenoon  the  Ploughing  and  Drawing  Matches 
to(jk  plac(!,  and  the  afternoon  was  devoted  to  the  examination  of 
contributions  by  the  several  committees,  and  to  trotting  on  the 
course. 


On  Friday,  the  first  performance  was  the  cavalcade  of  all  horses  on 
exhibition  on  the  tracik.  At  12 o'clock  m.,  a  procession  was  formed 
nnder  the  direct]  op  of  Captain  A.  A.  Hall  of  Roxbury,  Chief  Marshal, 
which,  preceded  by  the  Jamaica  Plain  Band,  marched  to  the  tent, 
where,  after  prayer  by  Rev.  Hillary  B3'graves  of  Milton,  Chaplain 
of  the  Da\%  the  President  of  the  Society,  Col.  Henry  S.  Rnssell  of 
Milton,  invited  the  company  to  partake  of  an  excellent  and  sub- 
stantial dinner  prepared  b}^  L.  E.  Reed  of  Boston,  at  the  close  of 
which  the  orator  of  the  occasion,  John  Qnincy  Adams  of  Quincy, 
was  introduced  to  the  audience,  and  proceeded  to  deliver  the  ad- 
dress, which  will  be  found  in  full  at  the  commencement  of  this 
volume.  Brief  addresses  were  also  made  by  Col.  Wilder,  the 
Honorary  President  of  the  Society,  Hon.  John  A.  Hawes  of  P'air- 
haven,  delegate  from  the  State  Board  of  Agriculture,  and  others, 
after  which  the  proceedings  in  the  tent  were  brought  to  a  close, 
and  the  company  adjourned  to  the  track. 

The  races  on  the  track  began  at  2  o'clock  under  the  direction  of 
Messrs.  J.  Freeman  Ellis,  Stoughton,  William  T.  Thacher,  Hyde 
Park,  and  Erastus  Nash,  Weymouth,  and  occupied  the  time  until 
5  o'clock,  when  the  Exhibition  closed. 

During  the  afternoon  the  Hyde  Park  Fire  Department,  having  as 
guests  Tiger  Engine  Company,  No.  4  of  Hallowell,  Maine,  and  a 
portion  of  the  Fire  Departments  of  Dedham  and  Jamaica  Plain, 
visited  the  grounds  and  were  the  recipients  of  marked  attention. 
The  display  made  by  the  several  companies  with  their  three  bands, 
added  nmch  to  the  attractions  of  the  occasion. 

The  only  drawback  upon  the  pleasure  of  the  day  was  the  in- 
ability of  the  famous  stallion  Smuggler  to  trot  on  the  track  by 
reason  of  lameness  ;  but  the  anxiety  of  the  public  to  see  the  ani- 
mal was  so  great  that  the  owner.  Col.  Russell,  allowed  him  to  be 
led  around  the  track,  where  he  received  an  enthusiastic  ovation. 

Viewed  as  a  whole  the  Exhibition  was  the  best  ever  held  by  the 
Society,  and  gave  great  satisfaction  to  all  in  al^tendance.  Good 
order  prevailed  during  the  entire  two  daj^s,  the  police  arrange- 
ments being  admirably  carried  out  b}'  Deputy  State  Constable 
Bailey  of  Dedham,  assisted  by  other  members  of  the  force. 
Captain  A.  A.  Hall  of  the  Roxbury  Horse  Guards,  proved  a 
most  efficient  Chief  Marshal,  and  his  efforts  were  admirably 
seconded  by  Messrs.  William  B.  Fenner,  A.  L.  Carleton,  W".  W. 
McCue  and  J.  Frank  Sargent,  all  connected  with  the  same  corps. 


4:5 


Officers    of   the     Society,    1874, 


President! 
HENRY  S.  RUSSELL of  Milton. 

Honorary  President  ■■ 
Hon.  MARSHALL  P.  WILDER of  Dorchester. 

Vice-Presidents! 

Hon.  OTIS  GARY '. of  Foa-.borough. 

ALONZO   W.  CHEEVER of  Mrentham. 

JOHN  QUINCY  ADAMS of  Quinaj. 

ALFRED  W.  W H ITCOMB of  liando/ph. 

THEODORE   LYMAN of  Brookline. 

WILLIAM  R.  MANN of  Sharon. 

Corresponding  and  Recording  Secretary! 
HENRY  O.  HILDRETH of  Dcdhum. 

Treasurer ! 
CHAUNCEY  C.  CHURCHILL of  Dedham. 

Executive  Committee  1 

E.  C.  R.   WALKER of  West  lloxhury. 

ALBERT  B.    BALCH of  Mcdfield. 

CHARLES   F.  CURTIS of  West  lioxbxmj, 

AUGUSTUS  P.  C ALDER of  West  Itoxbury. 

WILLIAM   T.    COOK of  Foxhorough. 

ELLIS  TUCKER of  Canton. 

HENRY  M.    MACK of  Dorchester. 

DAVID  W.  TUCKER of  Milton. 

GEORGE   CRAFT of  Brookline. 

Finance  Committee  and  Auditors! 

IRA    CLEVELAND of  Dedham. 

WILLIAM  J.  STUART of  ll>/de  J'u,/c. 

ELIPH  ALET   STONE of  Dtdham. 


46 


Board  of  Trustees, 


ALVA   MOERISON. 
JOHN   B.    ARNOLD. 


WILLIAM   J.    HYDE. 
GEORGE   GRIGGS. 


BELLIXGHAM. 

GEORGE    H.    CROOKS. 
BBAINTKEE. 

DAVID   H.   BATES. 
GEORGE   WALES. 
BROOKLINE. 

CHARLES   STEARNS. 
WILLIAM  J.    GRIGGS. 

CANTON. 


JAMES   T.    SUMNER. 
NATHANIEL    S.    WHITE. 


SOLOMON   J.    BEAL. 


LUTHER  EATON. 
ALLEN    COLBURN. 


LEMUEL   CLAPP. 
SAMUEL   J.    CAPEN. 
AARON    D.    CAPEN. 

HENRY   GOULDING. 
EPHRAIM    WILSON. 


JAMES   CAPEN. 
FRANCIS  D.    WILLIAMS. 


ERASTUS   L.    METCALF. 
JOHN    W.  RICHARDSON. 


ADAM   McINTOSH. 
EDMUND   TUCKER. 


COHASSET. 

ABRAHAM   H. 
DEDHAM. 


TOWER. 


JEREMIAH   W.    GAY. 
AUGUSTUS  B.    ENDICOTT. 

DORCHESTER. 

JOSEPH   E.    HALL. 
GEORGE    DORR, 
DANIEL   SPEAR. 

POVER. 

BENJAMIN   N.    SAWIN. 
AMOS    W.    SHUMWAY. 

FOXBOROUGH. 

ERASTUS   P.    CARPENTER. 
CHARLES   F.    HOWARD. 

FRANKLIN. 

HIRAM  W.   JONES. 
FRANCIS  B.  RAY. 


ALPHEUS  P.  BLAKE. 
WILLIAM  J.  STUART 


HOLBROOK. 

CALEB    S.    HOLBROOK. 

HYDE    PARK, 

WILLIAM   T 
HENRY 

MEDFIELD. 


THACHER. 
A.    DARLIN(i. 


CHARLES    C.    SEVVALL. 
ELIJAH   THAYER. 


WILLARD    P.    CLARK. 
RICHARD   RICHARDSON. 


ALBERT   K.    TEELE. 
LYMAN   DAVENPORT. 


WILLIAM    Q.    FISH. 
ALONZO   B.    PARKER. 

MEDWAY. 

WILLIAM   DANIELS. 
MILTON   M.   FISHER. 

MILTON. 

OLIVER   W.    PEAFODY. 
CHARLES   L.    COPELAND. 


47 


NEEDHAM. 


ABEL.   F.    STEVENS. 
CHARLES   H,    MANSFIELD. 

WALTER   II.    FISHER. 
ERASTUS    DUPEE. 


HENRY  BLACKMAN. 
JAMES  MACKINTOSH. 


NOKFOLK. 


LUCAS    POND. 

GEORGE   E.    HOLBROOK. 


NORWOOD. 


JAMES  R.  FISHER 
ISAAC   ELLIS. 


JOSEPH  W.    ROBERTSON. 
LEMUEL  BILLINGS. 


J.    WHITE   BELCHER. 
WILLIAM   PORTER. 


ROLAND    WORTHINGTON. 
J.    AUSTIN    ROGERS. 
ISAAC    HAYDEN. 


JOSIAH   W. 
SIDNEY    E. 


TALBOT. 
MORSE. 


QUINCY. 

CHARLES    A.    HOWLAND. 
EDWARD   TURNER. 

RANDOLPH. 

EPHRIAM    MANN. 
SETH   MANN,    2d. 

ROXBURY. 

JOSEPH    H.    CHAD  WICK. 
GEORGE    CURTIS, 
SAMUEL   LITTLE. 


ASAHEL   S.    DRAKE. 
LEWIS   W.   MORSE. 


LUCIUS   CLAPP. 
HENRY  BIHD. 


WILLARD   LEWIS. 
HENRY   M.    PLIMPTON. 


SHARDS. 

GEORGE 
THOMAS 

STOUGHTOX. 

ROBERT 


R.    MANN. 
DECATUR. 


PORTER,  Ju. 
H.    DRAKE. 


ALFRED    S. 
JOSEPH   W. 


BROWN. 
PAGE. 


JOHN   W.    LOUD. 
JAMES    HUMPHREY. 


JOFIN  F.    COWELL. 
EBENEZER   B.    PARKER. 


ALBERT 

WAPOLE. 

JOHN    N. 
EDMUND 

WEST  ROXBURY. 

HAMILTON 
GEORGE   S. 

WEYMOUTH. 

EltASTUS    NASH. 
JAMES    L.    BATES. 
WREN  rn  A.M. 

CIIAUNCEY   G.    FULLER. 
ROBERT   P.    GRANT. 


SMITH. 
POL LEY 


J.    FARRAR. 
CURTIS. 


48 


fTA 


MES     OF 


JA 


EMBER^S. 


BELLINGHAM. 

Chilson,  Paul,*  18fiO. 
Crooks,  George  H. 
Pickering,  Asa,*  '69.  [3.] 

BRAINTREE. 

Arnold,  Johu  B. 
Arnold,  Joseph  A. 
Bates,  David  H. 
Blake,  Joseph  H.  D.,*  '68. 
Bowditch,  Ebenezer  C. 
Bradford,  E.  S.,*186U. 
Chace,  George 
How,  Charles  H. 
Dyer,  Isaac 
Dver,  Joseph 
Fogg,  Charles  M.,*  1854. 
French,  George  G. 
French,  Charles,*  1861. 
French, Jonathan 
Hollingsworth,  E.  A. 
Hollis,  Caleb 
Hollis,  David  N. 
Hollis,  Johu  A. 
Hollis,  Josiah 
Howard,  J.  G. 
Ludden,  Miss  Carrie  F. 
Eudden,  Joseph  T.,*  '62. 
Locke,  W.  F. 
Mansfield,  John 
Manstield,  Warren 
INlorrisou,  Alva 
Niles,  Daniel  H. 
Penniman,  Ezra,*  181J6. 
Perkins,  Oliver 
Potter, Edward 
Rand,  William  T. 
Randall,  ApoUos,*  1863. 
Stetson,  Amos  W. 
Stetson,  Caleb 
Stoddard,  A.  A. 
Thayer,  Ebenezer  C 
Thayer,  Hezekiah,*  1854. 
Thayer,  Sylvanus,*  1S7'2. 
Vinton,  Thomas  H. 
Wainwright,  Peter 
Wainwright,  Williaui  L. 
Wales,  George 
Wild,  Hirain 
Willis,  Geo.  W.,*  'o-2.  [44.] 

BROOKE  I NE. 

Amory,  .Tames  S. 
Amory,  William 
Appleton,  William,  Jr. 
Baboock,  George* 
Bartlett,  James,*  1871. 
Benton,  Austin  W. 
Beegan,  Jos.  H. 
Bird,  Jesse,*  18."ifi. 
Blake,  George  liaty 
Blaney,  Henry 


Bramhall,  William,*  1870. 
Brown,  Atherton  T. 
Brown,  Josei)h  T. 
Chaflin,  Henry 
Churchill,  Wm.,*  1857. 
Codman,  Francis 
Codman,  James  M. 
Corey,  Elijah,*  1859. 
Corey,  Timothy 
Craft,  Miss  Emeline  H. 
Craft,  Caleb 
Craft,  Charles,*  1864. 
Craft,  George 
Craft,  Samuel,*  185C. 
Dane,  John,*  1854. 
Dane,  John  H. 
Denny,  Francis  P.,*  1871. 
Ferris,  Mortimer  C. 
Fisher,  Francis,*  1871. 
Frazer,  Amherst  A. 
Griggs,  George 
Griggs,  Thomas 
Griggs,  Thomas  B. 
Gilggs,  William  J. 
Henshaw,  Samuel,*  1833. 
Hill,  M.  F. 
Howe,  Friink  E. 
Howe,  James  Murray 
Howe,  John,*  1867. 
Humphrey,  VVillard  J. 
Hnniphrey,  W.  A. 
Hyde,  WillianiJ. 
Jameson,  William  H. 
Kellogg,  Charles  D. 
liawrence,  Amos  A. 
Lyman,  Theodore 
McCarthy,  Lawrence  .1. 
Parker,  Edward  G.*  '68. 
Parker,  M.  D.*  1863. 
Parsons,  Thomas 
Reed,  Eben 
Reed,  Mrs.  Eben 
Reed,  Miss  Ella 
Salisbury,  VVjHiam  G. 
Sampson,  George  R. 
Shaw,  G.  Howland,*  '67. 
Stearns,  Charles 
Stearns,  Marshall,*  1870. 
Thayer,  John  E.,*  1857. 
Tdley,  Jas.  B. 
Trowbridge,  John  H. 
Turner,  .John  N.,*  1864. 
Welch,  Matthew,*  1868. 
White,  Henry  K. 
Williams,  MosesB.*'66. [65] 

CANTON. 

Abbott,  Ezra,*  1873. 
Ames,  Frank  M. 
Billings,  Uriah 
Billings,  William 
Brav,  Edgar  W. 
Brewster,  Ezra  S. 
Cabot,  Samuel 


Capen,  Ezekiel,*  1872. 
Capen,  Samuel,*  18C3. 
Chapman ,  Oliver  S. 
Crane.  Albert,*  1873. 
Cushman,  Charles  F. 
Davenport,  Alfred 
Davenport,  Charles 
Davenport,  John,  Jr. 
Davenport,  J.  H. 
Deane,  Francis  W. 
Deane,  Oliver 
Downes,  (George,*  1861. 
Downes,  Miss  C.  T. 
Downes,  George  E. 
Draper,  Thomas 
Dunbar,  Elijah 
Dunbar,  James,*  1867. 
Dunbar,  Nathaniel 
Dunbar,  William,*  1857., 
P^ager,  Edward  R. 
Eldiidge  John  S. 
Eldridge,  John  S.,  Jr. 
Endicott,  John,*  1855. 
Endicott,  Charles 
Everett,  J.  Mason 
Everett,  Leonaid,*  1852. 
Farrington,  Nathaniel,  J. 
Fenno,  Jesse 
French,  Charles  H. 
French,  Thomas,*  1863. 
Fuller,  Daniel 
Guild,  Horace 
Hall,  John 
Howard  Lucius 
Hunt,  George  L. 
Huntoon,  Benj.,*  1864. 
Hnutoon,  Mrs.  Benjamin 
Huntoon,  D.  T.  V. 
Kinsley,  Lyman 
KoUock,  .Jeremiah 
Lincoln,  Frederick  W.,*  '71 
Lord,  William  P. 
Manstield,  William 
Mcintosh,  Adam 
Mcintosh,  Roger  S. 
McKendry,  William 
Messinger,  Vernon  A. 
Messenger,  VirgilJ. 
Morse,  William 
Noyes,  Samuel  B. 
Proiity,  Lorezo,*  1872. 
Revere,  .Joseph 
Shepard,  James  S. 
Spare,  Elijah 
Spaulding,  Corodon 
Stetson,  .loseph 
Sumner,  James  T. 
Sumner,  George  P. 
Sumner,  Mrs.  Sarah  E. 
Tilt,  Benjamin  B. 
Tucker,  Edmund 
Tucker,  Ellis 
Tucker,  Jedeiliah 
TuL'ker.  Nathaniel,  Jr 
Tucker,  Phineas 


i9 


Tucker,  William,*  1SC8. 
Waril,  Samuel  G. 
Weiilwortli,  Kdwin 
Wentworth,  Nathaniel 
White,  Klishii*,  18C5. 
White,  Nathaniel  S. 
Wood,  Kulus  C.  [79.] 

COHASSET. 

Beal,  Solomon  J. 
Beal,  Mrs.  S.  J. 
Doane,  James  C. 
Johnson,  William  B.,*  '72. 
Sohier,  William  D.,*  18C8, 
Souther,  Labaii,*  ISCO. 
Tower,  Abraham  H.     [7.] 

DEDHAM. 

Adams,  Benjamin  H. 
Alden,  Al)uer 
Alden,  Francis 
Alden,  Ueoige,*  18f.3. 
Alden,  Leonard.*  1874. 
Alden,  Samuel  F. 
Ames,  William 
Ames,  William, 2d 
Babcock,  Samuel  B.,*  '73. 
Bacon,  .>>ilas  I>. 
Bailey,  Benjamin  II. 
Baker,  David  A. 
Baker,  Obed,*  18G8. 
Baker,  Thnothy 
Baker,  William 
Balch,Benj.  W.,*  1S58. 
Barrows,  Edward 
Barrows,  Thomas 
Bates,  Martin,*  1SG9. 
Bean,  Albion,*  1(^0. 
Bestwick.  Frederick  L. 
BIckiier,  Samuel  R. 
Bosworth,  Isaac  C.,*  I8GG. 
Boyden,  Addison 
Boyden.  Benjamin 
Brooks,  Eilward  C. 
Bryant.  Austin,*  18.11. 
Bullard,  Elijah 
BuUard,  John,*  l&W. 
Bullard,  Lewis 
Bullard,  William 
Burjress,  Ebene/.er,*  1870. 
Burgess,  Ebenezer  (j. 
Burgess,  Edward  P. 
Capen,  Charles  J. 
Capen,  Oliver,*  1865. 
Carroll,  Sanl'ord 
Cawlej',  John 
Chase,  James  M.,*  1860. 
Chickerlng,  Horatio 
Chickering.  Munroe 
Churchill,  Chauncey  C. 
Clapi>,  Edward 
Clapp,  Nathaniel 
Clarke.  Jo.seph  \V. 
Clark,  Moratlo,»I.s71. 
Clark,  Mi's.  Horatio 
Cleveland,  Ira 
Cobb,  .Jonathan  H. 
Coburu,  Charles 
Ccburn,  Mrs.  Charles 
Colburn,  Allen 
Colburn,  Isaacus 
Colbui  1),  .Joseph 
Colburn,  Nathaniel,*  ia")3. 
Colburn,  Waldo 
Coiieland,  Franklin 


Cormerals,  Henry 
Coolidge,  George 
Cox,  John,  Jr. 
Crane,  E.  B. 
Crane,  Ebenezer  P. 
Crane,  Joseph 
Crane,  Mrs.  Susan 
Crocker,  Amos  II.,*  1864. 
Crosstnan,  Charles  B. 
Curtis,  George  F. 
Cushing,  Henry  W. 
Danirell,  Wm.  S.,*  1860. 
Daniell.EUery  C. 
Davenport,  George,*  1872. 
Decatur,  D.  F. 
Dean,  James 
Deane,  John,*  1864. 
Dixon,  Rulus  E. 
Doggett,  John,*  18.57, 
Donahoe,  Patrick 
Dray,  Ellen 
Dravton,. John,*  1856. 
Dun',  John 

Dunbar,  Thomas,  Jr. 
Eaton,  John 
Eaton.  John  Ellis,*  1854. 
Eatou,  Luther 
Eaton,  Luther  A. 
Edson,  Mrs.  E.  G.,*  1859. 
Ellis,  Calvin  F. 
Ellis,  Colburn,*  1854. 
Ellis,  George,*  1856. 
Ellis,  Jason 
Ellis,  Merrdl  D. 
Ellis.  Oliver 
Ely.F.  D. 

Eiidlcott,  Augustus  B. 
Everett,  Mrs.  Uepzibah 
Fairbanks,  Wm.,*  1863. 
Fales,  William 
Farrington,  Charles,*  1859. 
Farrington,  George  O. 
Farrington,  James,*  1864. 
Farrington,  Mrs.  .James 
Farrington,  Jesse,*  1857. 
Farrn)gton,  Jesse 
Field,  William 
Fisher,  Albert 
Fisher,  Alvan,*1863. 
Fisher,  Alvan  J.,*  It63. 
Fisher,  Amory 
Fisher,  Eben'r  S.,*18!i7. 
Fisher,  Mrs.  Elizabeth  D. 
Fisher,  Freeman,  1860. 
Fisher,  Freeman  * 
Fisher,  .Joseph 
Fisher,  Jo>liua 
Fisher,  Thonias 
Flemmg,  Douglas,*  18.58. 
Follausbee,  Isaac  W. 
Foord.  Enos,*  1861. 
Foordi  James 
French,  Abram 
French,  Charles 
French,  George  M. 
Fuller,  George,*  1869. 
Fuller,  Greenwood 
Gardner,  John 
Gay,  Ebenezer  F.,*  1871. 
Gay,  Mrs.  Hannah  S. 
Gay,  Jeremiah  W. 
Gay,  Lusher,*  18.55. 
Gay,  Mrs.  A.  M..*  1866. 
Gay.  Wm.Kiug,*  1860. 
Gleason,  Daniel 
Gould,  (icorge 
Green,  Elisha,*  1865. 


Green,. John 
Greon,  Mrs.  .John 
(iuild,  Calvin 
(Juild,  Francis 
liuild,  Henry 
(Junnison,  George  D. 
Ilarnden,  Harvey,*  1863. 
Hartney,  Thomas 
Ilenck,  John  B. 
Hewes,  Hannah  E. 
Hewins,  Mrs.  Hattie  W. 
Hildreth,  Ilenrv  O. 
ilinkley,  Mrs.  M.J. 
Holmes,  Edward  B.,*1S64. 
Houghton,  William  A. 
Howe,  Elijah,  Jr. 
Howe,  Francis,*  18.59. 
Howe,Josiah  D.,*  1867. 
Jackson,  Marcus  B. 
Johnson,  Edwin,*  1856. 
Keelan,  Michael 
Keves,  Ebenezer  W. 
Keyes,  Edward  L.,*  1859. 
Kingsbury,  Lewis  H. 
Kingsbury,  Moses 
Kingsbury,  Mrs.  Sally 
Kingsbury,  Warren 
Lamson,  Alvau,*  1864. 
Luce,  1).  W. 
Lynch,  Mrs.  A.,*  1869. 
Lynch,  Daniel  A. 
Lynch,  Wm.  F.,*  1869. 
McLane,  James 
Mann,  Henry  A. 
Mann,  Herman,*  18.51. 
Mann,  Samuel  C*  1864. 
Maun,  W.  H.,*  18fi4. 
Marden,  Charles 
Marsh,  Francis 
Marsh,  Martin,*  186.5. 
Marsh,  Mrs.  Martin,*  1869. 
3Iason,  William 
Mason,  Wm.  H.,*  1861. 
iMercer,  Miss  Mary 
Mitchell,  Francis  N.* 
Morgan,  John 
Morrell,  Henrietta  W. 
Morrill,  William  H. 
Motley,  Thomas,*  1861. 
Murray,  Daniel 
Neal,  A.  B. 
Noyes,  Nathaniel 
Norris,  Andrew  J. 
Onion,  Henry 
Onion.  Joseph  W. 
Otis,  Benjamin  H. 
Page,  Frederick  A. 
Patterson,  Albert  C. 
Paul,  Ebenezer 
Paul,  Mrs.  Ebenezer 
Pettee,  James,*  18()8. 
Phelps,  Timothy 
Phillips,  Nathan 
Phillips,  Mrs.  P.  M. 
Quincy,  Edmund 
Kand,  Edward  S.,  Jr. 
Koblcv,  Robert  C. 
Rice,  John  P. 
Rice,  William  R. 
Richards,  Abiathar 
Hichards,  Edward  M.,*'65 
Richards,  llcnrv  White 
Richards,  J.  F.,*  18.52. 
Ric'Uarils,  Lewis  A. 
Richards.  Mason,*  18i;6. 
Richards,  Iteuben,*  185.5. 
Richards,  William  15. 


50 


Roflman,  Alfred,*  18r>3. 
Rodman,  AUred 
Rodmau,  Mra.  Alfred 
Rooney,  Francis 
Russell,  Cliarles 
Russell,  Ira 
Sampson,  E.  W.,*  1867. 
Scan  Ian,  David 
Schwartz,  Mrs.  Jobanna 
Scott,  .Ioel,*1858. 
Sliattuck,  MHUard 
Shaw,  Charles  B.,*  1809. 
Sheriff,  John  L. 
Sherman,  Charles  B.,* 
Sherwin,  Thomas,*  18G9. 
Slafter,  Carlos 
Small,  Miss  Jaue  S. 
Smith,  Pklwin 
Smith,  Henry 
Smith  Nathaniel,* 
Smith,  Nathaniel 
Smith,  Thomas 
Smith,  Timothy 
Smith,  Zebina,*  1865. 
Spear,  Henry  F. 
Stimson,  Jeremy,*  1869. 
Stone,  Eliphalet 
Sully,  John 
Sumner,  Edward 
Sumner,  Mrs.  Edward 
Sumner,  Mirick  P. 
Sumner,  Mrs.  Sarah  R. 
Sumner,  William  R.,*  1860. 
Sutton,  Enoch,*  1853. 
Taft,  Ezra  \V. 
Thayer,  John  H.  B.,*  1873. 
Thomas,  John  W. 
Tower,  William  B. 
Trel'ry,  James 
Tubbs,  Benj.H.,*1854. 
Van  Brunt,  G.  J.,*  18t>3. 
Vose,  George  H. 
WaUefleld,  Thomas  L. 
Wales,  Sam'l  Jr.,*  1860. 
Washburn,  Alex  C. 
Waters,  Joseph  W. 
Weatherbee,  Comfort 
Weatherbee,  Jabez 
Weatherbee,  Jesse 
Weatherbee,  John  E. 
Webb,  Moses  E. 
Webb,  Seth,  Jr.,*1862. 
Welch,  Stephen 
Weld,  Joseph  It. 
W^ellcome,  Jacol)  II. 
White,  John,*  1S:">2. 
White,  Walter 
Whiting,  George  E. 
Whiting,  Hezekiah 
Whiting,  Horace 
Whiting,  Margaret  M. 
Whiting,  Moses 
Whiting,  William 
Whitney,  S.  S.,*  1855. 
AVight,  Danforth  P.,*  1874. 
Wight,  Ebenezer,*  1871. 
Williams,  G.  W.,*  ISOl. 
Wilson,  John  F.,*  ISiui. 
Wilson,  Reuben  S.,*  1874 
Withinglon,  Wari-en 
Wood,  Mrs.  Amos 
Worthington,E.  [284] 

DO  HC II  ESTER. 

Abbott,  William  E. 
Adams, Benjamin  W. 


Atherton,  Samuel 
Austin,  William  K. 
Bachi,  Ignatius  C,  *1859. 
Bacon,  Charles  II. 
Baker,  Edmund  J. 
Baker,  Walter,*  1852. 
Baldwin.  Enoch,*  1860. 
Barnes,  Parker 
Barry,  Michael  O.,*  1859. 
Bass,  Seth  B. 
Beal,  Alexander 
Billings,  Lemuel 
Bispham,  Eleazer  .T. 
Blanchard,  Chas.  F. 
Brown,  B.  F.,*  1872. 
Brown,  Mrs.  B.  F. 
Bradlee,  James  B. 
Bradstreet,  Samuel 
Bramhall,  Cornelius 
Breck,  Henry,  Jr. 
Brewer,  Darius,*  1854. 
Briggs,  Franklin 
Brooks,  Noah,*  1852. 
Brooks,  Williams  B. 
Brown,  Augustus 
Brown,  George  M. 
Burt,  George  L. 
Capen,  Aaron  D. 
Capen,  Samuel  J. 
Capen,  Thomas  W. 
Campbell,  Thomas 
Carleton,Mary  A. 
Carleton,  iMartha  G. 
Carruth,  Charles 
Carruth,  Nathan 
Carter,  Josiah  H. 
Carter,  Elizabeth  E. 
Carter,  Lizzie  S. 
Childs,  Nathaniel  R. 
Churchill,  Asaph 
Clai)p,  Amasa,  *  1874. 
Clapp,  Edward  B. 
Clapp,  Frederick 
Clapp,  Lemuel 
Clapp,  James  II. 
Clapp, John  P. 
Clapp,  Richard,*  1862. 
Clapp,  Thaddeus,*  18til. 
Clapp,  William,*  1860 
Clapp,  William  C. 
Cleveland,  S.  H.,*  1850. 
Cobb,  Moses  G. 
Codman,  John 
Codman,  Robert 
Coffin,  William  E. 
Conant,  R.  B. 
Copenhagen,  A.  W.,*  1866. 
Curtis,  Ebenezer 
Gushing,  Abel,*  18(;6. 
Gushing,  Benjamin 
Davis,  Barnabas 
Dearborn,  Axel 
Denny,  Daniel,  *1872. 
Denny,  Daniel,  Jr. 
Doody,  Dennis 
Dorr,  James 
Downer,  Samuel 
Flynn,  Thomas 
Foster,  William  H. 
Fowler,  M.  Field 
Fiench,  Benj.  V.,*  1860. 
French,  Mrs.  B.  V. 
Gardner,  Henry  .1. 
Gilbert,  Samuel,  .Jr. 
Gleason,  Moses,*  1856. 
Gleason,  Roswel 
Glea.son,  Sarall,    *]854. 


Groom,  Thomas 
Hall,  Joseph 
Hall,  Oliver 
Hall,  Samuel 
Hammond,  Horatio 
Harding,  William 
Harding,  Mrs.  William 
Hardy,  Alpheus 
Harris,  Benjamin  W. 
Hartshorn,  J^ewis  E. 
Hathaway,  Nicholas 
Haven, John  A. 
Haynes,  Edward 
Havnes,  George  A. 
Hebard,  B.  F.,*  1871. 
Hebard,  C.  F. 
Hewins,  John  C. 
Hickey,  Timothy 
Hickey,  Wdliam 
Ilolbrook,  Nathan 
Holmes,  Ebenezer 
Hooper,  Franklin  Henry 
Hooper,  Robert  C.,*  1869. 
Hooper,  Robert  C.  Jr., 
Houghton,  George  A. 
Howe,  Charles,*  1869. 
Howe,  James  T. 
Humphrey,  Henry 
Hunt,  Charles 
Igoe,  Patrick 
Jacobs,  Benjamin,*  1870. 
Jones,  Nahum 
Jones,  William 
King,  Edward,*  1867. 
King,  Franklin 
Learned,  J. M. 
Lee,  James,  Jr. 
Leonard,  .Joseph 
Lewis,  Edwin  J. 
Liversidge,  S.,*18  2. 
Liversidge,  Thomas 
Mack,  Henry  M. 
Mack,  Mrs.  H.  M. 
Mack,  S.  P.,  *18(J0. 
McAuliffe,  Daniel 
Marshall,  VVm.,*  1867. 
May,  John  J. 
Means,  Janiis  U. 
Mears,  John 
Mears,  John,  .Jr. 
Miller,  Erasmus  D. 
Minot,  John,*  1861. 
Mitchell,  Simeon 
Moseley,  Flavel 
Muniford,  Thomas  J. 
Munroe,  William 
Murphy,  Timothy 
Na/.ro,  John  G.,*  1870. 
Newhall,  Cheevcr 
Newhall,  John  M.,*  1869. 
Nichols,  Norman 
Payson,  Thomas 
Payson,  Mrs.  Thomas 
Perrin,  Augu.stus  W. 
Peters,  Henry  H. 
Petersilea,  Franz 
Pierce,  Chas.  B.,*  1857. 
Pierce,  Henry 
Pierce,  Henry  L. 
Pierce,  Jesse,*  1850. 
Pierce,  Lewis 
Pierce,  Hobert 
Pierce,  Wdliam,*  18.5.?. 
Pierce,  Wm.  B.,*  18.i8. 
Pierce,  William  P. 
Pope,  Alexander 


51 


Pope,  William 

Pratt,  Liib.xn 

Preston,  Kilward 

I'lestoii,  John,*  1856. 

Preston,  John 

Prince,  William  G. 

Kioliardoon,  George,*  1874. 

Kichsrdson,  William  H. 

Kliloout,  Asa 

Kobie,  John 

Uobinson,  Mrs.  D.  A. 

Kobiuson,  Eli  W. 

Robinson,  Jolm  H. 

Koblnson,  XathanT. 

Robinson,  Stephen  .\. 

Rujrgles,  E<lwanl  II.  R. 

Scudtler,  Horace,*  ISJl. 

Shaw,  Theroa  V.,  187u. 

Smith,  Heury 

Snell,  Stephen  D. 

Sonthxvorth,  A..  C. 

Spear,  Daniel 

Spear,  Joshua,  Jr. 

Spear,  Luther,*  1874. 

Spooner,.Johu  P. 

Stephenson,  Charles  E. 

Sumner,  Clement 

Swan,  James,*  1873. 
Temple,  Haunaniaii,*  1873. 
Temple,  Thomas  V. 
Temple,  William  h\ 
Thayer,  Benjamin  W. 
Thompson,  Joshua  P. 
Thurlow,  Rufus 
Tileston,  E.  P.,*  1873. 
Tileston,  F.  L. 
Tileston,  Samuel,*  1872. 
Tolman,  Eben'r,*  1863. 
Tolman,  William 
Train,  Enoch,*  1808. 
Tremlet,  Thomas,*  1858. 
Trull,  John  H. 
Trull,  Airs.  J.  H. 
Trull,  John  W. 
Tuttle,. Joseph,*  1870. 
Upham,  James  H. 
Vinson,  Thomas  M. 
Vose,  Robert 
Vose,  Robert,  .Jr. 
AVashburn,  Allen  J.*  1805. 
Webster,  Charles  W. 
Welch,  John  H. 
Weich,  Mrs.  J.  II. 
Whipple,. John  L. 
Wilder,  Marshal  P. 
Wilder,  Mrs.  iM.  P.,*  1851. 
Wilder,  iMis.  M.  P. 
Williams,  S.  U.,*185l. 
Willis,  C.J. 
WithinRton,  William  C. 
Whitten,  Charles  V. 
Wooilinan,  .James 
Worthington,  VVm.* 
Worthintrton,Wm.  K.,*  '73. 
Wright,  Edmund 
Wright,  .Mrs.  Edmuml 
Wright,  Otis,*  iSiiS.    [223.] 

DOVER. 

Adams,  Adna  J. 
Ailams,  John 
Allen,. Tared 
Allen,  Timothy 
Bacon,  Aaron 
Bacon,  Mary  S. 
Baldwin,  Frank 


Baker,  Jabez 
Barden,  Calvia 
Battelle,  John 
Battel le,  Mrs.  .John 
Battelle,  John  E. 
Battelle,  Mary  D. 
Battelle,  Rachael  A. 
Battelle,  Ralph 
Beatie,  Thomas 
Bigelow,  Calvin 
Bigelow,  Charles  A. 
Bigelow,  Mrs.  Hannah  T. 
Bigelow,  Mrs.  Abraham 
Bigelow,  William  A. 
Bliss,  Linus,*  1872. 
Bliss,  Mrs.  Linus 
Brookbank,  Miss  Bell.i 
Chickering,  Daniel 
Chickering,  George  E. 
Chickering,  Otis 
Chickering,  Samuel 
Cleveland,  William 
Dunn,  Theodore 
Everett,  George  D. 
Everett,  Mrs.  Martha  A. 
Everett,  Miss  Martha  E. 
Everett,  Miss  Sarah  E. 
Fearing,  Perez  L. 
Gaiieit,  Wm.  W. 
Gay,  Francis  G. 
G(Juluing,  H.  Emeline 
Goulding,  Henry 
Gouldiug,  Henry  E. 
Lyman,  Miss  Frances  L. 
Mann,  Mrs.  Adeline  B. 
Mann,  Daniel,*  185a. 
Mann,  Daniel  F. 
Mann,  Elbridge  L. 
Maun,  llollis 
Mann,  S.  J.  B. 
Marden,  Mrs.  Mary 
McGill,  Thomas 
McNamara,  Patrick 
Newell,  Benjamin 
Newell,  Mrs.  Benjamin 
Newell,  Miss  Betsey  E. 
Newell,  Jesse 
Newell,  Josiah  B. 
Otis,  E.  B. 
Perry,  Elijah 
Perry,  Mrs.  Mehitable 
Ricliards,  Calvin,*  1873. 
Richards,  Mrs.  Calviu 
Richards,  Jennie  A. 
Richards,  Lucy  M. 
Richards,  Luther 
Rogers,  Wilbor  J. 
Sanger,  Ralph,*  ISCO. 
Sawin,  Benjamin  N. 
Sawiu,  Frank  VV. 
Sawin,  Mary  A. 
Sawin,  Mary  J. 
Shumway,  Amos  W. 
Shumway,  Amos  W.,  Jr. 
Shumway,  Hannah 
Shumway,  John  W. 
Shumway,  Sarah  G. 
Sias,  Samuel 
Smith,  Abner  L. 
Smith,  Charles  U. 
Smith,  Mary  W. 
Sullivan,  Daniel 
Tisdale,  William 
Upham,  Martha  F. 
Upham,  Walter  W. 
Wall,  Patrick 
Wilson,  Ephraim 


Wilson,  Mrs.  Ephraim 
Wilson,  E.  Heury 
Wilson,  .Miss  N.  D.       [87.] 

FOXBOKOUGH. 

Aldrich,  II.  D.,*  1851. 
Barbour,  Miss  S.  M. 
Belcher,  Lewis  W. 
Burr,  Simeon 
Capen,  .James 
Carpenter,  A.  T. 
Carpenter,  Daniels 
Cariienter,  Erastus  P. 
Carpenter,  James  E. 
Carpenter,  Oliver 
Cary,  Otis 
Cobb,  Elias  G. 
Cook,  William  T. 
Dickernian,  Lemuel 
Dixon.  Sarah  O. 
Fisher,  Albert 
Foster,  .James  W. 
Gay,  Lewis  E. 
Guild,  Freedom,*  1802. 
Hersey,  David 
Hodges,  Alfred 
Kerr,  Robert  W.,*  1867. 
Kingsbury,  Joseph 
Leonard,  Mrs.  E.  S. 
Leonard,  Samuel  B.,*  1866. 
Leonanl,  James  F. 
Leonard,  Sanlbrd 
Pettee,  David 
Pettee,  Joseph  G. 
Pettee,  Simeon  E. 
Sbepard,  J.  M.,*  1806. 
Sherman,  .J.  E. 
Sherman,  .Job 
Smith,  Silas 
Shaw,  David 
Sumner,  Mrs.  A.  M. 
Sumner.  Charles  C. 
Torrey,  Martin,*  18  il. 
Williams,  Francis  D. 
Wymau,  David.  [40.] 

FRANKLIN. 

Adams,  Albert,*  1869. 
Adams,  Peter 
Adams,  Ward,*  1865. 
Alby,  R. 

Atwood,  Mrs.  Ruth.,*  1862. 
Atwood,  Shadrach 
Baker,  David  P. 
Bullard,  Plain,*  1805. 
Chapman,  Elisha  I', 
Daniels,  Albert  E. 
Daniels,  Charles  F. 
Daniels,  Mrs.  Charles  F. 
DeWitt,  Archibald,*  1859. 
Dewilt,  Mrs.  Mary  A.,*'05. 
Fisher,  Herman  C. 
Fisher,  Ma.xcy,*  1865. 
Green,  Henry  M. 
Green,  Martin,* 
Harding,  Lewis,* 
Hills,  TheronC.,*  1862. 
•Jones,  Hiram  W. 
Jones,  Alice  J. 
Jones,  I.  L. 
Jones,  Lucy 
Knapp,  AH'red 
Metcair,  Alfred  G. 
Metcalf,  Alfred  H. 
Metcalf,  Eruslus  L. 


r^^A 


IMctcalf,  Erasmus  B. 
Melcair,  Whiting,*  lt<(;9. 
Melcalt,  William  *  1872. 
Miller,  John  W. 
Miller,  Phillip  W.,*  18U0. 
Morse,  George  W. 
Morse,  Joseph 
Mason,  George  W.,*  18G8. 
Pond,  Henry  E. 
Ray,  Francis  B. 
Kay,  Mrs.  Francis  B. 
Ray, Joseph  G. 
Ray,  James  P. 
Richardson,  John  W. 
Richardson,  Stephen  W. 
Kockwood,  E.,  *  1804. 
Kockwood,  Nathan,  *  1874. 
Sergeant,  A.  D. 
Thayer,  Davis,  Jr. 
Wadsworth,  George  M. 
AVadsworth,  Joseph  H. 
Wales,  Otis,  Jr. 
Whiting,  Joseph 
Whiting,  Joseph  M. 
Whiting,  Wm.  E.         [53.] 

HOLBROOK. 

Holbrook,  Caleb  S.,  *  1874. 
Holbrook,  Elisha  N.,  *  '72. 
[2.] 

HYDE  PARK. 

Adams,  Henry  C. 
Adams,  C.  Henry 
Adams,  Henry  S. 
Aldrich,  E.  C. 
Allen,  Zeiias 
Blake,  Alpheus  P. 
Bleakie,  Robert 
Blazo,  W.  A. 
Bissett,  Henry  F. 
Beatey,  John 
Bonney,  William  A. 
Bradbury,  CO. 
Bradbury,  W.  C. 
Brainard,  Amos  H. 
Bragg,  William  M. 
Bryant,  H.  J. 
Bullard,  WiUiom 
Coleman,  E.  J. 
Clarke,  T.  Emory 
Connor,  Barney 
Crane,  Nathaniel,  *  1872. 
Darling,  Henry  A. 
Dolan,  Tliomas 
Davis,  Enoch  P. 
Davis,  David  L. 
Dow,  J.E. 
Downing,  Alfred 
Downing,  Mrs.  Alfred 
Downing,  .James 
Eastou,  F.  A. 
Ellis,  Charles,  *  1872. 
Evans,  Thomas  C. 
Everett,  W.  S. 
Farns'.yorth,  C.  L. 
Farrington,  John  B. 
Fiske,  H.  C. 
Gerry,  Charles  F. 
Getchell,  R.  C. 
Gilson,  John 
Gilson,  Violettie  L. 
Gould,  John  B.,  *  1870. 
Grew,  Henry 
llambliu,  J.  G. 


Hamblin,R.W. 

Hardy,  B.  il. 
]  Haskell,  B.  B. 

Hebard,  Nathaniel 
i  Horton,  E.  G. 
I  Howell,  Miss  L.  A. 
1  Ireland,  John,  *  1874. 
j  Ireland,  Mrs.  John 
1  Kendrick,  Henry  C. 
1  Lawson,  J.  D. 

Leach,  B.  F. 
!  Leach,  Mrs.  L.  A. 

Lougee,  K.  W. 

McAvoy,J.  D. 

Macomber,  E.  H. 

Mooar,  J.  F. 

Moseley,  R.  P. 

Moseley,  T.  W.  H. 

Norris,  R.  N. 

Nott,  Gordon  H. 

Nott,  lioxanna 

Nott,  L.  B. 

Nott,  Margaret 

Nott,  Maggie  G. 

Noyes,  George  W. 

0'Connell,D!Hiiel 

Patterson,  James 

Parrott,  George  B, 

Pratt,  James 

Perkins,  E.  G. 

Park,  Wisuer 

Pierce,  C.  H. 

Pierce,  George 

Plunimer,  R.  B. 

Putnam,  Sidney 

Radford,  B.  F. 

Raulett,  D.  D. 

Raynes,  J.  J . 

Raynes,  Mrs.  E.  H. 

Rich,  D.  B, 

Rich,  Henry  A. 

Roberts,  Edward 

Russell,  A.  L. 

Spring,  Charles 

Sprague,R.  T. 

Sharrock,  George 

Stark,  C.  C. 

Stevens,  J.  N. 

Stuart,  William  J. 

Stuart,  Mrs.  W.  J.,   *  1872. 

Sherman,  George  E. 

Sanford,  O.  S. 

Sumner,   Clarissa,  *  1869, 

Straw,  L.  H. 

Swan,  B. 

Swift,  Thomas  P. 

Thacher,  William  T. 

Thacher,  Mrs.  W.  T. 

Thaine,T.  G. 

Thaiue,  Mrs.  J.  W. 

Thompson,  B.  F.,  *  1874. 

Tower,  Isaac  N. 

Turner,  C.  R. 

Turner,  R.  W. 

Twitchell,  John  M. 

Vose.  John 

Vose,  Mrs.  John 

Vose,  B.  C. 

Vose,  Mrs.  B.C. 

Vose,  Sarah  N. 

Weeman,  W.E. 

Wright,  Richard 

Whittier,  A.  R. 

Williams,  J.  D. 

Williams,  John  M. 

Williams,  Rinaldo 

Williams, Mrs.  Kmaldo 


Willis,  John  M. 
Whitcher,  M.  L. 
While,  Charles  A.,  Jr. 
White,  E.  P.  [124] 

MEDFIELD. 

Abell,  Wm.  F. 
Abell,  Mrs.  Wm.  F. 
Adams,  George  F. 
Allen,  Mrs.  Harriet  B. 
Allen,  Noah 
Allen,  William C. 
Baker,  Joseph  H, 
Baker,  Mrs.  Joseph  H. 
Batch,  Albert  B. 
Battelle,  Kalph  A. 
Barney,  Thomas  L. 
Barney,  Mrs.  Thomas  L. 
Bigelow,  Andrew 
Bullard,  John  E. 
Carson,  Joseph 
Chenery,  William 
Cheney,  Nathaniel  H. 
Cheney,  Seth 
Crane,  George 
Curtis,  Daniel  D. 
Curtis,  Mrs.  Daniel  D. 
Curtis,  Irving 
Cushman,  Jacob  R. 
Cushmau,  Mrs.  Jacob  R. 
Davis,  George 
Davis,  Mrs.  George 
Ellis,  Caleb 
Ellis,  Francis  D. 
Ellis,  George  W. 
Ellis,  John 
Ellis,  Samuel 
Everett,  Edmund  T. 
Everett,  E.  T. 
Fisher,  Hinsdale,*  18Ui) 
Fisher,  Mrs.  Mary  L. 
Fisher,  Mary  E. 
Fisher,  Sarah  H. 
Fisher,  Wm.  Quincy 
Fiske,  George 
Fiske,  Isaac 
Fiske,  Mrs.  Isaac 
Frost,  Phineas,  Jr. 
Hamaut,  Miss  AJice  E 
Hamant,Mrs.  N.  Anna 
Hamant,  Miss  Abby 
Haniant,  Mrs.  Eliza  M.  C. 
Hamant,  Caleb  S.,*  1873. 
Hamant,  Charles 
Hani;int,  Mrs.  Charles 
Hamaut,  Daniels,  Jr.,*  '73. 
Hamaut,  Daniel  D. 
Harding,  Alfred 
Harding,  Nathan 
Hartshorn,  Joseph,*  18CG. 
Hartshorn,  Warren 
Hewins,  William  P. 
Hewuns,  Mrs.  William  P. 
Janes,  Walter,*  1807. 
Jones,  John  P. 
Morse,  Eliakim,*  1872. 
Morse,  Joel 
Morse,  Miss  Lucy 
Parker,  Alonzo  B. 
Parker,  Mrs.  A.  B. 
Partridge,  Mrs.  E.  A. 
Partridge,  Henry,  Jr. 
Richardson,  Simeon 
Roberts,  Mrs.  Helen  M. 
Roberts,  Uobcrl,*  1872. 
Rosa,  Johu 


53 


Salisbury,  Win.*  iai7. 
.Sanborn,  EilwardM. 
Sanborn, \V. 
Suwall,  Alice  O. 
Sewall,  Charles  C. 
Sewall,  Mrs.  C.  V.,*  1873. 
Sewall,  Kilward  U. 
Sewall,  Miss  Elizabeth  S. 
Shuniway,  Benjamin  i!'. 
Smith,  George  M. 
Stedman,  Cyrus,*  lti65. 
Thayer,  Elijah 
Thayer,  Mrs.  Elijah 
Turner,  John  A.,*  18G4. 
Turner  J.  Addison 
Wetherell,  Ilarlus  W. 
Wheeler,  Emory 
^Villard,  Gibson  [8S.] 

MEBVVAY. 

Adams,  Edward 
Adams,  Elisha 
Adams,  Lyman 
Adams,  \Vyman 
Barber,  George,*  1851, 
Barber,  Thomas 
Boyd,  William  B. 
Bnilard,  John,  Jr. 
Gary,  Gilmau 
Carev,  William  H. 
Clark,  James  P.,*  1SG5 
Clark,  James  W. 
Clark,  Mrs.  James  W. 
Clark,  Maria  F. 
Clark,  Willard  P. 
Crosby,  George,*  18G0. 
Daniels,  James  Willard 
Daniels,  Paul 
Daniels,  Mrs    Paul 
Daniels,  William 
Ellis,  .James  H. 
Fishec,  Milton  M. 
Fuller,  Asa  M.  B. 
Harding,  '•'heodore 
Henderson,  William 
Hurd,  Julius  C. 
Ide,  .Jacob 
Kingsbury,  Gilbert 
Lovell,  Aashel  P. 
Lovell,  Zachariah 
Lovering,  Warreu 
Mann,  James 
Mason,  Horatio,*  1868. 
Mason,  Miss  Matilda  G. 
Metcalf,  Luther 
Morse,  Asa  D. 
Partridge,  Clark 
Partridge,  George 
Richardson,  Elisha  P. 
Kichardson,  Jeremiah  D. 
Richardson,  .Joseph  L. 
Richardson,  Moses 
Richardson,  Richard 
Slocnmb,  C*  1861. 
Stevens,  l>aniel  G. 
Walker,  John  S.,*  1871. 
Walker,  Timothy 
Wheeler.  Abijali  11.      [48.] 

MILTON. 

Adams,  Edward  II, 
Adams,  .John 
Aibiiiis,  Samuel 
Ainory,  Francis 
Arnold ,  John,  Jr.* 


;  Babcock,  Josiali,*  1803. 
'  Babcock,  Josiah 
I  Babcock,  Lemuel  W. 
•  Babcock,  Samuel 
I  Baldwin,  Edward 
I  Bailey,  Samuel  K. 

Beal,  Jonathan 

Beck,  Gideon 

Blanchard,  J.  W..*  1874. 
,  Bradlee,  .John  D. 
i  Bradlee,  J.  W. 
!  Bradlee,  Miss  W.  A. 
j  Breck,  Charles 

Breck,  Charles  E.  C. 
I  Bronsdon,  Charles 
1  Bronsdon,  Lewis 

Brooks,  .John  W. 
■  Bunton,  .Jesse 

Burt,  .John 

Burt,  Sumner 

Bush,  James  P. 

Chase,  Leander  A. 

Churchill,  Jos.  McKeau 

Chapman,  R.  L. 
I  Clapp,  G.  W. 

Clark,  Thomas 

Cook,  Charles  W. 

Cook,  Samuel 

Cook,  W.  T. 

Copeland,  Charles  L. 

Copeland,  Lewis 

Cornell,  Walter 

Crehore,  John  A. 

Crowd,  George 

Cunningham,  C.  Loring 

Cunningham,  Francis,*  '07 

Cunningham,  John  A. 

Curtis,  Daniel  T. 

Davenport,  Edwin 

Davenport,  Mrs.  Ellen  M. 

Davenport,  F.  G. 

Davenport,  Miss  H.  G. 

Davenport,  Lewis 

Davenport,  Lyman 

Davenport,  Xalhauiel  T. 

Davis,  William  II. 

Dow,  .John  U. 

Dudley,  Benjamin  F. 

Elkins.D.  II. 

Emerson,  Joshua 

Everett,  George 

Fiirrington,  Henry  J, 

Faulkner,  .James 

Fenno,  Rul'us  P. 

Ferry  George  S. 

Ferry,  William  M. 

Forbes,  .John  M. 

Forbes,  Robert  Bennett 

Forbes,  R.  B.  Jr. 

Foster,  William  H. 

Foster,  William  L. 

Gannett,  George  K. 

Gannett,  Samuel 

Garrett,  George  E. 

Greene,  George  VV, 

Hall,  George  W. 

Harvey,  William 

Iliggins,  David 

Hinckley,  Thomas  II. 

Hobson,  A.  R. 

llobson.  Miss  Martha  .J. 

Ilollingsworth,  Z. 

Ilollis,  Thomas,*  187:5. 

Holmes,  C.  C. 

lloliiifs,  Mrs.Abraliain.Jr. 

Houghton,  (ieorge  D. 

Houghton,  K.  W.* 


Houghton,  Mrs.  E.  W. 
Houghton,  Jason  W.,* '67. 
Houghton,  Jason 
Hunt,  Charles  E. 
Hunt,  Charles  L. 
Hunt,  George 
Hunt,  William  M. 
Kendall,  J.  B. 
Kent,  George  W. 
Kidder,  Henry  P. 
Kinsman,  Adolphus 
Lothrop,  T.  K. 
McDonald,  William 
Merriam,  Mrs.  Charles  H. 
Morton,  E.  W. 
Myers,  John 
Parker,  C.  H. 
Peabody,  Oliver  W. 
Pierce,  Dean 
Pierce,  Edward  L. 
Pope,  Ebenezer,*  1853. 
Raymond,  George 
Richards.  Reuben  A. 
Robbins,  .James  M. 
liodgers,  O.  T.,*  ISTtd. 
Rogers,  II.,  Jr.  1855. 
Rotch,  Benjamin  S. 
Rowe,  Joseph,*  1850. 
Ruggles,  E.  T. 
Ruggles,  Philemon 
Russell,  Henry  S. 
Safford,  N.  F. 
Senter,  L.  W. 
Sias,  Eliphalet 
Sias,  John 

Sigouruey,  II.  II.  W.,*  '74. 
Stone,  Cliarles,*  1859. 
Stevens,  F.  H. 
Sumner,  Gilbert 
Sumner,  R.  W. 
Teele,  Albert  K. 
Tcele,  Mrs,  A.K. 
Thayer,  Jason 
Thayer,  James  B. 
Thompson,  George,*  1858. 
Todd,  Robert  M. 
Towne,  A.  .J. 
Tucker,  Diivid  W. 
Tucker,  Elijah 
Tucker,  Mrs.  Elijah 
Tucker,  Stillman  L. 
Tucker,  Timothy,*  1804. 
Twonibly,  Josiah  F. 
Vose,  Francis  E. 
Vose,  George 
Vose,  Mrs.  George 
Vose,  Grace 
Vose,  Henry 
Vose,  Miss  I^izzie  W. 
Vose,  Joshua  W. 
Wainwright,  H.  C. 
Watson,  Kobcrt  S. 
Walker,  J.  K. 
Webb,  .Josiah 
Webster,  Joseph  R. 
West,  Henry 
White,  Benjamin 
White,  Franklin  B. 
White,  James  P. 
White,  John  E. 
Wolcott,  J.  Huntington 

[15a] 

NEEDIIAM. 

Aldcn.Olis 
Avery,  Joualhau 


54 


Ayling,  Isaac. 
Beless,  Thomas 
Bemis,  Mrs.  S.  S. 
Bowers,  Heury 
Blackmail,  Henry 
lilackmau,  Augustus 
Buck,  Charles 
Buck,  Mrs.  F.  P.  H.*  18a5. 
Buck,  Miss  Mary  M. 
Bullen,  Ichabod,*  1858. 
Clark,  Joseph  P. 
Cooper,  Samuel 
Daniell,  George  K. 
Darling,  George  F. 
Dewing,  Charles  H. 
Dewing,  Warren 
Eaton,  George  E. 
Eayrs,  William  C. 
Emmons,  Chas.  P.;*  1867. 
Flagg,  Solomon 
Flags,  Wm.:*1861. 
Gardner,  Elbridge 
Goss,  DanielJ. 
Gray,  James 
Harmon,  Charles  H. 
Harmon,  Cyrus 
Harris,  John  *  1858. 
Harris,  John  M. 
Harvey,  Stei)hen  F. 
Henderson,  David  F. 
Holland,  .John 
Hollis,  ElishaP. 
Howe,  Albion  K. 
Howe,  Mrs.  Eliza  M. 
Howland,  George 
Hubbard,  G.  G.,  *  1856. 
Hunnewell,  H.  Hollis 
Hunting,  Israel 
Kimball,  Benj.  G.  *  '73. 
Kimball,  Mrs.  Betsey  G. 
Kimball,  Daniel,  *  1S62. 
Kingsbury,  J.  M. 
Kingsbury,  Lemuel 
Kingsbury,  Lauren 
Kingsbury,  Thos.,  *  1859. 
Kingsbury,  William  A. 
Knaup,  A.  P. 
Lombard,  K.  T. 
Longfellow,  George  J. 
Longlellow,  Mary  L. 
Longfellow,  Niithan 
Longfellow,  Mrs.  Nathan 
Longfellow,  W.  E.  *  '72. 
Low,  George  W. 
Lyon,  Mrs.  Julia  A 
Lyon,  Edward 
Lyon,  William 
Mansfield,  Charles  II. 
^lansfleld,  .John 
Mansfield,  Itobcrt 
Mansfield,  Mrs.  Robert 
Mansfield,  William 
McCrackin,  John 
MeCrackin.  Robert 
Mcintosh,  Charles 
Mcintosh,  Curtis 
Mcintosh,  Mrs.  F.  E. 
Mcintosh,  Mrs.  H.P.*  1874. 
Mcintosh,  James 
Mcintosh,  Mrs.  Mary  C. 
Mills,  John 
Mills,  Matthias 
Morton,  Otis,  Jr. 
Morton,  W.  T.  G.  *  ISnS. 
Newell,  Artemus,  *  1871. 
Newell,  Mrs.  Martha  S. 
Noyes  Josiah  *  1871. 


Peabody,  Ezekiel 
Phillips,  Freeman 
Pierce,  William 
Pierce,  William,  Jr. 
Pierce,  Mrs.  Harriet 
Revere,  George 
Richardson,  Geo. 
Robinson,  Henry 
Sawyer,  John 
Sawyer,  Otis,  *  1855. 
ScHuder,  Marshal  S. 
Seagrave,  Saul,  S. 
Shaw,  George  W.,  *  1852. 
Shaw,  John  W. 
Snelling,  Nathaniel  G. 
Spring,  Charles  H. 
Stedman,  Francis 
Stedman,  Mrs.  F.  F. 
Stedman,  William  M. 
Stevens,  A.  F. 
Stone,  David 
Stone,  Henry  L. 
Sumner,  Lewis 
Sumner,  Samuel  B. 
Tucker,  E.  H. 
Turner,  John,  *  1873. 
Turner,  Mrs.  John 
Upham,  Cyrus  G. 
Upham,  Mrs.  C.  G. 
Ware,  Dexter,*  1851. 
Ware,  Rueben 
Ware,  Althea 
Ware,  Ruel 
Ware,  William  S. 
Washburne,  G.  W. 
Webber,  Aaron  D. 
Welles,  John 
Whittaker,  Edgar  K. 
White,  George 
AVilder,  C.  T. 
Williams,  Silas  G. 
Wood,  Henry 
Wright,  Levvis  [122.] 

NORFOLK. 

Daniels,  Adam  a 
Dupee,  Erastus 
Fisher,  Walter  H. 
Fisher,  Mrs.  W.  H. 
Fisher,  Walter  M. 
Ford,  James  T. 
Pond,  Lucas 
Pond,  Mrs.  Lucas 
Robinson,  Joel  H. 
Scott,  Saul  B 
Trowbridge,  Henry   [11.] 

NORWOOD. 

Baker,  Joel  M. 
Boyden,  Miss  Emma  F. 
Day, Joseph 
Day,  Lewis 
Ellis,  Isaac 
Ellis,  M.J. 
Everett,  George 
Fisher,  James  R. 
Fogg,  David  S. 
Hartshorn,  Caleb  W. 
Hartshorn,  liichard  D. 
Hoyle,  Mark  C. 
Metcalf,  George  E. 
Morse,  Albert 
Morse,  Curtis  G.  *  1874 
Morse,  John  *  18(il. 
Morse,  John  L,,  *18ii4. 


Morse,  Otis 
Morse,  Sidney  E. 
Smith,  Lyman 
Talbot,  Josiah  W. 
Thompson,  Robert  *  1854. 
White,  N.B. 
Winslow,  Alfred  N. 
Winslow,  George         [25.] 

QUINCY. 

Adams,  Charles  Francis 
Adams,  John  Q. 
Adams  Ebenezer 
Bartlett,  Ibrahim,  *  1853. 
Bass,  Josiah 
Bass,  Lewis  *  1874. 
Baxter,  Daniel 
Baxter,  Elijah 
Baxter,  Mrs.  Elijah 
Baxter,  Mrs.  George 
Baxter,  George  L. 
Beale,  George  W.,  *  1851. 
Beals,  Nathaniel  H. 
Billings,  Lemuel 
Brackett,  Lemuel 
Brigham,  Josiah,  *  1867. 
Carr,  John  J.,  *  1865, 
Curtis,  Noah,  *  1856. 
Eaton,  Jacob  F.,  *  1871. 
Eaton,  William  N. 
Emmons,  Nathaniel  H. 
Faxon,  William  L. 
Fellows,  Ensign  S. 
Field,  J.  Q.  A. 
Frederick,  Eleazer, 
French,  Washington  M. 
Galloway,  James 
Glover,  H.N. ,  *l!;6;?. 
Green,  John  A.,  *  1861. 
Greenleal,  Daniel 
Greenleaf,  Thomas,*  1854. 
Howland,  Charles  A.  - 
Horton,  Lloyd  G. 
Marsh,  Charles 
Marsh,  Mrs.  Henrietta 
Miller,  Charles  E. 
Morton,  William  S.,  *  1871. 
Muuroe,  Israel  W. 
Newcomb,  James 
Newcomb,  John  B. 
Quincy,  Josiah,  *  1864. 
Quincy,  Josiah  P. 
Kichards,  L.,  *  1852. 
Robertson,  Joseph  W. 
Rogers,  Clitt 
Savil,  John 

Southworth,  C.  A.,*  1871. 
Spear,  Charles  A.,*  1868. 
Stetson,  James  A. 
Thayer,  G.  F.,*  1864. 
Torrey,  William 
Turner,  Edward 
Walker,  William 
White.  Nathaniel,*  1867. 
Willard,  Solomon,*  1861, 
Williams,  Francis         [56.] 

RANDOLPH. 

Alden,  Eoenezer 
Alden,  Horatio  B. 
Belcher,  Allen  A. 
Belcher.  J.  White 
Buck,  Nathan,*  1853. 
Burrill,  David 
Cordley,  Christopher  M.* 
Cushiug,  Abucr  L. 


55 


Jordan,  John  T.,*  1835. 
Leeds,  Joseph,*  1858. 
Maguire,  James 
Maguire  James  F. 
Mann,  Epliraim,*  18(13. 
Mann,  Seth,  2d 
Kiles,  Jacob,*  1871. 
Porter.  William 
Snow,  Zenas,  1&57. 
Stevens,  Richard 
Tileston,  G.  H. 
Tower,  Isaac,*  1865. 
Turner,  Royal  W. 
Turner,  Seth 
Wales,  Apollos 
Wales,  Ephraim,*  1855. 
Wales,  .John, 2d 
Wales  Jonathan,  1863. 
Whitcomb,  Alfred  W. 
White,  Adoniram 
White,  Jairus 
White,  Jonathan,  [30J 

ROXBURY. 

Adams,  Thomas,*  1869. 
Ames,  Robert  W. 
Andrews,  Alfred  A.,*  1864. 
Appleton,  Charles  T. 
Bacon,  William* 
Bartlett,  Henry,*  18G0. 
Elake,  S.  Parkman 
Bowditch,  Azell 
Bowdltch,  Azell  C. 
•  Bray,  Charles  F. 
I5i-igham,  Joseph  L. 
Brown,  Andrew  J. 
Bryant,  Charles  H. 
Buflbrd,  .John  H. 
Chadwick,  Joseph  H. 
Chandler,  John  G. 
Clarke,  .John  J. 
Codman,  Henry.*  1853. 
«;opeland,B.  F.,*  1j63. 
Copeland.Chas.,*  1853. 
Cotting,  Benjamin  E. 
Crawshaw,  Joseph 
Crosby,  Benjamin  H. 
Davis,  Gilmaa 
Dearborn,  H.  A.  S.,*  1851. 
Ellis,  Charles,*  1860. 
Ellis,  Charles  M. 
Eustis,  William 
Fisher,  Warren 
Fiske,  George  A. 
Ford,  Seth  H.,*  J8f53. 
Francis ,  Eben'r,*  1858. 
French  Jonathan 
French,  iMrs.  J. 
Fuller,  H.  Weld 
Fussell,  John 
Gardner,  Francis 
Gray,  Henry  D. 
Guild,  Frederick 
Guild,  Henry 
Guild,  .James 
Ham,  Joseph 
Harris,  Horatio 
Hayden,  Isaac 
Hendee,  Charles  .1. 
Hewes,  John  M. 
Hewins,  Whiting,*  1855. 
Hickling,  Charles 
Holmes,  Richard 
Holmes,  JMrs.  R. 
Huckins,  James,  1868. 
Huckius,  .James  VV. 


Huston,  William  R. 
Keene,  James 
Kidder,  Fiederic 
King,  William  S. 
Kingsbury.  Wui.  B.,*  1873. 
Kittredge,  Alvah 
Lee,  William  Raymond 
Lemist,  Edwin,*  1872. 
Lewis,  Daniel 
Lewis,  Franklin  H. 
Lewis,  Samuel  S. 
Longfellow,  Fannie  E. 
Lovewell,  Charles  B. 
Lowell,  John  A. 
Mackintosh,  Samuel 
Mann,  Benjamin 
Mathes,  Albert  R. 
McBurney,  Charles 
Mcintosh,  William  H. 
Merrill,  John  J. 
Monroe,  George  H. 
Oakley,  Frank  E.,*  1865. 
Paine,  Joseph  P. 
Parker,  Augustus 
Parker,  Geo.  J.,*  1860. 
Parker.  Thomas 
Perry,  Almon 
Pickering,  Henry  W. 
Pike,  Charles  S. 
Putnam,  Allen 
Rich,  Naphthalie  D. 
Rice,  George  VV. 
Ritchie,  James,*  1873. 
Robinson,  J.  P.,  1863. 
Ropes,  Joseph  S. 
Sargent,  Epes 
Shed,  Henry  P. 
Simmons,  D.  A.,  1859. 
Skinner,  Elias 
Sleeper,  John  S. 
Stevens,  Amos 
Stone,  Ebenezer  W. 
Sturgis,  James 
Tappan,  Josiah  S. 
Tluicher,  Thos.  Jr.,*  '69. 
Thwiug,  Supply  C. 
Tolman,  James,*  1868. 
Trescott,  Elijah 
Tucker,  Daniel 
Vinson,  Cornelius  M. 
Walker,  Samuel,  *  1860. 
Ware,  Leonard 
Way,  Samuel  A.,*  1872. 
Weston,  Lycurgus  B.*,  '72. 
Whiting,    Wm.    (Montrose 

avenue,)*  1873. 
Williams,  A.  D.,*  1863. 
Williams,  Aaron  D. 
Williams,  David  tV. 
Williams,  Mrs.  D.  VV. 
Williams,  Dudley 
Williams,  G.  Foster,*  1872. 
Williams,  (i.  B.*  18(12. 
Williams,  S.,*  If'Si. 
Williams.  Thomas  B. 
Wilson,  Granville  VV. 
Winslow,  Edward 
Wiswall,  Samuel 
Wolcott,  John  \V. 
Worthingtou,  Roland  [121J 

SHARON. 

Baker,  P.  Howard 
Baker,  Mrs.  I'.  H. 
Blackiuan,  K.  H. 
Billiard,  Benjamin 


Carpenter,  Shepard 
Carpenter,  Mrs.  Shepard 
Clark.  Edwin  R.,*  1868. 
Cobb,  Warren 
Cobb,  Mrs.  WaiTen 
Cobb,  Miss  Ella  M. 
Cobb,  Lizzie  M. 
Decatur,  Thomas 
Drake,  Asahel  S. 
Drake,  Mrs.  Asahel  8. 
Drake,  Ellis  D. 
Gay,  George  W. 
Gay.  Mrs.  G.  VV. 
Geissler,  J.  N. 
Geissler,  Mrs.  J.  N. 
Hewins,  Elijah,*  18.57. 
Hewins,  Lemuel  D.,*  1868. 
Howard,  George  F. 
Howard,  Mrs.  G.  F. 
Hixon,  G.  F. 
Hixon,Mrs.  G.  F. 
Hixon,  Charles  O. 
Hixon,  Mrs.  C.  O. 
Johnson,  Lucas 
Johnson,  Otis 
Lothrop,  Howard  A. 
Mann,  George  R. 
Maun,  Mrs.  George  R. 
Mann.  William  R. 
Mann,  Mrs.  William  R. 
Mann,  Miss  M.  Ella 
Mann,  Jliss  E.  Mary 
INIann,  George  H. 
Morse,  Edward  L. 
Morse,  Miss  E.  G. 
Morse,  Harvey 
Morse,  Leprellette 
Morse,  Mrs.  Leprellette 
Morse,  Lewis  VV. 
Morse,  Mrs.  Lewis  W. 
Park, George  C. 
Pettee,  D.  Webster. 
Pettee,  Mrs.  D.  VV. 
Randall,  Macey,  Jr. 
Sanger,  .John  M. 
Smith,  Lewis 
Stone,  Silas  A. 
Talbot,  Solomon 
Turner,  Calvin 
Turner,  Julia  C. 
Warren,  Charles  H. 
Weld,  H.  O. 
Wicks,  Mrs.  A .  L. 
I   Wicks,  Miss  Mary  L. 
Wicks,  William  B. 
\Vinship,  Charles 
Wiiiship,  Mrs.  Charles 
Winship,  Miss  Elmira  S. 
[62] 

STOUGHTON. 

Anderson,  E.  S. 
Atheiton,  James 
Atherton,  VVilljam 
Belcher,  LuMier  J. 
Belcher,  Orin 
B.dcher,  Wm.  S.,*  18;;2. 
Bird,  Henry 
Capen,  .Samuel 
Clapp,  Lucius 
Clapp,  IMi's-  l^ucius 
Clark,  Chester 
<;urtis,  SamufI  W. 
Drake,  Alliert  H. 
r>i-ak(\  .loii;ilh:iii  S. 
Drake,  Phillip  II. 


56 


Ellis,  J.  Freeman 
(-iay,  Cyrus  H. 
Gay,  Iliram 
<j!ay,  John  M. 
Gay,  Lemuel,*  1806. 
Gay,  Mace 
Gay,  Nathaniel 
Goldthwait,  Daniel  A. 
Hawes,  Emery 
Hill,  James 

Hodges,  Leonard,*  1870. 
Hodges,  Samuel  W. 
Hodges,  Mrs.  S.  W. 
Ingham,  James 
Jones,  Henry 
Kimball,  Henry  C. 
Littlefleld,  Charles 
Monk,  Elisha  C. 
Paul,  Samuel 
Porter,  Luther 
Porter,  Robert 
Porter,  Itobert,  Jr. 
Porter,  Uriah  C. 
Porter,  Theron  M. 
Porter,  John  M. 
Southworth,  Amasa,*  1872. 
Soiithworth,  Asahel 
Southworth,  Mrs.  Wm.  S. 
Sumner,  Francis  C.,*  1874. 
Swan,  Elisha,*  1864. 
Talbot,  George 
Talbot,  Newton 
Thayer,  S.  Lysander 
Tucker,  Wales 
Wales,  Nathaniel 
Warren,  N.  M.  [ol] 

WALPOLE. 

Allen,  Jeremiah 
Allen,  Lewis 
Bacon,  II.  E. 
liucon,  Samuel  W.,*  '69. 
Bacon,  William,*  1862. 
Bird,  Charles 
Bird,  Francis  W. 
Boytlen,  Horatio 
Cheney,  Joseph 
Clap,  Edmund  W.,*  1874. 
Clap,  George  11. 
Clap,  Samuel  G.,*  1S70. 
Clap,  Warren 
Clarke,  ftlrs.  Betsey  M. 
Clarke,  Henry  S. 
Clarke,  Mrs.  H.  S. 
Clarke,  Truemaa 
Conant,  George 
Cram,  .Jerome  B. 
Ellis,  James 
Ellis,  Joseph,*  1851. 
Fuller,  James  11.,  1874. 
Gilbert,  Samuel 
Gould,  John  A.,*  1861. 
(iray,  H.  Fannie 
Gray,  Smith,*  1869. 
Gray,  Mrs.  Smith 
Gray,  William  H. 
Grover,  Sarah  B. 
Guild,  Charles 
Hartshorn,  Charles 
Hartshorn,  George 
Hawes,  Joseph,*  1849. 
Hyde,  George  B. 
Ijcwis,  Willard 
INlann,  .John 
Blann,  Lnwell 
Merrick,  John  M.,*  1871. 


Neal,  Benjamin 
Page,  William  A. 
Pierce,  Shadrach  S. 
Plimpton,  C.  G.,*  1864. 
Plimpton,  H.  M. 
Polley,  Edmund 
Priest,  Mrs.  Leon  A. 
Scott,  James  G. 
Shepard,  E. 
Smith,  Miss  G.  E. 
Smith,  John  N. 
Smith,  Mrs.  John  N. 
Smith,  Metcalf 
Stone,  Ebenezer,*  1869. 
Thompson,  Edwin 
Wilmarth,  Ada  E. 
Wilmarth,  Naaman  B. 
Wilmarth,  Elizabeth  F. 
Wilson,  Edwin 
Wilson,  Mrs.  Edwin,  [58.] 

WEST  ROXBURY. 

Allen,  Stephen  M. 
Andrews,  Edward  R. 
Andrews,  Mrs.  E.  K. 
Arnold,  Joseph 
Austin,  Arthur  W. 
Austin,  Miss  Florence 
Austin,  William  Perciv 
Bacon,  Daniel  C.,*  1856. 
Bacon,  Francis  E. 
Bacon,  William  B. 
Bailey,  Lutlier  C. 
Balcli,  George  11. 
Balch,  Joseph,*  1849. 
Balch,  Joseph  W. 
Banfleld,  Everett  C. 
Barber,  A.  D. 
Bartlett,  Alden 
Bartlett,  Mrs.  Alden 
Beckwith,  Henry 
Billings,  Joseph  H.,*  1874. 
Billings,  Mrs.  .Joseph  H. 
Billnigs,  Miss  Jennie 
Billings,  Miss  Mary 
Blake,  John  J. 
Blake,  William 
Blackman,  George 
Bliss,  George  N. 
Bliss,  Mrs.  Lucius  S. 
BoUes,  Matthew 
Bond,  George  William 
Bowditch,  .J.  Ingersull 
Bradiord,  S.  D.,*  1865. 
Bradish,  Levi  J. 
Brewer,  Charles 
Brewer,  Otis 
Brown,  Alfred  S. 
Brown,  Benjamin 
Brown,  Daniel  A. 
Browne,  Ilortice  E. 
Brown,  W.  T. 
Bruce,  N.  T. 
Butters,  J.  A.  C.,*  1858. 
Cabot,  Stephen 
Capen,  Mrs.  .Josiah  A. 
Calder,  Augustus  P. 
Cary,  Isaac  H. 
Cass,  Aaron 
Cass,  Francis  W. 
Cass.  Henry  W. 
Ci'onin,  Jeremiah 
Crosby,  Albert 
Crosby,  Miss  Fannie  II. 
Crosby,  Miss  Irene  M. 
Crosby,  Miss  Mmuie  11. 


Comins,  Linus  B. 
Cowing,  Walter  H. 
Curtis,  Joseph  II. 
Curtis,  (Tcorge  S. 
Curtis,  Charles  F. 
Dabney,  Chas.  W.  Jr.,*'71. 
Davis,  Francis,*  1865. 
Dexter,  Anson,*  lb74. 
Dixwell,  John  J. 
Draper,  Abijah  W.,  1874. 
Dudley,  Henry 
Dudley,  Ephraim  W. 
Eldridge,  Oliver 
Emmons,  Johu  A. 
Ensliu,  William 
Evans,  William 
Farrar,  J.  Hamilton 
Farrington,  Ebenezer  T. 
Gates  Mrs.  V.  L. 
Gilbert,  Luther 
Gooding,  George,*  1874. 
Gould,  Joseph  D. 
Greenough  David  S, 
Hall,  Alfred  B. 
Hail,  David  P. 
Hall,  Joseph 
Hall,  William  D. 
Harod,  William  F. 
Head,  Charles  D. 
Head,  Francis  C.,*  1865. 
Henchman,  Nathaniel  H. 
Hewins,  Charles  A. 
Hilborn,  S.  C. 
Howe,  Edward  W. 
Howe,  Mrs.  Edward  W. 
Howland,  J.  T. 
Hunt,  Harrison  G. 
Knights,  Miss  H. 
Keith,  William,*  1859. 
Lamb,  Reuben  A.,*  1858. 
Lawrie,  Andrew  B. 
Low,  John  J. 
Lyman,  Mrs.  Thomas. 
Mackintosh,  Charles  G. 
Mackintosh,  J.  S. 
Manning,  Charles,*  1869. 
March,  A.  S.,*  1854. 
March,  Andrew  S. 
Mcintosh,  William 
McLaren,  Anthony 
jMeserve,  Andrew  T. 
Meserve,  Isaac  H. 
Minot,  George  R. 
Morse,  Charles 
Morse,  Robert  M. 
Motley,  Chnrles  D. 
Motley,  Thomas 
Motley,  Mrs.  Thomas 
Motley,  Thomas  L. 
North,  George  G. 
Orange,  Thomas 
Page,  .Joseuh  W. 
Page,  Kilby,*  1869. 
Palmer,  William,*  1860. 
Papinc'iu,  Antoine 
Papineau,  Alfred 
Parker,  S.  Winchester 
Parkinson,  John,*  1865. 
Pearce,  .John 
Popp,  Hieronemas 
Pratt,  John  C. 
Prescott,  Nathan  B. 
Prescott,  Mrs.  N.  B. 
Prichard,  Jeremiah 
Prichard,  Vila 
Prichard,  (iilman 
Richards,  Edward 


57 


Richards,  George  H. 

Richards,  Mrs.  U.  T- 

Richmond,  Thomas  H. 

Kobeson,  William  R. 

Rodman,  Samuel  W. 

Russell,  Geo.  R.,*  186(;. 

Sampson,  (Jharles,*  IS-'iS. 

Seaveins,  Thomas  W. 

Shaw,  Francis  G. 

Shaw,  J.  J. 

Shaw,  Quincy  A. 

Slocumb,  William  H. 

Smith,  Alvin,*  1870. 

Smith,  Humi)hrey 

Smith,  Joseph  M.,*  1872. 

Smith,  Lorenzo 

Smith,  Melancthon 

Spauldingr,  Solomon  R.*  '74 

Spooner,  William  H.,  Jr. 

Stevens,  S.  W. 

Sturgis,  Russell 

Sturtevant,  Benj.  F. 

Swett,  Samuel  W. 

Taft,  Reed 

Tavlor,  H.  B.,*  1861 

Ticknor,  Wm.  D.,*1864 
Tilden,  George  A. 
Tolman,  Ebenezer  W. 
Tolmau,  Lucius  A.,*  Ife71. 
Townsend,  David 
Tufts,  James,*  1859. 
Walker,  E.  C.  R. 
Watt,  Robert 
Watt,  Lizzie 
Watt,  Marion  J. 
Webster,  John  L. 
Weld,  Aaron  D. 
Weld,  Mrs.  A.  D.*  1872. 
Weld,  Aaron  D.,  Jr. 
Weld,  Miss  A.  K. 
Weld,  Miss  Eliza 
Weld,  Francis  M. 
Weld,  J.  Gardner 
Weld,  Nathaniel 
Weld,  Mrs.  Mary  P. 
Weld,  Richard  H. 
Weld,  Stephen  M.,*  1867. 


Weld,  Miss  Susan 
Wentworth,  Jacob 
Westcott.  Stephen,*  '74. 
Wheeler,  Warren  R. 
Whitney,  Israel  G. 
Whitney.  Mrs.  1.  G. 
AVhitney.  Miss  N.  B. 
Whytal,  Thomas  G. 
Whytal,  Mrs.  Thomas  G. 
Williams,  B.  P.,*  285(5. 
Williams,  George  H.. 
VVilliams,  Henry  H. 
Williams,  Moses 
Williams,  Moses  B. 
Williams,  N.  D.,*1852. 
Williams,  Joseph  W. 
Wilson,  Edmund  B. 
Winchester,  Parker 
Wing,  B.  F. 
Withcrbee,  John  B. 
Woodman ,  George  F. 
Woodward.Chauncv,  *'72. 
"Woodbury,  Joseph"P. 
Worley,  B.  W. 
Young,  Calvin, *1S74. 
York,  John  [203] 

WEYMOUTH. 

Blanchard,  Nathaniel 
Kurrill,  Ansel 
Fitield,  Noah,*  18(;7. 
Howe,  Appleton,*  1870. 
Humphrey,  Ebeiiezer 
Humphrey,  L.,*  18.57. 
Hunt,  A.  N.,*  1S64. 
Hunt,  Elias 
Jones,  James 
Kingsbury,  F.  A.,*  1860. 
Loud  Joseph,*  1874. 
Loud,  John  W.,*1874. 
Nash,  Abner  P, 
Na.-h,  Erastus 
Nash,  Stephen  W. 
Porter,  Thomas  B. 
Richaids,  Elias, 
Shaw,  Nathaniel,*  1860. 


Tirrell,  Albert 
Tirrell,  James,*  lg65. 
Tirrell,  Wilson 
White,  James 
White,  Thomas  [23] 

WRENTHAM. 

Aldrich,  Artemas 

Barnard  Allied,*  1871. 

Blakesley,  Hubbard 

Cheever,  Alonzo  W. 

Cheever,  Mrs.  Eliza  R. 

Cht-cver,  Otis  G.,*  1872. 

Clap,  Harvey  E.,*  18(j:i. 

Clay,  Nehemiah 

Cowell,  John  F. 

Cowell,  William  W. 

Everett,  Melatiah,*  1858. 

Faxon,  Francis  G. 
Fisher,  Calvin,  Jr.,*  1869. 

Fisher,  Hiram  B. 

Fisher,  Silas  P.,*  1865. 
Ford,  Peter 
Fuller,  Chauncy  G. 

Grant,  George 

Gassett,  Henry,  Jr. 
Grant,  Robert  P. 
Grant,  Whiting 
Hawes,  Benj.,*  1867. 
Holbrook,  George  E. 
Ide,  Edwin  S. 
Jepson,  William  A. 
Larkin,  Lyman  B. 
Mann,  Howard 
Parker,  Ebenezer  B. 
Pond,  Handel,*  1867. 
Pond, Jabez  E. 
Proctor,  Thomas 
Sayles,  Caleb  W.,*  1863. 
Starkey,  Gardner  H. 
Stone,  Curtis 
Sturdy,  James  H. 
Waie,  Asa 
White,  James  A. 
Wiggin,  James  S.         [36] 


MEMBERS   RESIDING  OUT  OF  THE  COUNTY. 


Allen,  George  E.,  Newton. 

Allen,  Joseph  A.,  Newton. 

Allen  ,  Nathaniel  T.,  Newton. 

Balch,  Wesley  P.,  Boston. 
Beckler,  Daniel  W., Boston. 

Callender,  Benjamin,  Boston. 

Collins,  James  H.,  Cambridge. 

Copeland,  R.  McCleary,  Boston- 

Deunie,  Edward  M.,  Boston. 
De  Reynoso,  Bernard. 
Donahoe,  Patrick,  Boston. 
Edmands,  J.  Wiley,  Newton. 
Ellis,  David,  Cambridge. 
Garbett,  William  A.,  Boston. 
Goddard,  Thomas,  Boston. 
Gould,  James,  ISoston. 
Gould,  George, Newton. 
Hapgood,  Lyman  S.,  Boston. 
HoUis,  John  W.,  Newton. 
Inches,  Martin  B.,  Boston. 

Members  admitted. 
Members  deceased. 


Lawrence,  Mrs.  James,  Boston. 
Loring,  A.  K.  Boston. 
Matthews,  Nathan,  Boston. 
Messenger,  G.  W.,  Boston,*  1871, 
Minot,  George  H.,  Boston. 
Norton,  R.  R.,  Boston. 
Parmenter,  Joshua,  Natick. 
Potter,  Silas,  Boston. 
Quinn,  John,  Boston. 
Rand,  Edward  S.,  Bo.ston. 
Rogers,  J.  A.,  Boston. 
Roswell,  Mary  Ann,  Boston. 
Slade,  Hubert,  Boston. 
Smith,  George  W.,  Boston. 
Stearne,  John,  Newton. 
Tappan,  Lewis  W,,  Boston. 
Vinal,  Otis,  Boston. 
Well.s,B.T.,  Boston. 
Wheeler,  Lewis,  Cambridge. 


2139. 
410. 


[••!!'] 


LIST  OF  PREMIUMS, 

Rules  and  Regulations  and  List  of  Committees, 

OF  THE 

Norfolk  Agricultural  Society 


TWEATY-SEVENTII  ANNUAL  EXDIBITION 


TO  HE   IlOI.UIiX   AT 


PvEADVlLLE, 


THURSDAY   AND    FRIDAY,  Sept.  23d  and  24th,   1875. 


HYDE  PARK: 

PllINIED  AT  THE  GAZETTE  OFFICE. 

1875. 


JI^The  Trustees  invite  the  Agriculturists,  Mechanics, 
Manufacturers,  Horticulturists,  and  Ladies  of  the  County,  to 
join  their  endeavors  to  render  the  Exhibition  worthy  of  the 
patronage  of  the  Commonwealth,  and  creditable  to  them- 
selves. 


OFFICERS  OF   THE    SOCIETY, 

1874-75. 


rresident. 
HENRY  S.  RUSSELL, Milton. 

Honorary  President. 

Hon.  MARSHALL  P.  WILDER Dorchester. 

Vice-Presidents. 

Hon.  Otis  C.ky, Foxboroujih. 

Alonzo  W.  Chkevkk Wiviitbam. 

John  Quincy  Adams, Quincy 

Alfked  W.  Whitcomb, Randolph. 

Theodouk  Lyman Rmokli.ie. 

William  R.  Mann^ Sharon. 

Corresponding  and  Recording  Secretary. 

Henuy  0.  Hildreth, D.dhum. 

2'reasurer. 
Chauncey  C.  Chukciiill,     Dedham. 

Executive  Committee. 
E.  C.  R.Walker, West  Roxbury ;  A.  B.  Balch,  Medfleld  ;  Charles  F.  Curtis, 
WestRoxbnry;    Augustus  P.  CaMer,  West  Roxbury ;    William   T    Cook' 
Foxboro';  Henry  M.  Mack,  Dorchester;  David  W.  Tucker,  Milton;  Ellis 
Tucker,  Cauton  ;  George  Craft,  Brookline. 

Finance  Committee  and  Auditors. 

Ira  Cleveland,   Dedham;    William  J.    Stuart,    Hyde   Park;    Elinhaiet 
Stoue,  Dedham. 

Supervisory  Committee. 
The  President,  Honorary  President,  and  Secretary,  ex-officiis  •  Charles 
C.  Sevvall,  Medtield;  Otis  Cary,  Foxborough  ;  A.  W.  Cheever,  wientham'- 
ErastusL.  Metcalf,  Franklin;  Henry  Grew,  Hyde  Park;  Charles  Breck' 
MUton;  Lucius  Clapp,  Stoughton:  Jo«iah  P.  Quincy,  Quincy;  Elijah 
I  ucker,  Milton  ;  Henry  Gouldiui.',  Dover;  E.  C.  R.  Walk-r,  West  Hoxbury  • 
CharlesF.  CurtLs,  WestRpxbury;  A.  F.  Stevens,  x\eedham ;  Thomas  b' 
Gnggs,  Brookline  ;  Henry  M.  Mack,  Dorchester. 

Committee  of  Arrangements. 
Henry  S.  Russell,  Milton;  William  R.  Mann,  Sharon;  Chauncey  C 
Churchill,  Henry  0.  Hildreth,  Dedham;  Charles  F.Curtis,  We.st  Roxhury  • 
A.  P.  Calder,  Dorchester;  William  J.  Stuart,  Hyde  Park;  John  i)' 
Bradlee,  Milton;  Albert  B.  Balch,  Medlleld ;  Alfred  W.  Whitcon.b 
Randolph;  Henry  M.  Muck,  Dorchester;  Abel  F.  Stevens,  Needham. 


:n^orfolk   agricultural   society, 


RULES    AND    REGULATIONS. 


It  is  understood  that  all  premiums  will  be  restricted  to  articles 
grown  or  manufactured  in  the  County,  or  in  towns  contiguous 
thereto,  unless  otherwise  specified  in  the  premium  list.  Essays 
and  Agricultural  Implements,  being  exempted  from  this  rule,  will 
be  opened  to  general  competition. 

The  several  Committees  sei-ving  at  the  Exhibition,  excepting 
those  on  Plowing  and  Drawing,  are  required  to  report  at  the  office 
of  the  8ecretai-y  at  twelve  o'clock  on  Thursday,  when  all  vacancies 
shall  be  filled  by  the  Committee  appointed  for  that  purpose. 

^^  No  person  serving  on  any  of  the  Committees  shall  act  or  vote 
in  any  department  in  n'ltich  he  is  p)ersonaUy  interested  as  a  comjjetitor. 

l^  Committees  are  prohibited  from  atvarding  gratuities,  other 
than  diplomas,  unless  specified  in  the  premium  list. 

B^  No  object  or  article  will  be  entitled  to  a  p)remium,  unless  it 
possesses  poirds  of  superiority ;  and  the  Committees  are  pirohibited 
from  awarding  premiums,  if,  in  their  opinion,  the  articles  or  objects 
are  not  deemed  worthy. 

Any  gentleman,  not  a  member  of  the  Society,  entitled  to  a 
premium  of  five  dollars  or  upward,  and  any  lady,  not  a  member  of 
the  Society,  entitled  to  a  premium  of  two  dollars  or  upward,  shall 
receive  the  amount  exceeding  the  sum  of  five  dollars  or  two  dol- 
lars, respectively,  and  may  thereafter  become  a  member. 

All  animals  and  articles  intended  for  exhibition  and  premium  — 
herds  of  milch  cows  and  bread  and  butter  excepted  —  must  be  on 
the  ground  at  or  before  twelve  o'clock  on  Thursday,  the  first  day 
of  the  Exhibition,  to  be  entitled  to  any  premium.  Animals  will 
not  be  allowed  to  be  removed  from  the  pens  before  three  o'clock  on 
Friday,  the  second  day ;  and  all  other  articles  not  until  five 
o'clock. 


Tlie  same  animal  —  except  worki  112;  oxen,  draught  liovses,  and 
horses  entered  I'or  purses  competed  for  on  the  track  —  or  article, 
shall  not  be  allowed  to  compete  for  more  than  one  premium.  And 
in  fruit,  it  is  understood  that  the  same  varieties  shall  not  i)e  in- 
cluded in  different  collections  of  the  same  exhibitor,  competing  for 
premium. 

In  order  to  extend  liberal  encouragement  to  citizens  of  the 
County  living  remote  from  the  Society's  grounds,  a  sum  —  not  ex- 
ceeding fifty  dollars  —  will  be  appropriated  for  compensation  of 
travel  to  the  owners  of  all  such  neat  cattle,  swine  and  sheep  as 
have  been  brought  or  driven  more  than  five  miles  —  reckoning  the 
distance  from  whence  they  come  to  the  place  of  exhibition  —  and 
receive  no  premium.  Only  one  travel  will  be  allowed  to  the  same 
person.  Payment  will  be  made  at  the  rate  of  ten  cents  per  mile 
for  a  3'oke  of  oxen  or  steers  ;  eight  cents  per  mile  for  each  bull, 
cow,  heifer  or  yearling  ;  ten  cents  per  mile  for  each  boar,  sow,  or 
litter  of  weaned  pigs  ;  and  eight  cents  per  mile  for  each  flock  of 
sheep.  But  no  such  payment  shall  be  made  for  any  animal  or  ani- 
mals which,  in  the  judgment  of  the  Committee  appointed  to  man- 
age them,  are  not  of  a  superior  charactei'  and  worthy  of  exhibition, 
or  have  not  been  entered  in  accordance  with  the  rules  and  regula- 
tions of  the  Societ}^ 

The  animals,  while  on  the  ground,  will  be  fed  at  the  expense  of 
the  Sociely. 

All  flowers,  fruits  and  vegetables  are  to  be  grown  by,  and  entered 
in  the  name  of,  the  contributor. 

After  the  objects  for  exhibition  are  arranged,  they  will  be  under 
the  exclusive  charge  of  the  Superintendents,  and  cannot  be  re- 
moved ivithout  their  consent. 

All  other  entries  for  premiums  must  be  made  in  writing,  and 
shall  be  placed  in  the  hands  of  the  Recording  Secretary  on  or  be- 
fore the  15th  of  J>Jovember. 

Premiums  awarded  and  not  called  for  on  or  before  the  last 
Wednesday  in  March  following,  will  bo  considered  as  given  to  the 
Society,  in  aid  of  its  funds. 

The  trustees  have  carefully  revised  and  approved  of  the  follow- 
ing list  of  premiums.  The  respective  Committees  appointed  to 
award  the  same  are  required  to  enforce  a  strict  conformity  to  all 
the  rules  in  relation  to  Entries  and  Certificates. 


6 

As  it  will  become  the  duty  of  the  Society  to  make  to  the  Legis- 
lature an  exact  report  of  its  doings,  the  trustees  deem  it  of  tlie 
highest  importance  that  earnest  and  persevering  efforts  be  made  by 
the  citizens  of  every  town  in  ihe  County  to  bring  out  the  results  of 
their  skill  and  industry. 

HENRY  S.  RUSSP:LL,  Presklent. 
Henry  O.  Hildreth,  Secretary. 


LIST 

OF 

PREMIUMS  AND  COMMITTEES 

FOR  THE  YEAR  1875. 


(Succesefiil  Competitors  rnay  receive  their  Premiums  in  Plate  or  Money,  at  their  option.) 


SUPEKINTENDENTS  AT  EXHIBITION. 

-Horses.— Augustus   P.    Calder,    Dorchester;    Assistant,    Hknky   A. 
Darling,  Hj'de  Park. 

Cattle. — Adam  Mackintosh,  Cautou. 

Sheep  and  Swine. — Hbnry  Gouldixg,  Dover. 

Fruit. — Chaklks  F.  Curtis,  West  Roxbury. 

Flowers. — Robert  Watt,  West  Roxbury. 

Vegetables. — David  Henderson,  Needhara. 

Poultry. — A.  F.  Stevens,  Needham. 

Manufactures,  Carriages,  Agricultural  Implements,  -fffc— William  Ames, 
Dedham. 

Plowing  and  Drawing. — Asahel  S.  Drake,  Sharon. 
Ladies'  Work. — Mrs.  John  Vose,  Hyde  Park. 

Committee  to  Fill  Vacancies  on  Committees  at  Exhibition. 
Otis    Cauy,   Foxboro';    Henry  O.   Hildrkth,   Dedham;    Albert   B. 
Balch,  Medtiekl;  N.  B.  Wilmarth,  Walpole;  J.  Walter  Buadlee,  Milton. 


FARMS. 

EXl'ERIMEKTS  ASD  IMPROVEMENTS  THEREON. 

MANAGEMENT   AND   IMPROVEMENT   OF   FARMS. 

SUPERVISORT  Committee.— The  President,  Honorary  President  and  Secretary,  ex- 
offidisi  Charles  C.  Sewall,  Mertfield;  Otis  Gary,  Foxborough;  A.  W.  Cheever, 
VVrentham;  Erastus  L.  Metcalf,  Franklin;  Henry  Grew,  Hyde  Park;  Charles  Brcck, 
Milton;  Lucius  Clapp,  Stoughton;  Josiah  P.  Quincy,  Quincy;  Elijah  Tucker,  Milton; 
Henry  Goulding,  Dover;  E.  C.  R.  Walker,  Roxbury  ;  Charles  P.  Curtis,  West  Roxbury; 
A.  F.  Stevens,  Needham;  Thomas  B.  Griggs,  Brookline;  Henry  M.  Mack,  Dorchester. 

For  the  best  managed  farm,  taking  into  view  tlie  condition  of 
tlie  buildings,  fences  and  orchards,  the  cultivation  of  the  lands, 


8 

the  care  and  management  of  tlie  stock,  the  quantit;y,  quality  and 
preservation  of  the  crops,  the  expenses  incurred  and  the  improve- 
ments made  during  the  year,  with  a  detailed  statement  of  the 
whole,  to  be  rendered  on  or  before  November  15th,  $25  ;  second 
best,  $20. 

Competitors  must  give  notice  of  their  intention  to  the  Secretary 
on  or  before  June  15th.  Farms  entered  for  premiums  will  be 
viewed  by  the  Supervisor}'  Committee,  as  they  shall  deem  expedi- 
ent, between  June  20th  and  September  20th.  Any  farm  offered 
for  inspection,  without  being  entered  for  a  jiremium,  will  be  viewed 
and  reported  by  the  Committee,  if  seasonable  application  be  made 
to  the  Chairman. 

PERMANENT  IMPROVEMENTS. 

Committee— Henvy  Grew,  Hyde  Park;   Horatio  Boyden,  Walpole;   Charles  E.  C. 
Breck,  Milton;  E.  P.  Carpenter,  Foxborough;  AValter  H.  Fisher,  Norfolk. 

Improved  Meadow  and  Swamp  Lands.  —  For  the  best  experi- 
ment in  reclaiming  wet  meadow  or  swamp  lands,  by  drainage  or 
otherwise,  on  not  less  than  one  half-acre,  with  statement  in  detail 
of  the  previous  condition  and  produce  of  the  land,  the  method  and 
expense  of  the  experiment,  and  the  produce  at  the  present  time, 
$8  ;  second  best,  $4. 

Under-Draining  Land.  —  For  the  best  experiment  in  under- 
draining  land,  not  less  than  forty  square  rods,  regard  being  had  to 
the  character  of  the  soil  and  subsoil,  the  method,  extent,  expense 
and  result  of  the  experiment,  $10  ;  second  best,  $5  ;  third  best,  $3. 

Old  Pasture  and  Unimproved  Lands.  —  For  the  best  con- 
ducted experiment  in  renovating  and  improving  old  pasture  lands 
and  lands  hitherto  lying  waste,  on  not  less  than  one  acre,  wMth  or 
without  plowing,  with  a  statement  of  the  previous  condition  of  the 
land,  and  of  the  method,  expense  and  result  of  the  experiment, 
$8  ;  second  best,  $5  ;  third  best,  $3. 

TURNING  IN  CROPS  AS  MANURE. 

COMMITTEE  —  Aarou  D.  Weld,  Wert  Roxbury ;  S.  W.  Richardson.Franklin;  Ephraim 
Wilson,  Dover. 

For  the  most  satisfactory  experiment  of  turning  in  crops  as  a 
manure,  either  green  or  dry,  on  not  less  than  one  half-acre  of  land, 


9 

a  detailed  account  of  the  whole  process,  expense  and  result  to  be 
given  in  writing,  $G. 

EXPERIMENTS  IN  SUBSOIL  PLOWING. 

For  the  best  experiment,  on  not  less  than  one  acre  of  land,  of 
the  effect  of  subsoil  plowing,  to  be  determined  by  the  difference  in 
the  value  of  the  crops  raised  on  equal  portions  of  equally  manured 
land,  of  like  quality,  one-half  of  which  having  been  subsoil- 
plowed,  and  the  other  half  plowed  in  the  usual  manner,  statements 
of  the  depth  of  plowing  in  each  instance,  together  with  all  the 
particulars  of  culture  required,  $8  ;  second  best,  $5. 

FEEDmG  AND  FATTENING  STOCK. 

COMMITTEE  -  A.  W.Cheever.Wientham;  John  Sias,  Milton;  Charles  Mackintosh, 
Needham.  ' 

Comparative  Value  of  Crops  as  Food  for  Cattle.  —  For 
the  best  experiment  upon  a  stock  of  cattle,  not  less  than  four  in 
number,  to  ascertain  the  relative  value  of  the  different  kinds  of 
fodder  used,  with  a  statement  in  detail  of  the  quantity  and  quality 
of  the  same,  as  compared  with  English  hay,  the  experiment  to  be 
made  in  the  three  months,  $i2  ;  second  best,  $o. 

Feeding  of  Milch  Cows.  — For  the  best  experiment  in  the 
feeding  of  milch  cows,  by  soiling,  stall-feeding  or  pasturing,  with 
a  detailed  statement  of  the  comparative  advantages  of  Either 
method,  regard  being  had  to  the  saving  of  manure,  comfort  of  the 
animals,  and  produce  of  the  dairy,  $12 ;  second  best,  $8  ;  third 
best,  $3. 

Fattening  Cattle.  —  For  the  best  experiment  in  feeding  cattle, 
with  a  statement  in  detail  of  the  process,  expense  and  result  $5  • 
second  best,  $3. 

Fattening  Swine.  —  For  the  best  experiment  in  feeding  swine, 
with  a  statement  in  detail  of  the  process  and  result,  $5  ;  second 
best,  $3. 

HAY. 

COMMITTEE. -ErastusL.Metcalf,  Franklin;  Ellis  Tucker,  Canton;  Otis  Carv  Fov 


borouffh 


For  the  largest  quantity  and  best  quality  of  English  hay  per 


10 

acre  produced  on  any  fiirra  in  the  County,  regard  being  had  to  the, 
character  of  the  soil,  the  mode  and  cost  of  cultivation  and  making, 
$25  ;  second  best,  $10. 

CRANBERRr  VINES. 

For  the  best  experiment  in  transplanting  Cranberry  Vines,  or  in 
growing  them  from  seed,  on  not  less  than  one-eighth  of  an  acre, 
which  shall  be  in  the  most  flourishing  and  productive  state  on  the 
10th  of  September,  $6  ;  second  best,  $3  ;  third  best,  $1. 

Competitors  will  be  required  to  give  an  exact  statement  of  the 
process,  expense  and  result  of  the  experiment. 


GRAIN,  ROOT   AIS^D  MIXED   CROPS. 

Committee  — Charles  Bieck,  John  Sias, Charles  E.  C.  Breck,  Milton;   Henry  Binl, 
Stoughton ;  Henry  M.  Mack,  Dorchester. 

Grain  Chops.  —  For  the  best  experiment  in  raising  Wheat,  a 
premium  of  $10  ;  second  best,  $3. 

For  the  best  experiment  in  raising  Rye,  Oats  or  Barley,  each, 
a  premium  of  $10  ;  second  l)est,  each,  $3. 

For  the  best  experiment  in  raising  Indian  Corn,  a  premium  of 
$10  ;  second  best,  $3. 

For  the  best  experiment  in  raising  White  Beans,  Millet  or  Buck- 
wheat, each,  $3. 

Samples  of  each  kind  of  Grain,  not  less  than  half  a  busliel, 
properly  labeled,  must  be  exhibited  at  the  Show.  The  quantity  of 
the  crop  to  be  ascertained  by  weight,  as  follows  :  Corn  and  Rye, 
56  pounds  each  to  the  bushel ;  Barley  and  Buckwheat,  48  pounds 
each  ;  Oats,  32  pounds  ;  Wheat,  GO  pounds. 

Root  Chops.  —  For  the  best  experiment  in  raising  Potatoes,  $5  ; 
second  best,  $3. 

For  the  best  experiment  in  raising  Sugar  Beets,  Carrots,  Pars- 
nips, Mangel-wui  tzel  or  Ruta-baga,  each,  $5  ;  second  best,  each,  $3. 

For  the  best  experiment  in  raising  Onions,  $5  ;  second  best,  $3. 

For  the  best  experiment  in  raising  Flat  Turnips,  $5  ;  second 
best,  $3. 


11 

Samples  of  roots,  not  less  than  one  bushel,  properly  labeled, 
must  be  exhibited  at  the  Show.  'The  quantity  of  the  crops,  which 
must  be  on  not  less  than  one-quarter  of  an  acre,  shall  be  ascer- 
tained by  weight  of  the  roots  — freed  from  dirt  and  without  tops 
—  as  follows  :  Potatoes,  Sugar  Beet,  Mangel-wurtzel  and  Ruta- 
bagas, 60  pounds  ;  Carrots,  55  pounds  ;  Onions,  and  Flat  Turnips, 
50  pounds  ;  Parsnips,  45  pounds  to  the  bushel. 

Competitors  must  give  notice  of  their  intention  to  compete,  to 
the  Secretary;  on  or  before  June  15th;  and  experiments  will  be 
viewed  by  the  Committee  between  July  1st  and  September  20th. 

Claimants  for  premiums  must  render  to  the  Chairman  of  the 
Committee,  on  or  before  Xovcmber  15th,  a  written  statement  of 
the  character  and  previous  condition  of  the  land,  its  present  value, 
and  the  taxes  upon  it ;  the  kind,  quality  and  value  of  manure 
used  ;  the  quantity  and  cost  of  seed  sown  ;  the  labor  and  exi)ense 
of  cultivating  and  harvesting  the  crop  ;  and  the  quantity,  quality 
and  value  of  the  crop.  In  awarding  premiums,  regard  will  be  had 
to  all  these  circumstances,  and  to  the  area  of  the  ground  in  culti- 
vation. 


VEGETABLES. 

CoMMiTTEr  -Charles  L.  Copeland,  Milton ;  John  W.  Richardson,  Franklin ;  William 
J.  Griggs,  Brookline;  William  J.  Hyde,  Brookline;  Aaron  D.  Capen,  Dorchester. 

Vegetable  Garden.  —  For  the  best  Vegetable  Garden,  regard 
being  had  to  the  variety,  excellence  and  quantity  of  the  prod°icts 
thereof,  and  the  mode  and  expense  of  cultivation,  first  premium, 
SlO  ;  second  do.,  $5  ;  third  do.,  $2. 

Entries  must  be  made  before  the  10th  of  June,  and  an  exact 
statement  rendered  before  the  1st  of  November. 

Experiments  in  RAisma  Vegetables.  —  For  the  best  experi- 
ment in  raising  Squashes  — one  half-dozen  of  each  variety  to  be 
exhibited  at  the  show,  $o  ;  second  best,  $3. 

For  the  best  experiment  in  raising  Cabbages  --  not  less  than  six 
heads  to  be  exhibited  at  the  Show,  $o  ;   secoml  best,  $3. 

Show  of  Vegetables  at  Exhibition.  —  Class  1.  —  For  the  best 
and  largest  collection  of  Vegetables  exhibited,  $20  ;  second  best, 
$15  ;  third  best,  $10. 


12 

For  the  best  and  largest  collection  of  Potatoes,  not  less  than 
one  peck  of  each  variety,  $6  ;  second  best,  $3. 

For  the  best  and  largest  collection  of  Winter  Squashes,  not  less 
than  four  of  each  variety,  $4  ;  second  best,  $3. 

For  the  best  new  variety  of  Seedling  Potatoes,  superior  to  any 
kind  now  in  cultivation,  a  premium  of  $10. 

Class  2.  — For  one  half-bushel  best  Table  Potatoes,  $2  ;  second 
best,  $1. 

For  one  half-bushel  best  Turnips,  $2  ;  second  best,  $1. 

For  one  half-bushel  best  Carrots,  $2  ;  second  best,  $1. 

For  one  half-bushel  best  Beets,  $2  ;  second  best,  %\. 

For  one  half-bushel  best  Tomatoes,  S2  ;  second  best,  $1. 

For  one  half-bushel  best  Onions,  $2  ;  second  best,  $1. 

For  one  half-bushel  best  Parsnips,  $2  ;  second  best,  $1. 

For  one  half-bushel  best  Salsify,  $2  ;  second  best,  $1. 

For  two  quarts  best  Lima  Beans,  %'2  ;  second  best,  %\. 

For  four  best  Late  Drumhead  Cabbages.  $2  ;  second  best,  $1. 

For  four  best  Green  Globe  Savoys,  $2  ;  second  best,  $1. 

For  four  best  Cauliflowers,  %2  ;  second  best,  $1. 

For  twelve  best  heads  of  Celery,  $2  ;  second  best,  $1. 

For  four  best  Marrow  Squashes,  $2  ;  second  best,  $1. 

For  four  best  Canada  Crookneck  Squashes,  $2  ;  second  best,  $1. 

For  four  best  Pumpkins,  $2  ;  second  best,  $1. 

For  four  best  Musk-Melons,  $2  ;  second  best,  §1 . 

For  four  best  Water-Melons,  $2  ;  second  best,  $1. 

For  twelve  ears  best  Sweet  Corn,  $2  ;  second  best,  $1. 
-      No  exhibitor  in  class  1  shall  compete  in  class  2  with  the  same 
varieties. 

SEEDS. 

COMMITTEE.-Geovge  E.  Chickering,  Dover;  John  N.  Smith,  Walpole;   Elbridge  L. 
Mann,  Dover. 

For  the  best  sample  of  ears  of  Seed  Corn,  not  less  than  forty  in 
number  — first  premium,  $2  ;  second  do.,  $1. 

For  the  best  collection  of  Onion,  Carrot,  Beet,  Parsnip  and  Ru- 
ta-baga  Seeds  —  first  premium,  $3  ;  second  do.,  $2. 

For  the  best  ten  pounds  of  Timothy,  Rcdtop  and  Clover  Seed, 

$1.  „ 

For  the  best  sample,  not  less  than  one  peck,  of  Wheat,  Rye, 

Barley  or  Oats,  %\  each. 


13 
TREE     CULTURE. 

Committee.  —  Edward  S.  Rand,  Jr.,  Eliphalet  Stone,  Dedham ;  A.  K.  Teele,  Milton ; 
George  Craft,  Brookllne;  Chcever  Newall,  Dorchester;  Robert  Watt,  West  Roxbury; 
Charles  F.  Curtis,  West  Roxbury. 

FRUIT    TREES. 

Apple  Orchards. — For  the  best  Apple  Orchard,  of  not  less  than 
fifty  trees,  wliich  shall  have  been  set  out  at  least  five  3'^ears,  and 
which  shall  be  in  the  best  and  most  thriving  condition  in  187o,  $8  ; 
second  best,  $5. 

Pear  Trees.  —  For  the  best  engrafted  or  budded  standard  Pear 
Trees,  set  out  at  least  five  years,  and  which  shall  be  in  the  most 
thriving  condition  in  the  autumn  of  1875,  not  less  than  twenty-five 
trees,  $8  ;  second  best,  $5. 

For  the  best  engrafted  on  budded  Pear  Trees  on  Quince  roots, 
with  same  conditions,  and  not  less  than  fifty  trees,  $8  ;  second 
best,  $5. 

Peach  Orchards. — For  the  best  Peach  Orchard,  of  not  less  than 
twent3'-five  trees,  which  shall  be  in  the  most  thrifty  bearing  condi- 
tion in  the  autumn  of  1875,  $S  ;  second  best,  $0. 

For  the  Peach  Orchard,  of  not  less  than  fifty  trees,  grown  from 
pits  planted  since  1865,  on  the  spot  where  the  trees  stand,  which 
shall  be  in  the  best  condition  in  1875,  $8  ;  second  best,  $5. 

Vineyards. — For  the  best  Vine3^ard,  of  not  less  than  one-half 
acre,  which  shall  be  in  the  "best  and  most  productive  state  in  1875, 
$8  ;  second  best,  $5.  ' 

Seedling  Apples  cr  Pears. — For  the  best  variet}'  of  new  seed- 
ling apples  or  pears,  of  decidedly  superior  quality,  one  dozen  speci- 
mens to  be  exhibited,  together  with  a  history  of  the  origin  of  the 
tree,  a  description  of  the  growth,  and  its  bearing  character,  $8  ; 
second  best,  $5. 

Seedling  Peaches. — For  the  best  variety  of  Seedling  Peaches 
of  decidedly  superior  qualit}^  and  worth}'  of  general  cultivation  — 
one  do;ien  specimens  to  be  exhibited  two  years  in  succession  —  to- 


u 

gether  with  a  history  of  its  origin,  a  description  of  its  growth,  and 
the  bearing  character  of  the  tree,  $5  ;  second  best,  $3. 

Note.  —  The  Society  will  require  a  full  statement  in  writing  of  the  soil, 
aspect,  cultivation,  fertilizers  used,  pruning,  variety,  &c.,  of  Apples, 
Pears,  Peaches,  Grapes,  &c.,  and  every  essential  thing  pertaining  to  the 
method  of  growing  them.  Entries  to  be  made  with  the  Secretary  on  or 
before  Sept.  10. 

FOREST  TREES. 

For  the  best  plantation  o  j  Forest  Trees,  of  either  of  the  follow- 
ing varieties,  namely,  White  Oak,  Yellow  Oak,  Locust,  Birch, 
White  Ash  or  Walnut,  Scotch  Larch,  Norway  Spruce,  Pitch,  White 
and  Norway  Pine,  or  other  varieties,  not  less  than  three  years  old, 
and  not  less  than  one  thousand  trees,  —  entries  to  be  made  to  the 
Secretary  previous  to  June  10th,  —  a  premium  of  ^15. 

For  the  best  plantation,  containing  not  less  than  five  hundred 
trees,  SlO. 

Ornamental  Planting.  —  To  any  individual  or  society,  regard 
being  had  to  the  number  of  persons  associated,  for  the  larger  num- 
ber and  best  growth  of  ornamental  trees,  not  less  than  fifty,  which 
shall  have  been  planted  in  a  public  square  or  on  the  roadside  at 
least  two  years  —  first  premium,  $10  ;  second  do.,  $5. 

HEDGES. 

For  tlie  best  Live  Hedge  Fence,  not  less  than  five  himdred  feet 
in  length,  $5  ;  st-cond  best,  $2. 

For  the  best  Evergreen  Hedge  of  not  less  than  four  hundred  feet 
in  length,  $5  ;  second  best,  $2.     Premiums  to  be  awarded  in  1875. 

FLOWERS. 

COMMrrxEE.  — A.  K.  Teele,  Milton;  Robert  Watt,  West  Roxbury;  George  Craft, 
Brookline;  Lyman  Davenport,  Milton;  Miss  Elizabeth  S.  Sewall,  MedflelU;  B.  C. 
Vose,  Hyde  Park. 

For  the  best  collection  of  Pot  Plants,  $10;  second  best,  $5. 
For  the  best  collection  of  Cut  Flowers,  $4  ;  second  best,  $3  ; 
third  best,  $2.  For  the  best  and  most  tastefully  arranged  baskets 
of  flowers,  not  less  than  four,  $4  ;  second  best,  $3  ;  tliird  best,  $2. 


15 

For  the  best  and  most  tastefully  arranged  bouquets,  not  less  than 
four,  $i  ;  second,  S3  ;  third,  $2.  For  the  best  collection  of  named 
gladiolus  in  spikes,  $4  ;  second  best,  $3  ;  third  best,  $2.  For  the 
best  collection  of  new  seedlings  in  spikes,  $3  ;  second  best,  $2. 
For  the  best  new  seedlings,  $1.  For  the  best  collection  of  Japan 
lilies,  $3  ;  second  best,  $2.  For  the  best  new  seedling,  $1.  For 
the  best  collection  of  dahlias,  $2  ;  second  best,  $1.  For  the  best 
new  seedlings,  $1.  For  the  best  collection  of  double  zinnias,  $2  ; 
second  best,  $1. 

A  statement  in  writing  of  the  sorts  contributed,  and  the  con- 
tributor's name,  will  be  required. 

Gratuities,  to  the  amount  of  $10,  may  be  awarded  at  the  discre- 
tion of  the  Committee. 


FRUITS. 


Rules  relating  to  the  award  of  premiums  : — 

All  fruits  ortered  for  premium  mast  be  correctly  named. 

All  fruits  must  be  composed  of  exactly  the  numl)er  of  specimens 
or  quantity  named  in  the  schedule. 

No  exhibitor  taking  a  premium  for  collection  shall  compete  with 
the  same  varieties  in  the  class  for  single  dishes. 

Non-compliance  with  the  rules  will  cause  the  rejection  of  the 
articles  offered  for  a  premium. 

APPLES. 

Committee.  -  George  V^se,  Milton;  William  H.  Forbes,  Milton;  Davi.l  Shaw 
Foxborough;  Lucius  (Jiapp,  Stoughton;  James  Mackintosh.  Needhani;  Amos  W 
Shumway,  Dover. 

For  the  best  collection  of  twelve  varieties  of  Apples,  twelve 
specimens  of  each  variety— first  premium,  $12;  second  do.,  $5; 
third  do.,  $4  ;  fourth  do.,  $3  ;   flftli  do.,  $2. 

For  the  best  collection  of  five  varieties  of  Apples,  twelve  speci- 
mens of  each  variety— first  premium,  $6  ;  second  do.,  $-i. 

For  the  best  collection  of  the  following  varieties,  twelve  speci- 
mens  of  each:     Baldwin  —  first   premium,    $2;    second  do.,  $1. 


16 

Rhode  Island  Greening  —  first  premium,  $2;  second  do,,  $1. 
Gravenstein  —  first  premium,  $2;  second  do.,  $1.  Hubbardston 
Nonesuch  —  first  premium,  S2  ;  second  do.,  $1.  Roxbury  Russet 
—  first  premium,  $2;  second  do.,  $1.  Porter  —  first  premium, 
$2  ;  second  do.,  $1.  Tohnan  Sweet— first  premium,  $2  ;  second 
do.,  $1.     For  any  other  variety  —  first  premium,  $2  ;  second  do., 


PEARS. 

CoMMiTTKK.  -  Charles  F.  Curtis,  West  Roxbury;   E.  C.  R.  Walker,  West  Roxbury; 
Otis  Gary,  Foxboiough;  John  W.  Brooks,  Milton;  William  J.  Stuart,  Hyde  Park. 

For  the  best  collection  of  twenty  varieties  of  Pears,  twelve  speci- 
mens of  each  variety  — first  premium,  $15  ;  second  do.,  $12. 

For  the  best  collection  of  ten  varieties  of  Pears,  twelve  speci- 
mens of  each  variety  — first  premium,  S8  ;  second  do.,  $6  ;  third 

do.,  $4. 

For  the  best  collection  of  five  varieties  of  Pears,  twelve  speci- 
mens of  each  variety  — first  premium,  $6  ;    second  do.,  4  ;  third 

do.,  S2. 

For  the  best  collection  of  the  following  varieties,  twelve  speci- 
mens of  each  :  Clapp's  Favorite  —  first  premium,  $2  ;  second  do,, 
$1.  Bartlett  — first  premium,  $2;  second  do.,  $1.  Beurre 
d'Anjou— first  premium,  S2-;  second  do.,  $1.  Urbaniste  —  first 
premium,  $2  ;  second  do.,  $1.  Merriam  —  first  premium,  $2  ;  sec- 
ond do.,  $1.  Louise  Bonne  de  Jersey  —  first  premium,  $2  ;  second 
do.,  SI.  Vicar  of  Winkfield  —  first  premium,  $2  ;  second  do.,  $1. 
Duchesse  d'Angoulenie— first  premium,  $2  ;  second  do.,  $1.  Seckle 
—  first  premium,  $2  ;  second  do.,  $1.  Onondaga  —  first  premium, 
$2  ;  second  do.,  $1.  Sheldon  —  first  premium,  $2  ;  second  do.,  $1. 
Beurre  Bose  —  first  premium,  $2  ;  second  do.,  $i.  Doyenne  Bou- 
souck  — first  premium,  $2  ;  second  do.,  $1.  Beurre  Clairgeau  — 
first  premium,  $2;  second  do.,  $1.  Lawrence  —  first  premium, 
$2;  second  do.,  $1.  Winter  Nellis  — first  premium,  $2  ;  second 
do.',  $1.  Beurre  Hardy  — first  premium,  $2;  second  do.,  $1. 
Butfum  — first  premium,  2  ;  second  do.,  $1.  Maria  Louise  — first 
premium,  $2  ;  second  do.,  $1 .  Dana's  Hovey  —  first  premium,  $2  ; 
second  do.,  $1.  Mount  Vernon  —first  premium,  2;  second  do., 
$1.  For  other  varieties,  not  exceeding  three  — first  premium  S2  ; 
second  do..  Si .  ♦ 


17 

GRAPES  AND  OTHER  FRUITS. 

Committee.  —  Abel  F.  Stevens,  Xeedham;  Eliphalet  Stone,  Detlham;  Joseph  W. 
Page,  West  Roxbuiy;  George  Cartwright,  Dedham;  Charles  F.  Gerry,  Hyde  Park; 
Josiah  W.  Talbot,  Norwood. 

For  the  best  collection  of  Foreign  Grapes  — first  premium,  $Q  ; 
second  do.,  §4. 

For  the  best  four  bunches  of  the  following  varieties,  four  bunches 
of  each  variety:  Black  Hamburg  — first  premium,  $3;  second 
do.,  $2.  Wilmot's  No.  16  — first  premium,  S3  ;  second  do.,  $2. 
Victoria— first  premium,  S3;  second  do.,  S2.  For  the  best  four 
bunches  of  any  white  variety,  S3. 

For  a  new  variety  of  Native  or  Seedling  Grape,  equal  or  superior 
to  the  Isabella,  ripening  in  this  County  in  the  open  air  by  the 
middle  of  September,  prolific  and  suitable  for  the  table  —  first  pre- 
mium, S20  ;  second  do.,  SlO. 

For  the  best  collection  of  Native  Grapes,  six  bunches  of  each 
variety  —  first  premium,  S4  ;  second  do.,  S3  ;  third  do.,  S2.  Dela- 
ware —  first  premium,  S2  ;  second  do.,  Si.  Diana  —  first  premium, 
S2;  second  do..  Si.  Concord— first  premium,  S2  ;  second  do., 
Si.  Hartford  Prolific — first  premium,  S2 ;  second  do.,  $1. 
Wilder  — first  premium,  S2  ;  second  do..  Si.  Agawam  — first 
premium,  S2  ;  second  do..  Si.  Merrimac  — first  premium,  S2  ; 
second  do..  Si.  Salem  —  first  premium,  S2  ;  second  do..  Si.  Any 
other  variety,  first  premium,  $2  ;  second  do..  Si. 

For  the  best  collection  of  Peaches,  twelve  specimens  of  each 
variety  —  first  premium,  S3  ;  second  do.,  $2  ;  third  do.,  Si. 

For  the  best  collection  of  Plums,  twelve  specimens  of  each 
variety  —  first  premium,  S3  ;  second  do.,  1. 

QuiNCKS.  —  For  the  best  peck  of  Quinces,  S2  ;  second  best.  Si. 

Cranberries.  —  For  the  best  peck  of  Cranberries,  S3  ;  second 
best,  S2;  third  best,  $1. 

COLD  VINERIES. 

Committee.  — Eliphalet  Stone,  Dedham;  John  Pearce,  WestRoxbury;  Edwards. 
Rand,  Jr.,  Dedham. 

For  the  best  crop,  and  the  most  economically  kept  Cold  Vinery, 
not  less  than  thirty  feet  —  first  premium,  S4  ;  second  best,  S3. 


18 
PLOWING  MATCH. 

Double  Ox  Teams. —  With  Miclikjan  Plotc. 

Committee.  — Nathan  Longfellow,  Needliam;  William  J.  Hyde,  Biookline;    Uriah 
Capen  Poiter,  Stoiigliton. 

For  best  performance  in  plowing  sward  land,  at  least  one-eighth 
of  an  acre,  eight  inches  in  depth,  $15;  second  best,  $10  ;  third 
best,  $5. 

With  any  other  ploio.  —  Same  conditions.  Best,  $15;  second 
best,  $10  ;  third  best,  $5. 

Double  Horse  Teams. —  With  Michigan  Plow. 

Committee.  — John  E.  Wetheibee,  Dedham ;  Charles  Hartshorn,  Walpole;  James 
T.  Sumner,  Canton;  James  Capen,  Foxborough. 

Same  conditions.     Best,  $15  ;  second  best,  $10  ;  third  best,  $5. 
With  any  other  plow.  —  Same  conditions.     Best,  $15  ;  second 
best,  $10  ;  third  best,  $5. 

Single  Ox  Teams.  —  With  any  Ploiv. 

Committee— B.  N.  Sawin,  Dover;  Charles  A.  Bigelow,  Medway ;  Henry  Blackman, 
Needhani. 

For  the  best  performance  in  plowing  sward  land,  at  least  one- 
eighth  of  an  acre,  six  inches  in  depth,  within  an  hour,  $10  ;  second 
best,  $8  ;  third  best,  $5. 

Single  Horse  Teams. 

Committee.— Lewis  W.Morse,  Sharon;  Edward  Sumner,  Dedham;  Horace  Guild, 
Canton. 

Same  conditions.     Best,  $10  ;  second  best,  $5. 

NoTK.  —  A  DouBLK  Team  will  consist  of  two  yokes  of  oxen  with  or 
without  a  driver ;  or  a  team  of  one  yoke  of  oxen  and  a  horse,  with  or  with- 
out a  driver.  Single  Team,  one  yoke  of  oxen  or  one  pair  of  horses  with- 
out a  driver.  Each  competitor  must  own  his  team  and  plow,  and  enter 
the  same  in  his  own  name.  Plows  must  be  held  and  driven  by  their 
owners,  or  by  persons  statedly  in  their  employ.  In  awarding  premiums, 
one  hour  will  be  allowed  for  the  performance  of  the  work,  regard  being 
had  to  the  width  and  depth  of  the  furrow  slice,  and  the  evenness,  ease 
and  quiet  with  which  the  work  is  performed. 


19 
ANIMALS. 

All  animals  to  be  entered  in  the  name  of  the  owner,  who  must 
have  owned  them  at  least  three  months  before  the  Exhibition. 

All  animals,  entered  in  accordance  with  the  rules  and  regula- 
tions, will  be  fed,  during  the  Exhibition,  at  the  expense  of  the 
Society. 

For  any  animal  worthy  of  the  first  premium,  having  received  a 
similar  one  at  any  previous  exhibition,  a  diploma,  certifying  the 
rank  of  such  animal  at  the  present  Exhibition,  shall  be  awarded 
instead  of  a  premium. 

A  diploma  may  also  be  awarded,  at  the  discretion  of  the  several 
Committees,  for  any  animal,  worthy  of  Exhibition,  from  without 
the  limits  of  the  Society. 

HORSES. 

In  awarding  the  premium  on  Roadsters,  the  general  good  quali- 
ties—  such  as  style,  action,  constitution  and  enduring  properties 
—  as  well  as  speed  of  the  animals,  will  receive  special  considera- 
tion. 

In  testing  the  speed  of  horses,  each  animal  —  four  years  old  and 
over  —  will  be  required  to  draw  a  carriage  weighing,  with  driver 
included,  not  less  than  350  pounds. 

It  is  understood  that  horses  which  have  heretofore  been  classed 
under  the  head  of  "  Thoroughbred  and  part  Thoroughbred,"  may 
compete  as  Roadsters,  or  in  any  other  class. 

Colts  and  fillies  will  compete  in  separate  classes,  as  heretofore, 
the  premiums  being  tlie  same  for  either  sex. 

No  stallion  will  be  entitled  to  a  premium  without  a  guarantee  of 
his  remaining  for  service  in  tlie  County  six  months. 

In  testing  the  strcngtli,  docility  and  training  of  Draught  or 
Team  Horses,  the  load  shall  not  be  less  than  2000  pounds  for  a 
single  horse,  and  3500  pounds  for  a  pair  of  horses. 

Every  entry  for  premium  must  be  made  before  12  o'clock  of  the 
first  day  of  the  Exhibition,  and  the  Stock  must  be  present  tlie  sec- 
ond day  on  or  before  9  o'clock  a.  m. 

It  must  be  distinctly  understood  that  premiums   will  not  be 
awarded  to  any  animal  that  does  not,  in   the  opinion  of  the  Com 
mittee,  possess  decided  merit  and  a  sound  constitution. 


20 


Augustus  P.  Calder,  Dorchester,  General  Chairman. 

Class  A,  —  Roadsters. 

Committee.  —William  T.  Thacher,  Hyde  Park;  William  Porter,  Randolph ;  J.  Free- 
man Ellis,  Stoughton. 

1st  Division.  —  Stallions. 

For  the  best  Stallion,  4  years  old  and  upwards,  a  premium  of  $10  00 

2d  best       "  ''  "  7  00 

2d  Division. 

For  the  best  brood  mare,  with  a  foal  at  her  side,  a  premium  of  S7  00 

2d  best  "  "  "  "  5  00 

Sd  Division.  —  Colts  and  Fillies. 

For  the  best  4  years  old,  a  premium  of    . 

For  the  2d  best  4  years  old,  a  premium  of 

best  3  3'ears  old,  " 

2d  best         "  " 

best  2  years  old,  " 

2d  best        "  " 

best  1  year  old,  " 

2d  best     "  " 

ith  Division.  —  Pairs  in  Harness. 

For  the  best  pair  of  Roadsters,  a  premium  of 

2d  best  " 

bth  Division.  —  Harness  Horses. 

For  the  best  Gelding  or  Mare,  a  premium  of 

2d  best    "  "  " 

3d  best    "  " 

4th  best  "  •'  " 


Class   B.^  Horses  of  all  Work 

Committee. —  Oliver  Deane,  Canton;  Francis  B.  Ray,  Franklin 
Foxborougli. 


85  00 

3  00 

5  00 
3  00 
3  00 

2  00 

3  00 
2  00 

$10  00 
7  00 

$8  00 

6  00 

4  00 
2  00 


William  T.  Cook, 


1st  Division.  — Stcdlions. 

For  the  best  Stallion,  4  years  old  and  upwards,  a  premium  of  $10  00 

2d  best     "  ''  "  "  7  00 

2d  Division.  —  Brood  Mares. 

For  the  best  Brood  Mare,  with  a  Foal  at  her  side,  a  premium  of  $7  00 

2d  best  "    '  '^  "  "  5  00 


21 


3d  Division.  —  Colts  and  Fillies. 

For  the  best  4  years  old, 

a  premium  of   . 

.       85  00 

2d  best            " 

a 

3  00 

best  3  years  old, 

" 

5  00 

2d  best          " 

" 

3  00 

best  2  years  old, 

" 

3  00 

2d  best         " 

n                .            .           . 

2  00 

best  1  year  old, 

*' 

3  00 

2d  best         " 

" 

2  00 

4:th  Division.  —  Pairs 

in  Harness. 

For  the  best,  a  premium 

of 

.       $7  00 

2d  best;         " 

• 

5  00 

5th  Division.  —  Horses  in  Harness. 

For  the  best  Gelding  or 

Mare,  a  premium  of  . 

.       $6  00 

2d  best,   " 

"                 "             .         . 

4  00 

Class  C.  —  Family  Horses. 

Committee.  —  George  R.  Mann,  Sharon;  Erastus  Nash,  Weymouth;  Henry  Trow- 
bridge, Norfolk. 

1st  Division.  —  Stallions. 
For  the  best  Stallions  4  years  old  and  upwards,  a  premium  of  $10  00 
2d  best      "  "  "  "  7  00 

2d  Division.  —  Brood  Mares. 
For  the  best  Brood  Mare,  with  Foal  at  her  side,  a  premium  of  $7  00 
2d  best  "  "  "  "  5  00 

Sd  Division.  —  Colts  and  Fillies. 
For  the  best  4  years  old,  a  premium  of 
2d  best  "  " 

best  3  years  old,  " 

2d  best         "  " 

For  the  best  2  years  old,  " 

2d  best  "  " 

best  1  year  old,  " 

2d  best       "  " 

4th  Division.  —  Carriage  Horses  15  to 
For  the  best  pair  of  Carriage  Horses,  a  p 
2d  best  "  " 

6th  Division.  —  Bxigrjii  or  Chaise  Horses. 
For  the  best  Buggy  or  Chaise  Horse,  a  premium  of 


«              •              •              • 

$0  00 

.              •              . 

3  00 

.             •             • 

5  00 

•               •               • 

3  00 

•               •                • 

3  00 

•              . 

2  00 

•               •               • 

3  00 

,               , 

2  00 

16  hands  high. 

)remium  of . 

.       10  00 

a 

7  00 

$8  00 


22 


2d  best  Buggy  or  Chaise  Horse,  a  premium  of 

3d  best  "  "  "  " 

6th  Division.  —  Saddle  Horses. 
For  the  best  Saddle  Horse,  a  premium  of 

2d  best    "  "  "  .         . 

3d  best    "  "  "  .         . 

1th  Division.  —  Ponies. 
For  the  best  matched  Ponies,  a  premium  of    . 

2dbest     "  "  "  .         . 

best  single  Pony,  " 

2d  best "         "  "  .         . 


.   $6  00 

4  00 

.   $6  00 

4  00 

3  00 

.   §6  00 

4  00 

3  00 

2  00 

Class  D. — Draught  or  Team  Horses. 

Committee.— ETcrett  .J.  Eaton, Needhatn;  Allen  Colburn,Dedham;  Ephraini  M.inn, 
Randolph. 

Is^  Division. — Single  Draught  or  Team  Horses. 

For  the  best  Draught  Horse,  a  premium  of  .         .         $7  00 

2d  best  "  «  "  .         .  5  00 

2d  Division.  —  Pairs  of  Draught  or  Team  Horses. 

For  the  best  pair  of  Draught  or  Team  Horses  a  premium  of  $10  00 

2d  best  "  "  "  "  7  00 

CATTLE. 

Bulls. 

Committee.  —  Aeahel  S.  Drake,  Sharon ;  Nathaniel  S.  White,  Canton ;  James  M.  Cod- 
man,  Brookline;  Edward  M.  C'ary,  Milton;  James  T.  Sumner,  Canton. 

For  the  best,  thoroughbred  Bull,  one  j'ear  old  and  upwards,  of 
either  Jersej^  Durham,  Devon,  Ayrshire,  Hereford,  Kerry,  or 
other  foreign  stock  —  in  each  class,  $10  ;  second  best,  $5. 

For  the  best  Bull  Calf  undej*  one  year  old,  foreign  stock  —  $5  ; 
second  best,  $2. 

Cows. 

Committee.— Jeremiah  W.  Gay,  Dedham;  Aaron  Bacon,  Dover;  Ellis  Tucker,  Can- 
ton; Samuel  Cook,  Milton;  Jesse  Fenno,  Canton;  Charles  F.  Howard,  Foxboro'; 
Daniel  Spear,  Dorchester. 

For  the  best  Cow,  three  years  old  and  upwards,  of  foreign  stock, 
of  either  class,  each,  $10  ;  second  best,  $5  ;  third  best,  $4. 
Grade,  $10  ;  second  best,  $5  ;  third  best,  $4. 


23 

For  the  best  Milch  Heifer,  less  than  three  years  old,  $4  ;  second 
best,  $2. 

Herds  of  Milch  Cows.  —  For  the  best  herd  of  Milch  Cows  — 
not  less  than  six  —  kept  on  an}^  farm  in  the  County,  and  exhibited 
at  the  Show,  regard  being  had  to  the  breed,  age  and  milking  prop- 
erties —  first  premium  the  Wilder  Cup,  of  the  value  of  $25  ;  sec- 
ond premium,  $12  ;  third  premium,  $8  ;  fourth  premium,  $6  ; 

Note.  — No  Competitor  for  the  premiums  oflFered  for  herds  shall  be  al- 
lowed to  offer  the  same  animals  for  any  premium  of  a  different  class. 

Heifers. 

Committee.  —  Edward  P.  Burgess,  Dedham;  Lemuel  Billiugs,  Quincy;  Solomon 
Flagg,  Needhara. 

For  the  best  Heifer,  two  years  old  and  under  three,  foreign 
stock,  of  either  class,  each,  $5  ;  second  best,  $4  ;  third,  $2. 

Grade  or  Native,  $5  ;  second  best,  $4  ;  third  best,  82. 

For  the  best  Heifer,  one  year  old,  of  any  stock,  $4  ;  second  best, 
$2. 

For  the  best  Heifer  Calf,  under  one  year  old,  of  any  stock,  $4  ; 
second  best,  $2. 

Working  Oxen,  Town  Teams  and  Steers. 

Committee.  — Robert  Mansfield,  Needham;  Henry  M.  Mack,  Dorchester;  Charles 
Hartshorn,  Walpole. 

For  the  best  3-oke,  four  years  old  and  upwards,  $10  ;  second 
best,  $7  ;   third  best,  $4. 

For  the  largest  and  best  team,  of  not  less  than  ten  yokes  of  Oxen 
or  Steers,  from  any  city  or  town  in  the  County  —  first  premium, 
$12  ;    second  best,  $8. 

For  the  best  yoke  of  Steers,  well  broken,  three  years  old  and 
under  four,  $6  ;  second  best,  $4  ;  third  best,  ii53. 

For  the  best  yoke  of  Steers,  well  broken,  two  years  old  and 
under  three  $4  ;    second  best,  $3. 

Note.  — For  Oxen  or  Steers,  and  also  for  Herds  of  Milch  Cows,  bred 
and  raised  by  the  exiiibitor,  twenty  per  cent  additional.  In  testing  the 
stren<;tli,  docility,  and  training;:  of  Worliing  O.xen,  the  load  siiall  not  be 
less  than  2500  pounds  for  oxen  of  Ave  years  old  and  upwards;  and  not 
less  than  2000  pounds  for  oxen  under  five  years  old.  In  testing  the  char- 
acter of  Steers,  as  the  Committee  may  direct,  special  regard  will  be  paid 
to  their  docility  and  proper  training. 


24 

Fat  Cattle. 

Committee. —  A.  W.  Cheevcr,  Wrentham;  John  Sias,  Milton;  Charles  Mackintosh. 
Needham. 

For  the  best  beef  animal  fattened  by  the  exhibitor,  within  the 
County,  regard  being  had  to  the  manner  and  expense  of  feed- 
ing—  of  which  a  written  statement  will  be  required  —  first  pre- 
mium, $8  ;  second  do.,  $6. 

SWINE. 

Committee.  — Thomas  B.  Griggs,  Brookline;  Heury  Goulding,  Dover;  J.  B.  Tilley, 
Brookhne;  \V.  L.  Faxon,  Quincy. 

For  the  largest  and  best  collection  of  Swine  —  not  less  than  six 
hogs  in  number  —  first  premium,  §15  ;  second  do.,  $10  ;  third  do., 
$7. 

BoAus.  —  For  the  best  Boar,  not  less  than  six  months  old,  $G  ; 
second  l)est,  $4. 

Sows.  —  For  the  best  Sow,  not  less  than  six  months  old,  $6  ; 
second  best,  $4:. 

Weaned  Pigs.  —  For  the  best  litter,  not  less  than  four  in  num- 
ber and  not  more  than  six  months  old,  $6  ;  second  best,  $4. 

Fat  Hogs.  —  For  the  best  Fat  Hog,  regard  being  had  to  breed, 
age  and  feeding,  SlO  ;  second  best,  $G. 

Note.  —  No  competitor  for  tlie  largest  collection  of  swiu'i  will  be  al- 
lowed lo  oiler  the  same  for  any  premium  of  a  ditlerent  chisis. 

SHEEP. 

Committee,  — Charles  Breck,  Miltou;  John  S.  Mackintosh.  West  Roxbury;  Theo- 
dore Harding,  Medway. 

For  the  largest  and  best  lot  of  Sheep  —  not  less  than  six  in 
number  —  §10  ;  second  best,  $8. 

For  the  best  lot  of  Lambs  —  not  less  than  six  in  number  —  bred 
b}'  the  exhibitor,  $8  ;  second  best,  $5. 

For  the  best  Ram  —  Cotsvvold,  Leicester,  Oxford  Down,  or 
Southdown  —  not  less  than  one  year  old,  $o  ;  second  best,  $3. 

POULTRY. 

Committee.  —  Abel  F.  Stevens,  Needham  ;  Albert  H.  Drake,  Stoughton ;  J.  F.  Cow. 
ell,  Wrentham. 

For  the  best  trio  of  any  variety,  of  either  old  fowls  or  chickens, 
first  premium,  $3  ;  second  do.,  $2  ;  third  do.,  Si. 


For  the  best  pair  of  Turke3's,  first  premium,  $3  ;  second  do.,  $2. 

For  the  best  pair  of  Geese,  first  premium,  $3  ;    second   do.,  $2. 

For  the  best  pair  of  Ducks,  first  premium,  $3  ;    second   do.,  $2. 

For  the  best  collection  of  Pigeons,  first  premium,  83  ;  second 
do.,  $2. 

Ten  dollars  in  gratuities  may  be  awarded,  at  the  discretion  of 
the  Committee. 

NoTK. — Poultry  must  be  entered  on  the  tirst  day  of  the  Exhibition,  be- 
fore 12  o'clock,  to  be  entitled  to  a  premium. 


D AIR  Y. 

Committee.  —  Milton  M.  Fisher,  Medway ;  Henry  Grew,  Hyde  Park ;  Lucius  Clapp, 
Stougliton;  Mrs.  George  Vose,  Milton;  Mrs.  William  R.  Mann,  Sliaroa;  Charles  H. 
Munstleld,  Nuedham. 

Butter.  —  For  the  best  produce  of  Butter,  on  any  farm  within 
the  County,  for  four  months,  from  the  20th  of  May  to  the  20Lh  of 
September  —  a  sample  of  not  less  than  ten  pounds  to  be  exhibited 
—  quantity  as  well  as  quality  to  be  taken  into  vievv,  —  first  pre- 
mium, $10  ;  second  do.,  $8  ;  third  do.,  $5  ;  fourth  do.,  $4. 

Note. — It  will  be  seen  that  these  premiums  are  offered  for  the  best  pro- 
duce on  the  Farms,  a  full  statement  of  which  will  be  required,  and  not 
simply  for  the  best  specimens  exhibited.  Each  lot  must  be  numbered, 
but  not  marked  ;  any  public  or  known  mark  must  be  completely  concealed, 
nor  must  the  competitors  be  present  at  the  examination. 

For  the  best  box  of  Butter  —  not  less  than  six  pounds  —  first 
premium,  $5  ;  second  do.,  $3  ;  third  do.,  $2. 

Note.  —  Butter  must  be  presented  only  on  the  morning  of  the  sec- 
ond day  before  9  o'clock. 

Cheesk.  —  For  the  best  lot  of  Cheese  —  not  less  than  twenty- 
five  pounds  —  first  premium,  $5;  second  do.,  $3  ;  third  do.,  $2. 

BREAD. 

Committee.  —  J.  White  Belcher.  Randolph;  Albert  B.  Balch,  Meddeld;  Elijah 
Tucker.  Milton;  Mrs.  A  S.  Drake,  Sharon;  Mrs.  B.  F.  Radford,  Hyde  Park. 

F'or  the  best  loaf  of  Wheat  and  Indian,  of  not  less  than  two 
pounds  weiglit —  first  premium  $3  ;  second  do.,  $2. 


26 

For  the  best  loaf  made  of  Unbolted  Wheat,  which  has  been 
grown  in  the  County,  of  not  less  than  two  pounds  weight  —  first 
premium,  $3  ;  second  do.,  $2. 

For  the  best  loaf  of  Rye  and  Indian,  of  not  less  than  four  pounds 
weight —  first  premium,  $3  ;  second  do.,  $2. 

For  the  best  loaf  of  Wheat  Bread,  of  not  less  than  two  pounds 
weight —  first  premium,  S3  ;  second  do.,  $2. 

For  the  best  specimens  of  each  or  any  of  the  aforementioned 
kinds  of  bread,  made  by  any  young  woman  under  eigliteen  years 
of  age,  an  additional  premium  of  twenty-five  per  cent. 

The  bread  presented  for  premium  must  be  made  on  the  first  day 
of  the  Exhibition,  by  some  member  of  a  family,  in  whose  name  the 
entry  shall  be  made,  and  to  whom  the  premium  shall  be  awarded. 
The  bread  shall  be  made  without  the  use  of  saleratus  or  other  al- 
kaline substance,  and  made  in  the  familj',  and  be  presented  only 
on  the  second  day  of  the  Exhibition,  before  9  o'clock  in  the  morn- 
ing. No  name  or  mark  shall  be  put  on  the  loaves,  except  the 
number  of  the  entry  on  the  Committee's  Book. 

The  names  of  contributors  shall  not  be  known  to  the  Committee, 
and  no  person  shall  serve  on  the  same  if  any  member  of  his  family 
shall  be  a  competitor. 

HONEY. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Honey  in  the  Comb,  not  less  than  six 
pounds,  $2  ;  second  best,  $1. 


MANUFACTURES. 

AGRICULTURAL  IMPLEMENTS. 

Committee.  —  William  Amesi,  2a,  Dedham;  Henry  Gouldiug,  Dover;  Horace  Guild 
Cautou. 

For  the  largest  collection,  $12  ;  second,  $6. 

For  any  new  or  improved  Flow,  which  on  trial  shall  be  found 
best  adapted  for  the  thorough  pulverization  of  old  plowed  land,  a 
premium  of  $6. 


27 

New  Inventions.  —  For  any  new  invention  of  decided  superiority 
and  usefulness  to  the  farmer,  a  premium  or  gratuity,  at  the  discre- 
tion of  the  Committee. 

DOMESTIC  MANUFACTURES. 

Fancy   Articles. 

Committee.  —  Mrs.  John  Vose,  Hyde  Park;  Mrs.  W.  T.  Thacher,  Hyde  Park;  Mrs. 
Jesse  Vose,  Milton. 

Including  Needlework,  Crochetwork,  Shellwork,  Millinery, 
Drawings,  Painting,  &c. 

For  such  articles  in  this  department  as  maj''  be  deemed  worthy,  a 
sum  not  exceeding  seventy-five  dollars  shall  be  appropriated,  to  be 
paid  in  premiums  or  gratuities,  proportioned  to  the  cost  and  value 
of  the  article,  ai  the  discretion  of  the  Committee. 

Note.  —  It  should  be  understood  that  in  this  department  of  Ladies 
work  —  while  other  things  will  receive  due  consideration  —  the  premiums 
are  intended  solely  for  newly'  made  articles  which  are  really  useful  or 
particularly  beautiful.  For  well  made  garments  of  any  kind;  for  stock- 
ing knitting  of  wool,  cotton  or  silk  ;  for  bonnet  and  cap  making;  for  all 
articles  for  children's  wear,  well  made  or  tastefully  embroidered;  for  neat 
and  thorough  mending,  patching  and  darning;  for  drawing,  designing,  or 
painting  in  oil  or  water  colors;  for  models  in  plaster,  wood  or  marble, 
&c. 

Any  article  well  and  tastefully  wrought,  offered  by  children  under 
twelve  years  of  age,  will  receive  particular  attention. 

Manufactures  of  Straw. 

Committee.  —  A.  S.  Harding.  Medway;  J.  A.  Turner,  Medfield;  Charles  C.  Sumner 
Foxboro'. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Straw  Bonnets,  wholly  of  domestic 
manufacture,  $8  ;   second  best,  $5. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Straw  Braid  of  domestic  straw,  not 
less  than  100  yards,  $o  ;  second  best,  $3. 

Manufactures  of  Clotii,  Flannels,  Hosiery,  «&c. 

Committee,— Charles  H.  French,  Canton;  Naaman  B.  Wilmarth,  Walpole;  Luther 
Metcali",  Medway;  Ezra  W.  Talt,  Dedhani. 

Cotton  Cloth.  — For  the  best  specimen  of  Cotton  Cloth,  of  any 
description,  not  less  than  twenty-eight  yards  in  quantity,  a  pre- 
mium or  gratuity,  at  the  discretion  of  the  Committee. 


28 

Woolen  Cloth.— Tor  the  best  specimen  of  Woolen  Cloth,  of  any 
description,  not  less  than  twenty  yards  in  quantity,  a  premium  or 
gratuity,  at  the  discretion  of  the  Committee. 

Cotton  and  Woolen  Mixed.—  For  the  best  specimen  of  Cotton 
and  Woolen  Cloth,  of  any  description,  not  less  than  twenty  yards 
in  quantity,  a  premium  or  gratuity,  at  the  discretion  of  the  Com- 
mittee. 

Flannels.  —  For  the  best  specimen  of  Flannel,  not  less  than 
twenty  yards  in  quantity,  a  premium  or  gratuity,  at  the  discretion 
of  the  Committee. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Cotton  Flannel,  not  less  than  twenty 
yards  in  quantitj^,  a  premium  or  gratuity,  at  the  discretion  of  the 
Committee. 

For  the  best  pair  of  Woolen  Blankets,  a  premium  or  gratuity, 
at  the  discretion  of  the  Committee. 

Hosiery,  &c.  —  For  the  best  specimen  of  Woolen  Hose,  a  premi- 
um of  $1. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Woolen  Half  Hose,  a  premium  of  50 
cents. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Cotton  Hose,  a  premium  of  oO  cents. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Cotton  Half  Hose,  a  premium  of  25 
cents. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Worsted  Hose,  a  premium  of  $1. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Worsted  Half  Hose,  a  premium  of  50 
cents. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Sewing  Silk,  not  less  than  one  pound, 
a  premium  of  $2. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Knitting  Yarn,  not  less  than  one 
pound,  a  premium  of  $1. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Spool  Thread,  not  less  than  one  pound, 
a  premium  of  $1. 

For  the  best  Fleece  of  Wool,  a  premium  of  $1. 

For  the  best  dozen  seamless  Grain  Bags,  a  premium  of  $1. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  neat  and  thorough  mending,  patching 
or  darning  of  garments,  hose,  &c.,  a  premium  of  $1. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  covered  bonnet  wire,  $3. 

Counterpanes.  —  For  the  best  Counterpane  — regard  being  had 
to  the  quality  and  expense  of  materials — first  premium,  $3  ;  sec- 
ond do.,  $2. 


29 

Carpetings,  Rugs  and'  Floor  Cloth. 

For  the  best  "Common"  Ingrain  2-ply  Carpeting. 

tt        u         "Fine"  "  "  " 

"         "         "Superfine"     "  "  " 

"         "         "Common,"   "Fine"  or  "Superfine"  Ingrain  3-ply 

Carpeting. 
For  the  best  Brussels  Floor  Carpeting. 

"         "        Tapestry     "  " 

«         "        Velvet  Carpeting. 
For  each  of  these  descriptions  of  Carpeting,  a  premium  or  the 
Society's  diploma,  at  the  discretion  of  the  Committee. 

Note. —Ingrain  3-ply  carpeting  will  be  judged  by  the  comparative 
merits  of  pieces  of  similar  weight;  or  disregarding  .weight,  by  the  quality 
of  color,  the  taste  of  shading,  and  evenness  in  spinning  and  weaving. 

For  the  best  piece  of  Stair  Carpeting,  the  Society's  diploma. 
For  the  best  Hearth  Rug,  the  Society's  diploma. 
For  the  best  specimen  of  painted  Floor  Cloth,  a  premium  or  the 
Society's  diploma,  at  the  discretion  of  the  Committee* 

Note.  —  Articles  in  either  of  the  foregoing  departments,  which 
shall  have  been  manufactured  in  the  family  of  the  person  presenting  it, 
will  receive  the  particular  consideration  of  the  Committee,  and,  if  worthy, 
a  suitable  premium. 

Glass,  Stone,  Earthen,  Wooden  and  Iron  Ware. 

Committee.  —  Frank  M.  Ames,  Canton ;  Alexander  Dickson,  West  Roxbury ;  Manly 
W.  Cain,  Dorchester. 

Glass,  Stone,  Earthen,  and  Wooden  Ware.  —  For  the  finest 
collection  and  best  specimen  of  articles  in  each  of  these  depart- 
ments, a  premium  or  gratuity,  at  the  discretion  of  the  Committee. 

Brass,  Copper,  Tin,  Iron  and  Brittannia  Ware.  —  For  the 
finest  collection  and  best  specimen  of  articles  in  each  of  these  de- 
pai'tments,  a  premium  or  gratuity,  at  the  discretion  of  the  Com- 
mittee. 

Cabinet  Work.  —  For  the  best  specimen  of  Cabinet  Work,  a 
premium  or  the  Society's  diploma. 

Iron  Fencing,  Gates  and  Posts.  —  For  the  best  specimen  of 
each  —  regard  being  had  to  cost  and  utility,  as  well  as  ornament 
—  a  premium  or  gratuity,  at  the  discretion  of  the  Committee. 


30 

Stoves.  —  For  the  best  Farmer's  Cauldron  Stove  ; 

"  "  "       Cooking        " 

"  "  "       Parlor  " 

—  a  premium  of  $2  each. 

Horse  and  Ox  Shoes.  —  For  the  best  set  of  Horse  and  Ox 
Shoes,  a  premium  of  $1. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Horse  Shoes,  for  meadow  lands,  a  pre- 
mium of  $1. 

Leather,  and  Articles  Manufactured  Therefrom,  India  Rub- 
ber Goods,  &c. 

Committee — John  B.Arnold,  Braintree;  Thomas  Ferguson,  Necdham;  P.  H.  Ba- 
ker, Sharon. 

India  Rubber  Goods.  —  For  the  finest  collection  of  India  Rub- 
ber goods,  a  premium  or  gratuity,  at  the  discretion  of  the  Com- 
mittee. 

Brushes,  Combs,  Hats,  Caps  and  Gloves. —  For  the  finest 
collection  and  best  specimen  of  each  of  these  articles,  a  premium 
or  gratuity,  at  the  discretion  of  the  Committee. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Thick  Boots,  a  premium  of 
"         "  "  Calfskin,  " 

"         "  "  Thin  Boots,  other 

than  Calfskin,    " 
"         "  "  Kipskin  Boots,       " 

"         "  "  Thick  Brogans,      " 

"         "  "  Fine  Brogans,        " 

"         "  "  Ladies'  Boots,        " 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Upper  or  Sole  Leather,  or  Morocco,  a 
premium  or  gratuity,  each,  at  the  discretion  of  the  Committee. 
For  the  best  single  Carriage  Harness  ; 
"  "      double       "  " 

"  "      Cart  Harness  —  a  premium  or  gratuity,  each,  at  the 

discretion  of  the  Committee. 

For  the  best  Riding  Bridle,  a  premium  of      .         .         .     $1  00 
"         "  "       Saddle,  "  ...       2  00 

"         "  "       Carriage  or  Cart  Whip,  a  premium  of    1  00 


of     . 

$2  00 

•     • 

3  00 

.    . 

2  00 

. 

2  00 

. 

1  00 

. 

1  00 

,          , 

1  00 

31 

Carriages,  Wagons,  Carts,  &c. 

Committee.— George  K.  Gannett,  Milton  ;  Sanford  Carroll,  Dedhani;  William  Ames, 
Dedham. 

For  the  best  specimen  of  Family  Carriages,  for  one  horse  or 
two  horses. 

For  the  best  Covered  Wagon  ; 
"         "         Open  " 

"         "         Farm  " 

"         "  "     Cart; 

"         "  "     Wheelbarrow  —  either  a  premium   or   sjratu- 

ity,  at  the  discretion  of  the  Committee. 

Jellies  Preserves,  Pickles,  Ketchup,  &c. 

Committee.— Mrs.  George  Vose,  Milton;  Mrs.  Elizabeth  F.  Wilmarth,  Walpole; 
Mrs.  James  Mackintosh,  Neertham ;  Mrs.  Masenua  Souihworth,  Stoughtou. 

For  the  finest  collection  and  best  specimen  of  each,  made  of  arti- 
cles of  domestic  growth,  first  premium,  $5  ;    second,  $3  ;  third,  $2. 

Canned  Fruits  and  Vegetables.  —  For  the  finest  collection 
and  best  specimens  of  each,  made  of  articles  of  domestic  growth, 
first  premium,  $5  ;  second,  $3  ;  third,  $2. 

Note. — It  is  to  be  understood  that  all  articles  presented  for  premium, 
in  each  of  the  foregoing  departments,  except  Agricultural  Implements, 
shall  have  been  manufactured  or  produced  within  the  County,  and  by  the 
person  presenting  them.  Also,  that  in  every  case,  the  Examining  Com- 
mittee shall  have  the  right  to  substitute  the  Society's  diploma  for  a  pre- 
mium or  gratuity,  or  to  give  it  where  no  premium  or  gratuity  has  been 
offered,  at  their  discretiou. 

All  discretionary  premiums  or  gratuities  shall  be  proportioned  to  the 
actual  value  and  utility  of  the  articles. 

Articles  in  either  of  the  above  departments,  contributed  to  the  Exhibi- 
tion by  persons  not  resident  in  the  County,  shall  receive  suitable  attention 
from  the  Committee,  and,  if  worthy,  be  awarded  the  Society's  diploma. 

CABINETS  OF  BIRDS  AND  INSECTS. 

Committee.— A.  W.  Cheever,  Wrentham;  Edward  Howe,  West  Roxbury;  A.  F. 
Stevens,  Needham. 

For  the  largest  and  best  collection  of  insects  found  within  the 
County,  beneficial  or  injurious  to  vegetation,  properly  arranged 
and  classified,  to  be  exhibited  on  the  Society's  tables  at  the  An- 
nual E^xhibition,  first  premium,  $.3  ;  second  best,  $3  ;  third  l^est,  $1. 


32 

For  the  largest  and  best  collection  of  Birds  found  within  the 
County,  beneficial  or  injurious  to  vegetation,  properly  arranged 
and  classified,  to  be  exhibited  on  the  Society's  tables  at  the  An- 
nual Exhibition,  first  premium,  $5  ;  second  best,  $3  ;  third  best,  $1. 

AGRICULTURAL   LABORERS. 

For  a  certificate  —  signed  by  his  employer,  and  countersigned 
by  any  two.  of  the  Trustees  residing  nearest  to  the  applicant  —  of 
the  superior  qualifications  of  any  man  or  youth,  in  the  employment 
of  any  member  of  the  Society  for  a  period  next  preceding,  of  not 
less  than  two  years,  attesting  the  industry,  integrity,  respectful 
demeanor  and  general  good  habits,  during  the  time,  of  the  bearer 
of  such  certificate,  a  premium  of  membership  of  the  Society  and  a 
diploma. 

AGRICULTURAL  ESSAYS. 

Committee.— Henry  S,  Russell,  Milton;  Marshall  P.  Wilder, Dorchester;  Charles  C. 
Sevvall,  Medfleld;  Henry  O.  Hildreth,  Dedham;  Albert  K.  Teele,  Milton;  Theodore 
Lyman,  Brookline. 

For  the  best  Report  of  Committees  which  recommend  the  award 
of  premiums.     First  premium,  $8  ;  second,  $6  ;  third.  $4. 

For  the  best  Essay  on  the  relative  importance  and  value,  as 
sources  of  profit,  of  the  various  grasses,  or  cereal,  fruit  or  vegeta- 
ble crops,  a  premium  not  exceeding  $25. 

For  the  best  Essay  on  the  relative  importance  and  value,  as 
source3  of  profit,  of  the  breeding  and  raising  of  the  diflferent  classes 
of  farm  stock,  a  premium  not  exceeding  $25. 

For  the  best  Essay  on  the  fattening  of  cattle,  swine  or  sheep, 
detailing  the  process  and  expense  of  the  same,  a  premium  not  ex- 
ceeding $25. 

Forest  Trees. —  For  the  best  Essay  on  the  raising  and  cultiva- 
tion of  Forest  Trees,  a  premium  not  exceeding  $25. 

Insects.  —  For  the  best  Essay  on  the  destruction  of  Injects  inju- 
rious to  vegetation,  such  as  CurcuUo,  Borer,  Canker-  Worm,  Cater- 
pillar, Cut- Worm,  Squash-Bag,  Striped-Bug,  Rose-Bug,  etc.,  etc.,  a 
premium  not  exceeding  $25. 

Preservation  of  Winter  Fruit. —  For  the  best  Essay  on  the 
preservation  of  Apples  and  other  Winter  Fruits,  a  premium  not 
exceeding  $25. 


33 

Preservation  of  Vegetables. —  For  the  l)est  Essay  on  the 
preservation  of  Vegetables,  a  premium  not  exceeding  $25. 

Agricultural  Education. —  For  the  best  Essay  on  Agriciiltnral 
Education,  a  premium  not  exceeding  $25. 

Farm  Accounts. —  For  the  best  Essay  on  a  system  of  Farm 
Accounts,  a  premium  not  exceeding  $25. 

For  the  best  Essay  on  Domestic  Poultry,  a  premium  not  exceed- 
ing $25. 

For  the  best  Essay  on  Fences  for  Farms,  uniting  economy, 
strength  and  appearance,  a  premium  not  exceeding  $25. 

For  the  best  Essay  on  the  Extermination  of  Weeds  and  Plants, 
destructive  to  crops,  a  premium  not  exceeding  $25. 

For  the  best  Essay  on  the  Preservation  and  Application  of  Liq- 
uid Manure,  a  premium  not  exceeding  $25. 

For  the  best  Essay  on  the  introduction  of  new  Fruits,  or  of  new- 
articles  of  Field  Culture,  a  premium  not  exceeding  $25. 

For  the  best  Essay  on  the  value  and  application  of  Phosphate 
of  Lime,  or  any  fertilizer  of  the  soil,  a  premium  not  exceeding  $25. 

For  the  best  Essay  on  Bees  and  Structure  of  Hives,  with  par- 
ticular reference  to  feeding  Bees  and  guarding  against  the  spolia- 
tion of  the  Bee  Moth,  a  premium  not  exceeding  $2i>. 

For  the  best  plan  for  a  Barn  and  Barnyard,  with  regard  to  the 
keeping  of  the  Hay,  the  comfort  of  the  (Jattle,  the  ease  and  com- 
venience  of  tending  them,  and  the  making  and  preserving  the 
Manure,  a  premium  not  exceeding  $25. 

These  premiums  will  not  be  awarded  unless  the  Essays  offered 
shall,  in  the  judgment  of  the  Committee  appointed  to  decide  upon 
them,  be  deemed  worthy  of  an  award,  without  reference  to  their 
comparative  merit. 

FARM     BUILDINGS. 

For  the  best  planned  house  and  out-buildings  —  regard  being- 
had  to  the  cost  and  economy  of  labor  —  the  house  to  be  warm,  well 
lighted  and  ventilated,  with  a  cellar  protected  from  frost  and  ver- 
min, and  the  whole  not  to  cost  over  $25(^0  —  to  be  examined  b}-  the 
Supervisory  Committee  —  a  premium  to  be  adjudged  by  said  Com- 
mittee. 


TRANSACTIONS 


Norfolk  Agricultural  Society 


1875, 


PtTBr^isHRr)  Hv  u^iih:  socikty. 


Printed  at  the  Korfolk  County  Gazette  Office. 


CONTENTS. 


PAGE. 

Address,  by  Col.  Theodore  Lyman 5 

Report  of  the  Presideut  aud  Secretary 19 

on  Horses 20 

on  Plowing 22 

on  Working  Oxen 23 

on  Bulls 23 

on  Cows 23 

on  Heifers 24 

on  Swiue 24 

on  Poultry 25 

on  Vegetables 26 

on  Fruits , 27 

on  Flowers 3q 

on  Bread 31 

on  Dairy 31 

on  Straw  Goods 32 

on  Seeds 32 

on  Birds  and  Insects 33 

on  Manufactures 33 

on  Ladies'  Work 35 

Recapitulation  of  Pi-emiums 38 

Report  of  Treasurer 41 

Proceedings  of  the  Twenty-seventh  Anniversary 42 

Officers  of  the  Society 45 


ADDRESS. 

BY  COL.  THEODORE  LYMAN,  OF  BROOKLINE. 


Although  the  schools  of  political  economy  quarrel  about 
almost  everything,  there  is  one  point  of  agreement  among 
them,  to  wit :  that  crops  make  an  addition  to  the  wealth  of  a 
country. 

Let  those  of  us  who  think  they  are  annually  losing  money 
on  their  land  take  courage  from  this  principle,  and  reflect 
that  they  are  laboring  under  the  approving  eye  of  the  politi- 
cal economists.  In  the  very  nature  of  things  it  seems  as  if 
digging  the  earth  ought  to  bring  something  good  to  pass. 
The  Greeks,  who  seldom  went  wrong  in  a  name,  called  earth 
Mother  ;  the  mother  from  whom  all  come  and  to  whom  all 
return  ;  the  mother  who  teaches  her  children  this  lesson, 
that  food  follows  work,  and  without  work  there  is  no  food  ; 
the  mother  who  tames  her  wild  offspring  by  long  and  steady 
discipline  of  toil.  For  man  is  by  nature  a  destroyer  and  a 
waster.  The  savage  kills  fish  and  game,  and  snatches  wild 
berries  and  roots,  thoughtless  of  their  decrease.  In  the  an- 
cient shell-heaps  of  Denmark,  or  in  the  river  gravels  of  France, 
we  find  the  mute  record  of  such  savages  who  once  peopled 
the  larger  part  of  Central  Europe.  It  is  a  dreary  record  — 
everything  for  waste  and  nothing  for  renewal.  The  flint 
hatchets,  knives  and  arrow-heads,  the  piles  of  shells,  the  bones 
of  deer  and  of  wild  oxen,  split  to  get  out  the  marrow  —  all 
denote  a  race  that  took  what  they  could  from  nature,  and  return- 


cd  her  nothing.      They  had  no  ear  for  the  lessons  of  Mother 
Earth.     There  are  some   children    now-a-days  who  will  not 
mind  their  mothers,  and  who  get  sent  to  the  State   Reform 
School.      The  reform  of  those  old  oyster-eaters   and    bone- 
splitters  was  very  gradual.      Aachaeologists  tell  us  that    they 
first  became  pastoral  in  their  habits,   and    took   to    keeping 
horses.     Now  I  am    not  going  to  assert,   in  the  presence  of 
our  honored  president,  that    horse-raising  is  a  semi-barbaric 
practice ;  but  the  archaeological  succession   does  go  to  prove 
that  wheat-growing  is  a  step  beyond   it.      Nor  do  I  maintain 
that  the  men  of  the  ancient  stone  period  raised  horses  artisti- 
cally, as  they  are  to-day  raised  at  the  Home  Farm.  On  the  con- 
trary, the  numerous  skeletons  found  on  the  sites  of  those  long- 
forgotten  villages,  show  us  that  the  pre-historic  horse  had  too 
big  a  head.     I  might  say  he  was  all  head  ;    and,  as  a  Hunga- 
rian officer  once  remarked  :   "A  horse  does  not  trot  with  his 
head."     In  our  day  we  have  improved.     We  try  to  have  the 
driver  all  head  and  the  horse  all  legs.     Again,  our   horse- 
breeders  are  advanced  in  respect   that  they  use  trotting   wa- 
gons ;  albeit  we  must  not  boast   of  them   too  much  ;  for,    in 
the  museum  at  Florence,  you  may  see  a  trotting  sulky  that 
was  found  in  a  pyramid  of  Egypt.    You  are  told  it  is  a  Scy- 
thian war  chariot  —  Scythian  it  may  be,  but  a  clearer  trotting 
sulky  I  never  met.     Not  certainly  a  sulky  of  our  manufacture. 
It  is  made,  axles  and  all,  of  wood  and  leather.     Shall  we  laugh 
at  it  for  that  ?      Remember  it  is  3000  or  4000  years  old,  and 
still  is  in  running  order.     What   kind  of  order  do  you   think 
one  of  Brewster's  best  500  lb.  wagons  will  be  in  when  it  is 
3000  or  4000  years  old  ?      Not  even  the  "  deacon's  one-hoss 
shay "  lasted   3000  or  4000  years.      All  honor  then  to  that 
Scythian  sulky  and   to  its   unknown  maker,  who,   were    he 
now  alive,  would  have  a  rare  reputation  for  durable  v>^ork  ! 


Those  big-headed  horses  lived  before  men  had  invented 
vehicles,  nevertheless  they  were  useful  animals  ;  their  mas- 
ters ate  them,  and  doubtless  killed  for  their  friends  the  fatted 
colt.  If  we  no  longer  eat  horseflesh  it  is  because  we  are 
such  good  Christians.  Like  the  unknown  savages  of  the 
stone  age,  our  pagan  Scandinavian  ancestors,  eight  hundred 
years  ago,  thought  it  the  best  of  meat,  and  served  it  at  the 
feasts  of  Odin.  Hence  it  became  an  abomination  to  the  early 
christian  converts,  who  transmitted  to  us  their  religious  pre- 
judices ;  and  only  of  late  years,  and  in  certain  parts  of  Eu- 
rope, has  it  been  added  to  the  list  of  foods. 

The  lesson  goes  slowly  on.  One  after  another,  animals  are 
domesticated,  and,  at  last,  comes  the  discovery  of  agriculture 
proper — the  idea  that  a  seed  well  planted  and  tended  will 
yield  many  fold,  whereof  a  part  may  be  kept  for  next  season 
and  the  rest  may  be  eaten.  The  ruins  of  so-called  lake  dwell- 
ings, covered  for  long  ages  with  water,  have  revealed  the  be- 
ginning of  such  culture  in  Europe.  Among  the  charred  piles 
which  once  supported  wooden  cabins  built  in  a  lake,  have 
been  found  bones  of  oxen,  dogs  and  goats  ;  and,  beside  them, 
heaps  of  wheat  and  barley.  No  writing,  monument  or  tradi- 
tion remains  to  tell  us  who  were  these  primitive  tillers  of  the 
soil  who  thus  sought  safety  from  enemies  amid  the  waters. 
By  their  implements,  fished  up  in  quantities  from  the  bottom, 
we  know  that  some  of  them  still  maintained  the  good  old  fash- 
ion of  stone  tools  ;  while  others  more  ambitious  were  able  to 
cast  instruments  of  bronze  ;  another  lesson  from  Mother 
Earth  who  yielded  her  copper  and  tin  for  the  melting-pot. 

They  were  barbarians  with  the  manners  of  barbarians  ; 
and  it  is  safe  to  infer  that  women  did  all  the  field  work,  and 
held  undisputed  possession  of  what  the  French  call  "the  sa- 
cred right  to  labor."     The  man  goes  into  the  Swiss  forest,  in- 


tent,  with  flint-headed  arrow,  to  slay  a  red   deer  ;  the  woman 
must  till  the  field  and  be  back  in  good  season  with  a  bundle 
of  firewood  to  boil  the  venison  which  her  lord  may  eat  while 
she  dresses  the  hide  with  a  stone  scraper.    To  her    the  duty 
of  gathering,  quartering  and  drying  the  wild  apples  for  winter 
use  ;   their  fragments  have  been  found — prototypes  of  apple 
sauce !    She  must  bring  in  the  grain  from  the  small  clearings 
and  store  it  safely  in  the  lake  dwelling,  under  the  eye  of  its 
master,  who  sits   lazily  chipping  a  pebble,    whereof  he    will 
fashion,  by  some  weeks  of  labor,  a  spear-head.     That  woman 
wrought  better  than  she  knew  !    While  perchance  her  thoughts 
were  only  on  her  barbarian  finery  —  her  bronze  bracelets  and 
hair-pins —  she  was  founding  an  ever-glorious  reputation  as  the 
discoverer  of  agriculture.     It  passes  my  comprehension  that 
writers  on  woman's   rights  and  woman's  superiority  have  not 
earlier  hit  on  this  capital  fact  —  woman  was  the  discoverer  of 
agriculture.      The  classic  nations  recognized  it.     Ceres  of  the 
Romans,  Mysia  of  the  Greeks,  was  not  a  god,  but  a  goddess, 
who  taught  the  uses  of  corn.     On   the  eve  of  her  festival  the 
women  drove    out   of  the   temple   men   and   dogs,  shut   the 
doors,   and    had  a  good   time    by    themselves.     Alas,  genius 
lives  on  unconscious  of  itself!     Woman  planted  and  garnered 
all  through  the  last  of  the  stone  period  and  beginning  of  that 
of  bronze,  unconscious  that  her  praises  would  be  sung,  ages, 
afterwards,    by    the    Norfolk    County    Agricultural    Society. 
When  she  quartered  and  dried  those  sour  wild  apples,  did  she 
dream  of  pomological  clubs  .''    Did  she  suppose  it  would  ever 
be  possible  to   propagate   three  hundred  varieties  of  pears  .'* 
There  is  encouragement  to  be  drawn   from  such  late  recogni- 
tion   of  genius.       Perhaps    we  —  without    knowing  it  —  are 
doing  something  very  remarkable  which   will  only  be  found 
out  several  thousand  years  hence.     How  delightful  to  feel  that 
several  thousand  years  hence  we  shall  be  fully  appreciated  ! 


9 

And  thus  mankind  had  fairly  learned  something  from  the 
earth  :  how  to  put  in  the  seed,  and  to  gather  the  increase  ; 
how  to  seek  the  hidden  metals,  copper,  tin,  and  afterwards 
iron.  But,  like  the  country  lad  who  thinks  he  can  learn 
enough  in  two  quarters'  schooling,  mankind  thought  that 
wheat  and  game  and  wild  fruits  were  enough  to  find  out,  and 
sat  down  for  an  indefinite  rest.  Thus,  at  least,  did  our  an- 
cestors, and  why  should  we  trouble  ourselves  about  those  of 
other  people  ?  We  might  as  well  confess  now  as  later  that 
our  ancestors,  the  Jutes,  or  Saxons,  or  Germanni,  or  what 
not,  were  the  slow  boys,  the  dunces  of  the  family.  For  years 
and  years  they  fought  and  idled  until  good  Mother  Earth 
thought  they  never  would  learn  anything.  Down  to  the  time 
of  the  Christian  era  they  had  not  even  a  history,  and  then 
their  history  was  written  by  two  foreigners,  Csesar  and  Taci- 
tus. It  is  a  wholesome  discipline  to  our  vanity  to  reflect  that 
when  the  inhabitants  of  Greece  and  Italy  were  at  the  height 
of  their  civilization,  our  progenitors  went  half-naked,  and 
were  scarcely  more  tamed  than  American  Indians.  They 
lived  on  game  and  on  the  milk  and  cheese  of  their  domesti- 
cated animals.  Agriculture  they  scorned  as  a  trade  that  took 
away  a  man's  mind  from  the  only  noble  exercises,  war  and 
hunting.  Were  we  to  meet  one  of  those  Germans  with  his 
rough  spear  and  shield,  an  untanned  deer's  hide  flung  across 
his  shoulder,  and  his  long  red  hair  tied  in  a  knot  on  top  of  his 
head,  it  would  stick  in  our  throats  to  exclaim  reverentially  : 
"  Thou  art  my  grandfather  fifty-four  times  removed."  And 
had  he  been  thus  addressed  he  would  not  have  understood. 
His  rude  tongue  had  a  small  list  of  short,  pointed  words,  like 
"good,"  "bad,"  "kill,"  "blood."  In  their  altered  forms  they 
still  exist  with  us,  and  it  is  a  notable  fact  that  when  a  man 
is  in  a  towering  rage  he  betakes  himself  to  the    short,  fierce 


10 

words  of  that  grandfather,  fifty-four  times  removed  ;  whereas, 
if  he  be  calm  and  gentle,  and  especially  if  he  be  addressing  a 
young  ladies'  Sunday-school,  he  is  sure  to  use  the  French, 
Latin  and  Greek  derivatives  wherewith  he  has  painted  and 
padded  the  knarled  old  stock.  Not  forever  were  those  tall 
barbarians  to  stalk  through  the  dark  forests  of  beech  and  fir. 
Their  destiny  was  written  on  a  golden  tablet,  and  a  power 
stronger  than  the  sword — the  power  of  Christianity — was  to 
bring  their  proud  knee  to  the  neglected  earth.  From  the 
Catholic  missionaries  and  monks  of  those  remote  times  came 
the  first  lesson  in  agriculture  to  their  savage  neophytes.  It 
was  a  little  spark,  but  the  wood  of  the  beacon  lay  ready  and 
blazed  with  a  clear  and  increasing  flame.  In  this  and  in  al] 
other  arts  they  have  ever  since  gone  rapidly  on  with  labori- 
ous study  and  untiring  toil.  These  slow  boys  bent  at  last  to 
their  task,  and  after  eighteen  hundred  years  of  schooling, 
they  have  beaten  the  spry,  quick  boys  and  stand  at  the  head 
of  their  class.  Not  alone  in  their  native  plains  of  Germany, 
or  among  the  sand  dunes  of  Jutland,  or  by  the  fiords  of  Nor- 
way, are  these  Northmen  now  found.  They  are  everywhere, 
from  Iceland  to  Australia  ;  from  England,  through  America 
to  Hindostan. 

And  now  let  us  ask,  how,  from  such  mean  beginnings,  they 
have  come  to  results  so  grand .''  Plainly  the  power  lay  coiled 
within  them  like  a  spring,  which  begins  to  push  when  the 
clamp  is  taken  off.  But  what  special  working  had  that  spring 
by  which  it  came  to  beat  other  springs  .-'  The  answer  is,  that 
the  Germanic  mind  is  a  scientific  mind,  and  has  always  been 
so  from  the  day  when  its  form  grew  to  be  recognizable. 
What  is  scientific,  and  what  is  science  .''  They  are  words  on 
every  tongue,  yet  not  one  tongue  in  twenty  will  answer  the 
question  aright.     The  nineteen  wrong  tongues  will  hasten  to 


11 

say  that  science  first  may  be  defined  as  the  opposite  or  the 
complement  of  practice  ;  and,  secondly,  as  abstract  theory 
based  on  thought,  and  distinguished  from  working  based  on 
experience.  Why  run  so  far  for  a  reply  and  put  it  in  so 
many  words  when  a  short  one  is  at  hand?  "Science"  is 
knowledge,  and  "scientific"  is  knowing;  just  that  and 
nothing  less  or  more.  The  mind  of  the  Northmen  has  grown 
great  and  strong,  because  it  is  knowing  and  still  seeks  knowl- 
edge. 

To  descend  from  generals  to  specials,  and  from  greater 
things  to  smaller,  we  cannot  hope  to  thrive  in  agriculture  ex- 
cept by  holding  to  the  working  method  of  our  race  ;  we  must 
be  scientific,  having  and  eagerly  seeking  knowledge.  There 
are  too  many  men  who  fall  away  from  this  method,  and  prop 
themselves  against  one  of  the  stupidest  sayings  ever  invent- 
ed by  an  idler :  "  What  was  good  enough  for  my  father  Ik 
good  enough  for  me."  They  are  like  those  lake  people  we 
were  talking  of,  who  thought  that  wheat,  dried  apples  and  a 
bronze  hatchet  were  sufficient  for  any  family,  and  who,  so  far 
as  we  know,  never  got  beyond  these  simple  supplies. 

You  tumble  against  such  folks  at  every  turn  ;  and  a  deal  of 
hauling  and  pushing  it  takes  to  get  them  out  of  the  way. 
Last  winter,  a  number  of  learned  men  asked  the  Legislature 
for  an  annual  grant  for  making  a  proper  survey  of  this  Com- 
monwealth. Our  friends  of  the  bronze  period  awoke  at  once 
from  their  customary  doze.  "What,  what,  what!  A  survey! 
Have  we  not  town,  county,  and  state  maps  already }  Did  our 
fathers  complain  of  them  }  No,  no !  This  is  a  device  to  pay 
a  parcel  of  scientists  who  want  to  wander  over  the  earth  with 
muck  rakes  !  "  So  the  petitioners  had  leave  to  withdraw. 
As  a  fact,  there  is  no  such  thing  in  existence  as  a  map  of 
Massachusetts.     There  is  a  sheet  of  paper  painted  with  divers 


12 

colors,  and  covered  with  lines  which  mean  roads,  and  with 
dots  which  signify  towns.  But  that  is  not  a  map  ;  it  is  rather 
a  perfecting  of  the  shingle  with  chalk-marks  wherewith  the 
countrymen  indicates  to  you  the  way  to  his  father's  wood-lot. 
When  we  consider  that,  for  every  important  problem  of  drain- 
age, road-making,  mining,  manufacturing,  water  supply,  and 
agriculture,  an  exact  topographical  map  is  essential,  the  peti- 
tioners would  seem  to  have  been  in  the  right.  There  is  no 
country  of  Central  Europe,  however  small  and  poor,  that  does 
not  possess  a  topographical  survey.  Our  sister  republic, 
Switzerland,  has  a  topographic  map  which  is  a  model  in  its 
way.  She  has  mountains  14,000  feet  high,  whose  every 
crest  and  ravine  is  there  minutely  laid  down  ;  while  we,  with 
no  hills  that  a  child  cannot  climb,  stay  content  with  our  im- 
proved shingle  and  chalk-marks.  All  this  comes  of  want  of 
knowledge  or  science.  And  thereby  we  are  led  to  ask,  what 
is  a  scientific  man,  and  how  may  we  know  him  ?  A  scientific 
man,  like  a  gentleman,  is  rare,  but  may  be  looked  for  in  any 
station  or  class.  I  know  that  all  males  are  in  this  country 
called  gentlemen.  Call  them  what  you  please  ;  my  experience 
is  that  a  gentleman  is  rare  in  this  and  in  any  other  country. 
So  our  man  of  knowledge,  of  science,  may  be  looked  for  any- 
where. Does  a  man's  lettuce  head  better  than  his  neighbor's 
— he  is  scientific,  knowing.  When  you  examine  him,  you  find 
he  knows  just  how  many  inches  to  open  the  frames  at  such  and 
such  a  temperature  ;  when  to  water  and  when  to  leave  them 
dry  ;  how  to  keep  lice  and  mould  away  ;  and  how  to  maintain 
a  long,  steady  heat.  Does  a  man  have  the  best  cows, — he, 
too,  is  scientific  ;  for  a  good  cow  is  no  matter  of  chance. 
He  has  stared  at  cattle  till  he  knows  their  points  by  a  sort  of 
instinct ;  he  can  rise  above  the  limits  of  breed  or  grade,  and 
can  tell  an  animal  on  her  own  merits  ;  can   say  whether  she 


13 

runs  too  much  to  beef,  or  has  not  the  constitution  to  keep  up 
her  milk,  or  is  too  closely  bred.  The  two  men  have  one  trait 
in  common  ;  they  ane  one-sided  ,  they  are  specialists.  The 
lettuce-grower  could  not  tell  a  fifteen-quart  cow  if  he  died  for 
it  ;  and  the  cattle-breeder  would  scald  his  lettuce  before  Feb- 
ruary was  out.  Knowledge  is  great,  and  one  student,  though 
he  be  talented,  can  master  only  a  bit.  Every  scientist  there- 
fore is  one-sided.  He  is  all  lettuce,  or  all  cow.  With  this 
preface  we  are  prepared  to  place  and  to  appreciate  what  are 
called,  with  improper  exclusiveness,  "  scientific  men,"  to  wit : 
those  who  follow  a  subject  not  for  the  profit  of  it,  not  even 
that  they  may  teach  it,  but  that  they  may  know  it.  Such 
men  must  of  course  be  specialists,  and  one  specialty  is  scien- 
tific agriculture.  We  must  not  expect  too  much  of  scientific 
agriculturists.  They  are  human  and  can  know  a  part  only. 
If  they  work  all  day  with  test-tube  and  re-agent,  they  cannot 
be  expected  to  "  point  out "  a  swarth  as  well  as  a  country  lad 
who  never  got  beyond  the  rule  of  three.  This  advantage, 
however,  is  theirs,  that  they  arrive  at  a  result  more  rapidly 
and  reliably  than  men  of  slight  education,  because  they  do 
not  try  problems  already  solved,  and  because  they  compare 
thousands  of  facts  where  the  others  compare  tens. 

We  have  noted  how  ancient  is  the  tilling  of  the  soil,  and 
how  slow  has  been  its  improvement.  Nevertheless,  each  im- 
provement was  the  act  of  somebody  who  refused  to  be  con- 
tented with  things  as  they  were,  and  who  studied  to  find 
something  new  and  better.  How  long  mankind  delved  with 
sharp  sticks,  we  know  not.  At  any  rate,  the  day  came,  day 
when  a  grand  genius  was  born.  He  gave  his  mind  to  the 
study  of  sharp  sticks  ;  and  at  last  (perhaps  when  he  was  grey- 
haired)  hit  on  this  discovery,  that  if  you  held  a  sharp  stick 
upright  and  fastened  to  it  a  horizontal  blunt  stick,  you  could 


14 

drag  the    sharp  upright  by  the   blunt  horizontal,    and   thus 
scratch  the  ground  —  in  fact,  you  could  plough.     There  are 
nations,  like  the  Persians,  who  have  never  ceased  to  gaze  with 
awe  on  this  invention,  and  who  stil)  use  it.     Others  there  are, 
who  have  improved  it  until  they  have  reached  steam-plows 
and  gang-plows.     Let  us  side  with  the  latter   nations,  and 
never  say  of  any  tool,  it  is  good  enough.     Let   us  encourage 
all  sorts  of  research  ;  but  especially  that  of  highly  educated 
men,  for  of  them  is  our  best   hope.     Good  examples  are  not 
far  to  seek.     Look  at  Germany.     Perhaps  somebody  will  ob- 
ject to  looking  at  Germany,  on  the  plea  that  it  is   the  land  of 
priveleged  classes  and  of  military  rule.     True  ;  but  remem- 
ber, we  are  talking  of  crops  and  not  of  nobles  and  soldiers. 
A  man  may  have  a  bad  temper,  and  yet  raise  excellent  string 
beans.     We  do  not  scorn  to  drink  tea  because   there   is   a 
Tai-ping  rebellion  in  China.     Therefore,  we   look   into  Ger- 
many, and,  after  getting  through  the  stratum  of  nobles  and 
soldiers,  ("who,  it  may  be  said  in  parenthesis,  have  thorough- 
ly studied  their  trade  of  killing  and  have  brought  it  to  the  fine 
point  of  perfection)  we  shall  find  a  people  who  have  perhaps 
more  knowledge  than  all  the  rest  of  the  world  together.     Not 
that  they  are   a  fine-grained  or  a  well-to-do  people ;  on  the 
contrary,  one  is  struck  by  a  certain    coarseness   and   by  a 
general  lack  of  means  ;  but  in  knowledge  and  research,  they 
•  are  to-day  the  world's  leaders.     Their  governments  are  well- 
known  as  exceptionally  thrifty  and  economical,  insomuch  that 
when  a  man  is  said  to  "  Work  for  the  king  of  Prussia,"  it 
means  that  he  works   for  nothing.     If,  then,  these  govern- 
ments support  certain  establishments,  we  may  be  sure  they 
expect  much  advantage  from  them.     And  now  look  at  their 
establishments  for  the  study  of  agriculture.     The   last  statis- 
tics tell  us  that  Prussia  proper  has  ninety  colleges,  academies, 


15 

and  schools  of  agriculture,  in  which  every  branch  is  taught 
with  extreme  detail,  including  crop-raising,  grape-growing, 
horse  and  cattle-breeding,  fish-culture,  drainage,  forestry,  and 
the  care  of  bees  ;  all  these  in  addition  to  original  researches 
in  chemistry  and  in  other  pertinent  sciences.  Of  these 
colleges  the  four  highest  have  eighty  professorships,  and 
those  of  lower  degree  are  proportionately  supplied.  One 
academy,  that  of  Proskan,  has  attached  to  it  17,000  acres  of 
tillage  and  forest.  The  little  duchy  of  Baden,  with  a  popula- 
tion less  than  that  of  Massachusetts,  has  twenty  agricultural 
establishments  ;  and,  in  the  entire  German  empire,  the  people 
are  taught  nearly  on  this  scale.  Perhaps  some  one  will  ask. 
What  has  this  vast  net-work  of  scientific  schools  brought  to 
pass  ?  What  has  this  army  of  highly  educated  and  spectacled 
professors  to  show,  in  exchange  for  their  apparatus  and 
salaries .''  Already  I  have  said  that  German  officials  keep  a 
sharp  eye  on  their  penny's-worth.  Being  themselves  well 
scrimped,  they  are  determined  that  nobody  else  shall  grow  too 
fat,  or  get  pay  without  full  return.  A  Prussian  employe  who 
should  leave  his  post  and  run  to  Berlin  to  look  after  politics 
and  offices,  would  first  be  discharged  and  afterwards  clapped 
in  prison.  Sometimes  I  think  that  a  little  of  such  tyranny 
might  have  a  wholesome  effect  in  our  country. 

The  case  before  us  makes  no  exception  to  the  rule  of  thrift. 
These  professors  have  earned  their  wages.  They  found  a 
country  that  produced  scanty  crops  of  oats,  barley  and  white 
wine.  To-day  they  show  you  an  abundant  yield  of  everything 
their  soil  and  cHmate  will  allow.  Cultures  that  were  feeble, 
such  as  those  of  wheat  and  sugar-beets,  have  grown  to  grand 
proportions  ;  waste  lands  have  been  reclaimed  ;  forests  plant- 
ed, grown  and  cut  according  to  rule.  Nobody  there  dares 
sell  a  false  manure  with  the  argns  eyes  of  a  professor  of  chem- 


16 

istry  ever  on  him.  It  will  not  avail  him  to  puDlisn  a  ten- 
dollar  analysis  from  a  private  assayer.  The  government 
chemist  says :  "Empty  out  your  bags  here  and  let  me  ex- 
amine their  contents.  If  you  have  been  swindling  the  farmers 
to  jail  you  go  !" 

Are  we  speaking  of  a  land  naturally  fertile  and  of  a  favoring 
climate  ?  Not  so.  North  Germany  is  a  dreary  plain,  the 
gravelly,  sandy  bottom  of  an  ancient  lake.  South  Germany 
is  rugged  with  mountains.  The  climate,  over  a  good  part  of 
the  entire  region,  is  damp,  chilly  and  tormented  by  bleak 
v>finds.  But  a  persevering  and  intellectual  people  have  kept 
on  learning  that  lesson  of  Mother  Earth  ;  and  she  has  plente- 
ously  rewarded  them  accqrding  to  their  deserts.  Here  are 
guide  and  encouragement  to  us  poor  occupants  of  a  country, 
that  long  ages  ago  was  subsoiled  by  the  glaciers  ;  and  a 
glacier,  let  me  tell  you,  is  a  plow  that  subsoils  a  little  too 
deep,  and  brings  all  the  gravel  and  rocks  to  the  top.  Our 
German  cousins,  however,  are  every  whit  as  ill  off ;  and  yet 
they  make  the  crops  grow.  We  will  not  sneer  at  our  own 
efforts.  It  will  not  do  to  sneer  at  such  shows  of  fruit  and 
vegetables  as  we  to-day  have  seen.  But  let  us  all  in  all 
honesty  confess  that  we  are  partial  farmers,  working  much 
by  rule  of  thumb,  doing  some  things  extremely  well,  and  fail- 
ing childishly  in  others.  Our  agriculture  is  nowhere  thorough 
and  well  proportioned.  Here  is  a  man  who  will  raise  prize 
strawberries,  and  his  apple  trees,  hard  by,  will  be  full  of  cat- 
erpillar webs.  Another  excels  in  onions,  while  his  starved 
potato  field  is  buried  with  weeds.  In  these  respects  our 
transatlantic  friends  do  better.  You  may  start  from  Florence 
in  Italy  and  walk  for  miles  along  the  valley  of  the  Arno,  with- 
out seeing  a  fruit  tree  cut  by  insects  or  a  weed  in  a  vegetable 
bed,  or  a  Sfjuarc  yard  of  arable  soil  without   some   crop  on  it. 


17 

It  may  be  that  the  peasants  are  driven  to  careful  husbandry 
by  poverty,  and  that  they  work  with  antiquated  tools.  At 
all  events,  they  give  a  lesson  to  us  who  have  money  and  fine 
implements. 

It  is  said  there  is  no  profit  in  Massachusetts  agriculture, 
and  that  our  farmers  grow  each  year  poorer.  Whether  this 
be  true  or  not,  certain  it  is  that  we  must  have  a  large  body  of 
tillers  of  the  soil,  or  be  doomed  to  dwindle  and  become  ex- 
tinct. The  waste  in  mankind  is  made  good  and  the  increase 
furnished  chiefly  by  the  rural  population.  There  is  no  occu- 
pation like  farming  to  make  red  blood.  But  the  farming 
people  must  live  the  lifeiof  their  trade.  And  here  we  strike 
another  of  our  troubles.  Among  our  country  people,  the  men, 
though  spare,  are  commonly  strong  and  sinewy.  Not  so  the 
women,  who,  however  pretty  and  intelligent,  are  apt  to  lack 
vitality.  During  our  long,  cold  winter  and  spring,  farmers 
are  forced  to  be  out  of  doors,  while  the  women  can  stay,  and 
do  stay,  in  the  house.  Staying  in  the  house  was  not  so  bad 
in  the  days  of  big  open  chimneys  ;  but  in  these  days  of  iron 
stoves  it  is  very  bad.  The  hotter  the  stove  gets,  the  worse 
the  air  becomes  ;  the  worse  the  air  becomes  the  less  the 
blood  circulates,  so  that  by  spring  the  temperature  of 
the  room  is  raised  to  eighty  or  eighty-five  degrees. 
You  can  easily  convince  yourselves  of  this  by  going  next 
winter  to  the  committee-rooms  of  the  State  House.  A  large 
proportion  of  the  representatives  are  from  the  rural  districts. 
You  will  find  those. rooms  heated  to  80  or  85  degrees,  and  if 
you  open  a  window  some  honorable  member  will  jump  as  if 
he  were  shot,  and  exclaim,  in  tones  of  fear,  that  there  is  a 
draught !  It  is  a  curious  fact,  of  which  you  also  may  convince 
yourselves,  that  of  a  winter's  day,  you  may  sec  a  greater  pro- 
portion of  fat,  rosy  little  children  on  Beacon  street,  than  you 


18 

would  find  amonc;  niir  back-country  farms.  The  former  are 
children  of  rich  parents  and  ought  to  be  comparatively  puny 
and  delicate.  The  reason  they  are  not  so  is  this :  their 
parents  can  command  the  best  medical  advice,  and  the  best 
medical  advice^says  :  Never  take  any  medicine,  especially  pa- 
tent medicine  ;  send  the  children  out  daily  ;  give  them  bread 
and  meat,  and  no  pie  or  candy  ;  let  them  not  stay  too  long  in 
school ;  have  an  open  fire  in  their  room,  and  keep  the  ther- 
mometer under  70  degrees.  The  majority  of  children,  if  so 
treated,  though  they  may  be  puny  as  babies,  will  grow  up 
tolerably  strong  men  and  women.  This  may  not  be  agricul- 
ture, but  it  is  man-culture,  and  one  depends  on  the  other. 
Our  native  New  England  population  of  the  old  English  stock 
is  said  to'  be  decreasing  ;  nor  will  it  increase  till  the  law  of 
health  becomes  the  law  of  living. 

Wherever  we  strike  in,  we  work  round  to  this  same  truth, 
that  we  ever  need  more  science  —  knowledge  ;■  and  to  be 
more  scientific  —  knowing.  Let  each  one,  then,  approach  the 
subject  as  he  can,  not  scorning  the  work  of  others,  but  com- 
bining it  with  his  own. 

Mother  Earth  holds  her  secrets  tightly  clenched,  and 
means  to  make  us  pull  hard  at  her  fingers,  getting  out  a  little 
here  and  a  little  there.  Thus  she  keeps  us  strong  and  active 
and  teaches  us  to  value  and  to  understand  what  we  get. 


Y.) 


Report  of  the  President  aud  Secretary. 


To  the  Secretary  of  the  State  Board  of  Agriculture : 

Sir, — We  herewith  submit,  in  compliance  with 
the  requirements  of  the  statute,  the  following  state- 
ment of  the  operations  of  the  Norfolk  Agricultural 
Society  for  the  year  1875,  to  be  found  in  the  sub- 
joined Reports  of  the  several  Committees. 

HENRY  S.  EUSSELL,  President. 
Henry  O.  Hildreth,  Secretary. 


20 


liEPOliTS    OF    COMMITTEES. 


HORSES. 

Class  A. 

Best  Stallion^ — Four  3'ears  old  and  upwards. — Jasou  Houghton, 
Milton,  1st  premium  SIO  ;  H.  W.  Tiltou,  Walpole,  2d  premium 
$7. 

Best  Brood  Mare  with  Foal  at  her  side, — Jason  Houghton,  Mil- 
ton, 1st  premium,  %1 ;  C.  F.  Howard,   Foxboro,  2d  premium,  $5. 

Colts  and  Fillies — For  the  best  four  years  old,  J.  Allen,  Dover, 
a  premium  of  $5  ;  best  three  years  old,  W.  E.  Coffin,  Dorchester, 
$5  ;  2d  best,  W.  T.  Cook,  Foxboro',  $3  ;  best  two  years  old  ;  0. 
Hodgkins,  West  Roxbury,  $3  ;  2d  best,  J.  Allen,  Dover,  $2  ;  best 
one  year  old,  W.  T.  Cook,  Foxboro',  $3  ;  2d  best,  W.  E.  Coffin, 
Dorchester,  $2. 

Bestpair  of  Roadsters, — F.  B,  Ray,  Franklin,  Isl  premium,  $10. 

Best  Gelding  or  Mare, — H.  R.  Bird,  Cauton,  a  premium  of  $8 ; 
Dr.  F.  L.  Gerald,  Hyde  Park,  2d  premium,  6  ;  J,  M.  Twitchell, 
Hyde  Park,  3d  premium,  4. 

Class  B. 

Best  Brood  Mare  with  Foal  at  her  side, — A.  T.  Brown,  Brook- 
line,  a  premium  of  $7  ;  best  three  years  old,  D.  Kelley,  Stough- 
ton,  a  premium  of  5  ;  H.  R.  Bird,  Canton,  2d  best  3. 

Class  C. 

Best  Brood  Mare  with  Foal  at  her  side, — W.  T.  Cook  Foxboro', 
a  premium  of  %1 ;  2d  best,  W.^T.  Cook,  Milton,  5. 

Best  Three  Years  Old, — J.  H.  Farrington,  Milton,  $5  ;  2d 
best,  2  years  old,  W.  T.  Cook,  Foxboro',  premium  of  2  ;  best  1 
year  old,  W.  L.  Faxon,  Quincy,  3. 


21 

Best  Buggy  or  Chaise  Horse, — C.  L.  Copeland,  Milton,  a  prc- 
miunofSS;  2d  best,  Emeiy  Hawes,  Stoughton,  6;  3d  best,  H. 
Briggs,  Walpole,  4. 

Best  Saddle  Horse, — S.  C.  Ferry,  Milton,  a  premium  of  $6  ;  2d 
best,  C.  H.  Heustis,  Hj'-de  Park,  4  ;  3d  best,  J.  W.  Bradlee,  Mil- 
ton, 3. 

Best  Matched  Ponies, — J.  W.  Hamblin,  Hyde  Park,  a  second 
premium  of  S4  ;  best  single  pony,  Henry  Trowbridge,  Norfolk, 
3  ;  2d  best,  J.  W.  Bradlee,  Milton,  2. 

Class  D. 

Best  Draught  Horse — J.  A.  Hatchings,  East  Medway,  a  pre- 
mium of  $7  ;  D.  F.  Decatur,  West  Dedham,  2d  best,  5. 

Best  pair  of  Draught  or  Team  Horses — C.  A.  Bigelow,  East 
Medway,  a  premium  of  $10  ;  J.  Ware,  Norfolk,  2d  best,  7. 


RACES. 
Thursday — Trials  of  Speed. 

First  Race — Gents'  driving  horses. — H.  Beckwith,  Jamaica 
Plain,  Ist  prize,  S25  ;  E.  G.  Perkins,  Hyde  Park,  2d  prize,  15  ; 
Oliver  Deane,  Canton,  3d  prize,  10. 

Second  Bace — Double  Teams — R.  W.  Hamblin,  Hyde  Park,  1st 
prize,  $25  ;  F.  B.  Ray,  Franklin,  2d  prize,  $10. 

Third  Race — Running  Horses. — S.  S.  Putnam,  Jr.,  Neponset, 
1st  prize,  $20  ;  T.  Raymond,  Neponset,  2d  prize,  10. 

Friday — Trials  of  Speed. 

First  Race — Open  to  all. — J.  C.  Dyer,  Medfield,  1st  prize,  $40  ; 
R.  W.  Hamblin,  Hyde  Park,  2d  prize,  25  ;  H.  C.  Turner,  Dedham, 
3d  prize,  10. 

Second  Race — Double  Teams. — H.  Beckwith,  Jamaica  Plain, 
1st  prize,  $40  ;  R.  W.  Hamblin,  Hyde  Park,  2d  prize,  20. 

Third  Race — Running  Horses. — S.  S.  Putnam,  Jr.,  Neponset, 
1st  Prize  $20  ;  A.  T.  Holmes,  Boston  Highlands,  2d  prize  10. 

Fourth  Race — Ponies — J.  A.  Paine,  Dover,  1st  prize,  $20  ;  J. 
W,  Beals,  Milton,  2nd  prize,  10. 


22 

Fiftli  Race — For  horses  that  have  never  beaten  2.50. — T.  E. 
Clark,  Hyde  Park,  1st  prize,  $45  ;  S.  T.  Capron,  Franklin,  2d 
prize,  20  ;  C.  S.  Plarper,  Sharon,  3d  prize,  10. 

Sixth  Race — Last  horse  in — J.  H.  Farriugton,  Milton,  1st  prize, 
$10  ;  J.  Walter  Bradlee,  Milton,  2d  prize,  5. 

Augustus  P.  Calder,  Chairman. 


RURAL  SPORTS. 

Foot  Race. — John   Manning,  1st  prize,  $8  ;  A.  Thompson,  2d 
prize,  5  ;  Moses  Bass,  3d  prize,  2. 

W.  R.  Mann,  Chairman. 


PLOWING. 


Double  Horse  Teams  with  Michigan  Plow. — Josiah  Ware,  Nor- 
folk, 1st  premium  of  $15  ;  2d,  Henry  Goulding,  Dover,  10 ;  3d, 
Blackman  Bros.,  Needham,  5. 

With  other  Plows, — Bigelow  &  Sawin,  Medway,  1st  premium, 
$15,  Steel  Clipper,  U.  G.,  No.  3  1-2;  D.  F.  Decatur,  Dedham, 
2d,  10,  Iron  Beam;  John  Hutchins  &  Co.,  Medway,  3d,  5,  Lyon 
Plow. 

Charles  Hartshorn,  ^ 

James  T.  Sumner,       V  Committee. 

James  Capen,  J 

Double  Ox  Teams,— Wm.  Fales,  Dedham,  1st  premium,  $15  ; 
Henry  L.  Pierce,  Canton,  2d,  10  ;  S.  K.  Bayley,  Milton,  3d,  5. 

Nathan  Longfellow,  Chairman. 

Single  Horse  Teams, — Nathaniel  Farrington,  Jr.,  Canton,  1st 
premium,  $10,  Nourse  Plow,  No.  75  ;  Patrick  McNamara,  Dover, 
2d,  5,  Doe  Plow,  E.  4. 


L.  W.  Morse,    {committee. 
Horace  Guild,  ) 


23 


WORKING  OXEN. 


S.    K.  Bayley,  Milton,   1st  premium,  ^10;  Henry   L.    Pierce, 
Canton,  2il,  7. 

Henry  M.  Mack,  Chairman. 


STEERS. 


The  Committee  regret  that  Mr.  Luther  Eaton  of  Dedham,  failed 
to  enter  his  yoke  of  twin  streers  (breed,  Jamestown  and  Jersey,)  on 
the  first  day  of  the  exhibition,  as  it  barred  them  from  the  first 
premium,  the  rules  requiring  them  to  be  entered  the  first  day  be- 
fore ten  o'clock ;  they  being  extra  fine  cattle,  and  in  every  v,^ay 

entitled  to  it. 

Henry  M.  Mack,        \ 

Saml.  K.  Bayley,       >  Committee. 

J.  Walter  Bradlee.  j 


BULLS. 


Brittany,  Flinfs  StocJi. — Napoleon  Harvey,  Foxboro,'  1st  pre- 
mium, $10. 

Ayrshire. — H.  E.  Bacon,  Walpole,  2d  premium,  $o. 

Jersey. — Hemy  L.  Pierce,  Canton,  1st  premium,  $10  ;  Geo.  S. 
Ferry,  Milton,  2d,  5. 

Ayrshire  Bull  Calf. — E.  P.  Burgess,  1st  premium,  $5. 

Best  Bull  Calf. — E.  M.  Gary,  Milton,  1st  premium,  $5. 

Jersey  Bull  Calf. — Thos.  Cauley,  Readville,  2d  premium,  2. 

AsAiiEL  S.  Drake,  ^ 
N.  S.  White,  i  ^ 

James  T.    Sumner,  ]  Committee. 
Edward  M.  Gary,  j 


COWS. 

Herds. — H.  L.  Pierce,  Canton,  1st  premium,  $25. 

Jersey — Charles  Faulkner,  Brookline,  eight  years  old,  1st  pre- 
mium, $10  ;  Henry  Chaffin,  Brookline,  7  years  old,  2d  premium,  o  ; 
Benj.  C.  Vose,  H^'dc  Park,  3d  premium,  4. 


24 

AyrsMre — H.  E.  Bacon,  South  Walpole,  "Lady  Scott,"  five 
3^ears  old,  1st  premium,  $10  ;  H.  E.  Bacon,  South  Walpole,  "Lady 
Norfolk,"  three  j^ears  old,  2d  premium,  5. 

Grade — Dennis  Murphj%  Milton,  1st  premium,  $10  ;  Edward 
McKenna,  Hj^de  Park,  2d  premium,  6  ;  C.  F.  Pepper,  Dedham, 
3d  premium,  4. 

H.  M.  Mack,  Dorchester,  offered  4  cows  for  exhibition  only, 
which  were  very  excellent  animals. 

Heifers  in  Milk. — Henry  Chaffin,  Brookline,  2d  premium  S2. 

J.  W.  Gay,  Chairman. 


HEIFERS. 


Jersey — For  heifers  two  years  old  and  under  three. — H.  L. 
Pierce,  Canton,  1st  premium,  85  ;  Charles  S.  Sargent,  Brookline, 
2d  premium,  4  ;  H.  L.  Pierce,  Canton,  3d  premium,  2. 

Grade. — C.  M.  S.  Churchill,  Milton,  1st  premium,  5  ;  E.  P. 
Burgess,  Dedham,  2d  premium,  4  ;  E.  P.  Burgess,  3d  premium,  2. 

Jersey  Calf  6  months  old. — Charles  Fq,ulkner,  Brookline,  1st 
premium,  84. 

Grade  Calf  sixteen  iveeks  old. — D,  F.  Decatur,  Dedham,  2d  pre- 
mium, 2. 

J.  W.  Gay,  \r.         -,, 

A  o    A  i  Committee. 

AsAHEL  S.  Drake,  J 


SWINE. 


Largest  and  best  collection — N.  Farrington,  Canton,  1st  premium 
815  ;  J.  H.  Farrington,  Milton,  2d  premium,  10. 

Boars — For  best  boar  not  less  than  six  months  old — J.  H.  Far- 
rington, Milton,  1st  premium  86  ;  National  Sailors'  Home,  Quincy, 
2d  premium,  4  ;  S.  K.  Bayley,  Milton,  gratuit}^  2. 

Sows — Best  sow  not  less  than  six  months  old — National  Sailors' 
Home,  Quincy,  1st  premium  $6  ;  J.  H.  Farrington,  Milton,  2d 
premium  4  ;  H.  W.  Tilton,  Walpole.  gratuity,  2. 

Weaned  Pigs — Best  litter  not  less  than  six  months  old — E.  Cot- 
ter, Canton,  1st  premium  86  ;  N.  Farrington,  Canton,  2d  premium, 
4;  J.  H.  Davenport,  Canton,  gratuity,  2. 


25 

Fat  Hogs — E.  Cotter,  Canton,  1st  premium,  $G  ;  National  Sail- 
ors'  Home,  Quincy,  2d  premium,  4  ;  N.  Farrington,  Canton,  gra- 
tuity, 2  ;  H.  W.  Tilton,  Walpole,  for  two  spring  pigs,  gratuity,  2. 

T,  B.  Gkiggs,  ^ 

Henry  Goulding,  1  r^ 

J.  B.  TiLLEY,  \  Committee. 

W.  L.  Faxon,  J 


POULTRY. 


Light  Brahmas. — J.  F.  Mooar,  Hyde  Park,  on  fowls,  1st  pre. 
mium,  $3. 

J.  F.  Mooar,  Hyde  Park,  chicks,  1st  premium,  S3  ;  2d  pre- 
mium, 2. 

Dark  Brahmas, — Francis  Codman,  Brookline,  chicks,  1st  pre- 
mium, $3  ;  2d  premium,  2. 

Buff  Cochin. — David  Cartwright,  Dedham,  chicks,  1st  premium, 
$S. 

Plymouth  Rock — A.  H.  Drake,  Stoughton,  fowls,  1st  premium, 
S3;  2d  premium,  2;  3d  premium,  1  ;  J,  E.  Sherman,  Foxboro', 
chicks,  1st  premium,  3 ;  A.  H.  Drake,  Stoughton,  chicks,  2d  pre- 
mium, 2  ;  3d  premium,  1. 

Dominique— K.  I.  Ellis,  Norwood,  fowls,  1st  premium,  88  ;  2d 
premium,  2. 

Wliite  Cochins— M..  I.  Ellis,  Norwood,  fowls,  1st  premium,  $3  ; 
2d  premium,  2. 

Houdans—'E.  C.  Aldrich,  Hyde  Park,  fowls,  Isl,  premium,  $3 
2d  premium  2  ;  3d  premium,  1  ;  E.  C.  Aldrich,  Hyde  Park,  chicks, 
1st  premium  $3  ;  2d  premium,  2  ;  3d,  1. 

White  Dorkins—A.  F.  Stevens,  Wellesley,  fowls,  1st  premium, 
$3. 

Brown  Leghorn— L.  E.  Gray,  Foxboro',  chicks,  1st  premium, 
S3  ;  2d  premium,  2  ;  J.  E.  Sherman,  Foxboro',  chicks,  3d  premium, 
1  ;  J.  E.  Sherman,  Foxboro',  fowls,  1st  premium,  S3. 

Dominique  Leghorn— A.  F.  Stevens,  Wellesley,  fowls,  1st  pre- 
mium, S3. 

Black  Spanish— E.  A.  Fluet,  Dedham,  fowls,  3d  premium,  $1. 
B.  B.  E.  Game— Geo.  Miles,  Hyde  Park,  fowls  ;  2d   premium, 


26 

2 ;  Geo.  Miles,  Hyde  Park,  chicks,  1st  premium,  $3,  2(1  premium, 
2  ;  3cl  premium,  1. 

B.  B.  R.  Game  Bantams — J.  F.  Mooar,  Hyde  Park,  fowls,  1st 
premium,  $3  ;  2d  premium,  2  ;  8d  premium,  1  ;  A.  F.  Stevens, 
Wellegley,  chicks,  1st  premium,  $3  ;  J.  F.  Mooar,  Hyde  Park, 
chicks,  2d  premium,  2. 

Black  Game  Bantams — E.  Lunt,  Hyde  Park,  Ist  premium,  $3. 

White  Bantams — A.  F.  Stevens,  Wellesley,  Ist  premium,  $3. 

Black  Cayuga  Ducks— M.  I.  Ellis,  Norwood,  1st  premium  $3  ; 
2d  premium,  2. 

Spangled  Mallard — M.  I.  Ellis,  Norwood,  1st  premium,  $i3. 

Pekin  Ducks — J.  B.  Tilley,  Brookline,  1st  premium,  $3. 

Musk  Ducks — J.  B.  Tilley,  Brookline,  1st  premium,  $3. 

Morten  Ducks — W.  E.  Sumner,  Milton,  1st  premium,  S3. 

Geese — W.  T.  Cook,  Milton,  1st  premium,  $3. 

Pigeons— W.  T.  Cook,  Milton,  2d  premium,  S2  ;  E.  P.  Cassell, 
Dedham,  on  collection,  1st  premium,  3. 

Polish  Ducks — J.  B.  Tilley,  Brookline,  1st  premium,  $3. 

Ring  Doves — McKean  C.  Churchill,  Milton,  gratuity,  $1. 

Rabbits — J.  H.  Barney,  Hyde  Park,  gratuity,  50  cents. 

Abel  F.  Stevens,      i 

Albert  H.  Drake,    >  Committee, 

J.  F.  Co  well,  ) 


VEGETABLES. 


Largest  and  Best  Collection — R.  P.  Sumner,  Milton,  1st  pre- 
mium, $20  ;  James  Mcintosh,  Needham  2d,  15  ;  J.  B.  Tilley, 
Brookline,  3d,  10. 

Largest  and  Best  Collection  Potatoes,— John  Vose,  Hyde  Park, 
1st  premium,  $6  ;  William  McDonald,  Milton,  2d,  3. 

Largest  and  Best  Winter  Squash,  not  less  than  four  of  each 
Variety.— W.  T.  Cook,  Milton,  1st  premium,  $1;  John  Vose, 
Hyde  Park,  2d,  3.' 

Best  Half  Bushel  Potatoes,— Y..  Paul,  Dedham,  1st  premium, 
$2  ;  Ileiny  Bird,  Stoughton,  2d,  1. 

Best  Half  Bushel  Timvps. — E.  Paul,  Dedham,  1st  premium,  $2; 
J.  H.  Farrington,  Milton,  2d,  1. 


^7 

Best  Half  Bushel  Carrots, — -Tlios.  B.  Griggs,  Brookline,  1st 
premium,  ^2  ;  A.  F.  Stevens,  Needham,  2d,  1. 

Best  Half  Bushel  Beets, — E.  Paul,  Dedham,  1st  premium,  $2  ; 
John  Vose,  Hj'de  Park,  2d,  1. 

Best  Half  Bushel  Tomatoes, — John  Vose,  Hyde  Park,  Ist  pre- 
mium, $2  ;  B.  C.  Vose,  Hyde  Park,  2d,  1. 

Best  Half  Bushel  Onions, — Allen  Colburn,  West  Dedham,  1st 
premium,  $2. 

Best  Half  Bushel  Parsnips, — A.  F.  Stevens,  Needham,  1st  pre" 
mium,  S2  ;  Thos.  B.  Griggs,  Brookline,  2d,  1. 

Best  Two  Quarts  Lima  Beans, — B.  C.  Vose,  Hyde  Park,  1st 
premium,  ^2  ;  John  Vose,  Hyde  Park,  2d,  1. 

Four  Best  Drumhead  Cabbages. — Allen  Colburn,  West  Dedham, 
1st  premium.  $2  ;  John  Vose,  Hyde  Park,  2d,  1. 

Four  Best  Caulifloioers, — Allen  Colburn,  West  Dedham,  1st  pre- 
mium, $2. 

Best  Dozen  Celery, — Thos.  B.  Griggs,  Brookline,  1st  premium, 

Four  Best  Marroto  Squash, — Timothy  Corey,  Brookline,  1st  pre- 
mium, $2. 

Four  Best  Canada  Crooked  Neck  Squash, — E.  Paul,  Dedham, 
1st  premium,  $2. 

Four  Best  Pumpkins, — A.  Hunt,  Milton,  1st  premium,  $2. 

Four  Best  Watermelons. — John  Vose,  Hyde  Park,  1st  premium, 
$2  ;  D.  F.  Decatur,  West  Dedham,  2d,  1. 

Twelve  Ears  Best  Sweet  Corn, — D.  F.  Decatur,  West  Dedham, 
1st  premium,  %2;  S.  S.  Somes,  Milton,  2d,  1. 

The  Committee  were  pleased  to  be  able  to  report  a  very  large 
and  fine  display  of  vegetables. 


William  J.  Hyde,        )  ., 

David  F.  Henderson,  r^'^'^^^^^^' 


PEARS. 


Twenty  Varieties — No  competitors. 

Ten  Fam^tes— Joshua  W.  Vose,  Milton,  1st  premium,  $8  ;  John 
L.  Bird,  Dorchester,  2d.  premium,  6  ;  B.  F.  Radford,  Hyde  Park, 
3d  premium,  4. 


28 

Five  Varieties — Edward  Sumner,  Dedham,  1st  premium,  $6  ; 
Cyrus  Curtice,  Jamaica  Plain,  '2d  premium,  4 ;  W.  J.  Griggs, 
Brookline,  3d,  2. 

SINGLE     DISHES. 

Bartlett — Rufus  P.  Sumner,  Milton,  1st  premium,  S2 ;  J.  D. 
Bradlee,  Milton,  2d  premium,  1. 

Beurre  d'Anjou — A.  D.  Capen,  Dorchester,  1st  premium,  S2  ; 
J.  J.  Raynes,  Hyde  Park,  2d  premium,  1. 

Urhaniste — F.  &  L.  Clapp,  Dorchester,  1st  premium,  S2  ;  Horace 
Eaton,  Quincy,  2d,  1. 

Merriam — Col.  Theodore  Lyman,  Brookline,  1st  premium,  $2  ; 
Lucius  Clapp,  Stoughton,  2d  premium,  1. 

Louise  Bonne  de  Jersey — J.  H.  Spear,  Quincy,  1st  premium,  $2  ; 
Col.  Theodore  Lyman,  Brookline,  2d  premium,  1. 

Vicar  of  Winlcjield — A.  W.  Benton,  Brookline,  1st  premium  $2  ; 
J.  D.  Bradlee,  Milton,  2d  premium,  1. 

Duchesse  d'Angouleme — J.  J  Raynes,  Hyde  Park,  1st  premium, 
$2  ;  J.  M.  Williams,  Hyde  Park,  2d  premium,  1  ; 

SecMe—J.  S.  Whitney,  Brookline,  1st  premium,  82  ;  J.  H.  Far- 
rar,  Jamaica  Plain,  2d  premium,  1. 

Onondaga — F.  &  L.  Clapp,  Dorchester,  1st  premium,  $2;  J.  D. 
Bradlee,  Milton,  2d  premium,  1. 

Sheldon — A.  W.  Benton,  Brookline,  1st  premium,  $2  ;  R.  P. 
Sumner,  Milton,  2d  premium,  1. 

Beurre  Bosc — J.  W.  Page,  Jamaica  Plain,  1st  premium,  $2 ; 
Russell  Churchill,  Milton,  2d  premium,  1. 

Beurre  Clairgeau — F.  &  L.  Clapp,  Dorchester,  1st  premium  $2  ; 
J.  W.  Talbot,  Norwood,  2d  premium,  1. 

Lawrence — Col.  Theodore  Lyman,  Brookline,  1st  premium,  $2  ; 
John  L.  Bird,  Dorchester,  2d  premium,  1. 

Winter  Nelis — Col.  Theodore  Lyman,  Brookline,  1st  premium, 
S2. 

Buffum — Joshua  W.  Vose,  Milton,  1st  premium,  $2 ;  J.  H. 
Spear,  Quincy,  2d  premium,  1. 

Maria  Louise, — Col.  Theodore  Lyman,  Brookline,  1st  premium, 
$2  ;  Timothy  Smith,  Dedham,  2d  premium,  1  ; 

Dana's  Hovey — Col.  Theodore  Lyman,  Brookline,  1st  premium, 


29 

Mount  Vernon— E.  Reed,  Hyde  Park,  1st  premium,  $2. 
n.  du  Cornice— 3.  J.  R&yues,  Hyde  Park,  2d  premium,  $1. 
Fulton — John  L.  Bird,  Dorchester,  $1  ; 
Fig's— Thomas  P.  Swift,  Hyde  Park,  $1. 

E.  C.  R.  Watker,  Chairman. 

APPLES. 

Twelve  Varieties—Best  collection— F,  &  L.  Clapp,  Dorchester, 
1st  premium,  $12. 
Five  Varieties— Besi  collection— F.  &  L.  Clapp,  Dorchester,  $5. 

SINGLE  DISHES. 

Baldwins— 3 ^mes  Brack,  Milton,  1st  premium,  $2  ;  John  L. 
Bird,  Dorchester,  2d  premium,  1. 

R.  I.  Greenings— C  L.  Copeland,  Milton,  1st  premium,  $2  ;  F. 
&  L.  Clapp,  Dorchester,  2d  premium,  1. 

Gravenstein—F.  &  L.  Clapp,  Dorchester,  1st  premium,  $2; 
Charles  Stearns,  Brookline,  2d  premium,  1. 

Hubhardston  Nonsuch— C.  L.  Copeland,  Milton,  1st  premium, 
$2  ;  Sumner  Bagley,  Norwood,  2d  premium,  1. 

Roxhury  Ricssetts—F.  &  L.  Clapp,  Dorchester,  1st  premium, 
$2  ;  John  L.  Bird,  Dorchester,  2d  premium,  1. 

Porter— J.  D.  Bradlee  &  Co.,  Milton,  1st  premium,  $2 ;  James 
Breck,  Milton,  2d  premium,  1. 

Tolman  Sweet— Joshua  W.  Vose,  Milton,  1st  premium,  $2 ;  F. 
&  L.  Clapp,  Dorchester,  2d  premium,  1. 

Seaver  Sweet— Joahns.  W.  Vose,  Milton,  1st  premium,  $2. 

Gilli-Floioer—Mvs.  Elkins,  Milton,  2d  premium,  $1. 

Mw  York  Ritssett—C.  L.  Copeland,  Milton,  1st  premium,  $2. 

Winter  Sweet— Charles  Stearns,  Brookline,  1st  premium,  $2. 

Crab  Apples— The  Committee  recommend  the  following  gratui- 
ties : — 

Emery  Hawes,  North  Stoughton,  for  single  dish  containing 
more  than  the  number  required  by  the  schedule,  $1. 

Thomas  P.  Swift,  Hyde  Park,  for  dish  of  crab-apples,  $1. 

George  Vose,  Chairman. 


30 

GRAPES  AND  OTHER  FRUITS. 

Native  Grcqjes — Best  collection — Horace  Eaton,  Quincy,  1st 
premium,  $4  ;  Edwin  Reed,  Hyde  Park,  2d  premium,  3. 

SINGLE    DISHES. 

Delaware — Horace  Eaton,  Quincy,  1st  premium,  S2  ;  J.  W.  Tal- 
bot, Norwood,  2d  premium,  $\  ;  B.  C.  Vose,  Hyde  Park,  gratuity, 
50  cents. 

Diana — R.  W.  Sumner,  Milton,  1st  premium,  $2  ;  J.  W.  Talbot, 
Norwood,  2d  premium,  1. 

Concord — J.  "W.  Talbot,  Norwood,  1st  premium,  $2  ;  C.  S. 
Locke,  West  Dediiam,  2d  premium,  1 ;  B.  C.  Vose,  Hyde  Park, 
gratuity,  50  cents. 

Agaivam — C.  S.  Locke,  West  Dedliam,  1st  premium,  $2  ;  C.  F. 
Holt,  Hyde  Park,  2d  premium,  1  ;  J.  W.Talbot,  gratuity,  50  cents. 

Allen  Hybrid — Chas.  Spring,  Hyde  Park,  1st  premium,  $2. 

Eumelan — Horace  Eaton,  Quincy,  1st  premium,  $2. 

Clinton — C.  S.  Locke,  West  Dedham,  1st  premium,  $2. 

Craveling — B.  F.  Radford,  Hyde  Park,  1st  premium,  $2. 

Peaches — Ebenezer  Paul,  Dedham,  1st  premium,  $3 ;  Mrs. 
Sarah  Watson,  Hyde  Park,  3d  premium,  1. 

Cranberries — Nathaniel  Gay,  Stoughton,  1st  premium,  $3  ;  Na- 
than Longfellow,  Needham,  2d  premium,  2. 

Quinces — Joshua  W.  Vose,  Milton,  1st  premium,  $2. 

N.  B.  White,  Norwood,  entered  one  dish  each  of  Norfolk  Mus- 
cat and  Amber  Queen  grapes  for  special  premiums,  as  seedlings  as 
equal  to  or  better  than  Isabella,  and  ripening  at  or  before  the  middle 
of  September.  It  was  the  unanimous  vote  of  the  committee  that 
neither  variety  came  up  to  the  requirements,  and  they  therefore 
withheld  the  premium. 

Abel  F.  Stevens,  Chairman. 


FLOWERS. 


Pot  Plants— E.  Roberts,  Hyde  Park,  1st  premium,  $10  ;    B.  C 
Vose,  Hyde  Park,  2d,  5. 


31 

Cut  Flotvers — John  Vose,  Milton,  1st  premium,  $i ;  N.  T. 
Davenport,  IMiltou,  2cl,  3. 

Bouquets — B.  C.  Vose,  Hyde  Park,  1st  premium,  $4 ;  James  D. 
Davenport,  Milton,  2d,  3. 

Dahlias — Miss  M.  B.  Leseur,  Hyde  Park,  2d  premium,  $1  ; 

Gratuities — N.  T.  Davenport,  Milton,  for  rose-buds,  $2  ;  Miss 
Helen  A.  Fisk,  Hyde  Park,  for  one  basket  of  flowers,  1  ;  Mrs.  B. 
C.  Vose,  Hyde  Park,  one  basket  of  flowers,  1  ;  Miss  Fanny  Staples, 
Oakdale,  two  baskets  of  flowers,  1  ;  John  Vose,  Milton,  seedling 
verbenas,  1  ;  Mrs.  M.  B.  Leseur,  Hyde  Park,  one  bouquet,  50 
cents  ;  Mr.  W.  Briggs,  Brookline,  dahlias  and  one  bouquet,  50 
cents. 

A.  K.  Teelk,  Chairman. 


BREAD. 


Mhrat — Mrs.  Henry  Blackman,  Necdham,  1st  premium,  $3  ; 
Mrs.  Nathaniel  Gay,  Stoughton,  2d  premium,  2. 

Unbolted  MHieat — Mrs.  Nathaniel  Gay,  Stoughton,  1st  premium, 
$3  ;  Mrs.  B.  N.  Sawin,  Dover,  2d  premium,  2. 

Eye  and  Indian — Mrs.  Nathan  Longfellow,  Needham,  1st 
premium,  $3  ;  Mrs.  Charles  Blackman,  Needham,  2d  premium,  3. 

J.   White  Belcher,  Chairman. 


honp:y. 


Mrs.  W.  U.  Fairbairn,  Hyde  Park,   1st  premium,    $2;  William 
Eldridge,  Canton,  2d  premium,  1. 

J.  White  Belcher,  Chairman. 


DAIRY. 


James  R.  Fisher,  Norwood  best  box  of  butter,  1st  premium,  $5  ; 
The  Blue  Hill  Stock  Farm,  2d  premium,  3  ;  Mrs.  Lucius  Clapp, 
Stoughton,  3d  premium,  2. 


32 

No  stntcmcnt,  snch  as  required,  was  presented  with  the  butter 
of  Mr.  Fisher,  otherwise  he  might  have  been  entitled  to  a  premium 
offered  for  the  best  produce  of  butter.  The  samples  presented 
were  fewer  than  usual,  but  of  very  good  quality.  No  cheese  was 
offered. 

M.  M.  Fisher,  Committee. 


PICKLES,  PRESERVES,  &c. 

Mrs.  John  Vose,  Milton,  for  collection  of  16  jars  preserved  fruit, 
1st  premium,  $5  ;  Mrs.  Edward  Sumner,  Dedham,  for  collection  of 
13  jars  canned  fruit,  2d,  3  ;  Mrs.  J.  W.  Talbot,  Norwood,  for  col- 
lection of  11  jars  preserved  fruit,  3d,  2 ;  Mrs.  R,  W.  Sumner, 
Milton,  for  6  jars  of  mixed  pickles,  gratuity,  1. 

Mrs.  Massena  B.  Soutiiworth,  )  ^         ., , 
Mrs.  Annie  B.  Thacher,  }  Committee. 


SEEDS. 

Adam  Mackintosh,  Canton,  seed  corn,  1st  premium,  $2  ;  J.  B. 
Tilley,  Brookline,  2d,  1. 

G.  E.  Chickering,  \ 

J.  N.  Smith,  >  Committee. 

E.  L.  Mann,  ) 


STRAW  WORK. 


Mrs.  Sally  Boyden,  Foxboro',  for  one  lot   of  Straw  Braid,  200 
yards,  1st  premium,  $5. 

Chas.  C.  Sumner,  Chairman. 


CARRIAGES,  WAGONS,  &c. 

To  C.  S.  Harper  of  Sharon,   for  best  Brewster  road  wagon,  1st 
premium,  $5. 


33 

To  C.  S.  Harper  of  Sharon,  for  one  horse   family  carriage,    2rl 
premium,  S3. 

G.  K.  Gannett,    \ 

S.   Carroll,  >  Committee, 

Geo,   Vose,  ) 


CABINETS  OF  BIRDS  AND  INSECTS. 

Your  committee  on  birds  and  insects  find  but  two  entries  which 
come  strictly  under  their  jurisdiction. 

Geo,  E.  Brown,  Dedham,  presented  an  ornamental  case  of  stuff- 
ed birds  and  animals,  which  reflect  much  credit  on  the  skill  and 
taste  of  the  exhibitor,  and  to  whom  we  recommend  the  2d  pre- 
mium of  63. 

There  was  but  one  entry  of  insects,  and  these  were  evidently 
not  of  a  recent  collection,  as  many  of  the  specimens  were  much 
faded  and  injured  by  exposure  to  light  and  atmospheric  influences. 
To  the  exhibitor,  Mr,  F,  F.  Brown,  Dedham,  we  award  the  3d 
premium  of  $1. 

The  rules  of  the  society  require  that  all  entries  made  in  this 
department  shall  be  properly  arranged  and  classified,  and  it  is 
hoped  that  in  future  this  rule  will  be  more  strictly  observed  by 
competitors. 

To  Mr,  Charles  Mansfield,  Wellesley,  who  exhibited  a  collection 
of  about  50  birds'  eggs,  each  of  a  dirferent  name  and  variety,  your 
committee  would  recommend  a  gratuity  of  Si.  Your  committee 
are  pleased  to  find  this  year  a  novelty  presented  for  their 
notice  in  the  way  of  a  swarm  of  bees  in  working  condition,  con- 
fined in  a.  hive  of  glass  and  black  walnut,  so  arranged  that  it 
may  be  kept  in  the  house  as  a  parlor  ornament ;  a  constant  source 
of  entertiiinment  and  instruction,  aside  from  pecuniary  considera- 
tions. We  award  to  the  exhibitor,  Mr.  Charles  F.  Holt,  Hyde 
Park,  a  gratuity  of  S2. 

A.  W.  Cheever,  for  the  Committee. 


DOMESTIC  MANUFACTURES. 

To  George  H.  Mansfield   &  Co.  of  South  Canton,  the  Society's 


34 

Diploma,  for  their  large  and  valuable  display  of  braided  silk  and 
linen  fish  lines,  that  will  gladden  the  heart  of  any  disciple  of  Ike 
Walton. 

To  Walker  &  Phinney  of  Stoughton,  the  Society's  Diploma,  for 
their  exhibition  of  boot  and  Shoe  lasts  of  superior  workmanship. 
From  appearances  there  is  no  reason  why  any  one  should  suffer 
from  a  bad  fitting  boot  in  the  future. 

To  S.  C.  &  1.  G.  Phinney  of  Stoughton,  the  Society's  Diploma, 
for  patent  boot  and  shoe  counters  and  soles.  A  very  good  evidence 
that  there  is  to  be  no  more  "  running  down  at  the  heel,"  however 
hard  the  times  may  be. 

To  I.  H.  SuUavvay  of  Boston,  General  Agent  for  Morse's  Rol- 
ling Lug,  the  Society's  Diploma.  An  ingenious  invention  and 
remetly  long  sought  for  by  every  owner  of  a  horse  and  carriage, 
to  prevent  the  sudden  destruction  of  the  saddle  and  injury  to  the 
horse. 

To  Russell  Pratt  of  North  Easton,  the  Society's  Diploma,  for 
his  "  American  dish  lifter."  The  wonderful  adaptability  of  this 
simple  contrivance  to  grasp  every  form  of  utensil  used  by  the  house- 
wife al)out  a  heated  stove  is  truly  surprising. 

To  E.  R.  Jones  of  Boston,  for  his  fruit  and  vegetable  knife, 
the  Society's  Diploma.  A  very  simple  and  therefore  valuable  arti- 
cle for  the  kitchen,  with  a  gauge  easily  adjusted  to  any  required 
thickness  and  no  danger  of  getting  out  of  order  ;  it  is  ever  ready 
for  use. 

To  the  New  England  Awl  &  Needle  Co.  of  West  Medway,  for 
their  exhil)ition  of  sample  card  of  machine  and  haiad  awls  made  by 
tliem,  the  Society's  Diploma.  The  peculiarity  of  their  manufac- 
tory consists  in  workingall  their  several  parts  by  machinery  and 
they  are  never  over-heated  to  destroy  their^quality  and  are  uniform 
in  temper. 

To  Willard  Lewis  of  Walpole,  the  Society's  Diploma,  and  we 
are  happy  to  say  a  good  word  in  favor  of  his  anti-moth  carpet  lin- 
ing, luiving  used  and  proved  the  same.  A  valuable  article  to 
every  housekeeper. 

To  Charles  B.  Tower  &  Co..  Hyde  Park,  we  award  the  Society's 
Diploma,  for  his  case  of  writing  inks  and  mucilage,  and  we  can  say 
his  samples  used  by  the  society  proved  a  superior  article. 

To  the  Brainard  Milling  Machine  Co.,  of  Hyde  Park,  the  Socie- 
ty's Diplom;i,  tor  their  samples  of  bench  vises  for  the  machine  shop. 
A  sul)stantial  and  n;'atly  made  article. 


:}5 

To  Josiali  TiscUile  of  NorwooU,  who  dis[)hiyed  his  patent  treadle 
for  the  sewing  machine  the  Society's  Diploma,  and  we  are  glad  to 
say  it  is  an  improvement  over  his  former  exhibitions,  having  over- 
come its  previous  imperfections. 

To  Timothy  Smith  of  Dedham,  an  exhibitor  of  Manual  and 
Drake  Spring  Bed,  the  Society's  Diploma.  Mr.  Smith  is  proving 
himself  to  be  an  indefatigable  worker  for  the  comfort  of  liis  fellow- 
men  in  furnishing  substantial  and  comfortable  beds. 

Your  committee  desire  to  thank  those  who  contributed  their  man- 
ufactures, for  we  duly  appreciate  their  kindness  and  good  will  to 
the  Society,  and  regret  that  so  many  refrained  from  contributing 
where  when  we  had  every  reason  to  expect ;  and  hoping  they  will 
not  forget  us  in  the  future,  we  submit 

Respectfully  yours, 

Wm.  R.  Mann,  in  behalf  of  the  Committee. 


MANUFACTURES  OF  CLOTH,  &c. 

The  committee  award  to  Messrs.  Geo.  R.  and  Wm.  R.  Mann 
of  Sharon,  the  Societj^'s  Diploma  for  a  very  superior  bolt  of  Cot- 
ton Duck  foundation  to  rubber  machine  belts.  To  the  efforts  of 
the  Messrs.  Mann  the  Society  are  under  lasting  obligation,  not 
only  for  tlie  fine  exhibition  in  their  own  special  branch  of  manu- 
facture, but  for  their  elforts  to  induce  other  manufacturers  to  con- 
tribute to  this  important  department.  A  little  of  the  zeal  and  en- 
ergy displayetl  by  these  gentlemen,  if  diffused  throughout  the 
county,  would  add  very  much  to  the  attractions  of  our  annual  ex- 
hibition. 

Charles  H.  French,  Chairman. 


LADIES'  WORK. 


Carrie  Watson,  Milton,  1  quilt,  Si. 

Mrs.  Mary  Snell,  Dedham,  2  quilts,  $1.50. 

F.  A.  Trowbridge,  Norfolk,  1  quilt,  Si. 


36 

Fannie  A.  Barr,  Dedliam,  1  quilt,  50  cents. 

Mrs.  Hannah  P.  Cook,  Milton,  1  quilt,  $1. 

Miss  Katie  Logue,  Randolph,  quilt,  $1. 

Miss  Josie  Breck,  Milton,  drawn  rug,  ^2. 

Mrs.  Samuel  Googing,  Dedham,  drawn  rug,  $1. 

Miss  Louisa  T.  Trescott,  Sharon,  tidy,  $1. 

Miss  Sophia  J.  Ellis,  Canton,  carriage  robe,  $3. 

Miss  Alice  L.  Tolman,  Walpole,  carriage  robe,  $2. 

Mrs.  S.  T.  Egan,  Hyde  Park,  wax  foliage,  $1. 

Mrs.  Charles  B.  Danforth,  Dedham,  wax  cross,  $1. 

Miss  Fannie  Harlow,  Hyde  Park,  quilt.  Si. 

Miss  Minnie  Spring,  Hyde  Park,  embroidery,  $1. 

Mrs.  J.  Walter  Bradlee,  Milton,  cushion,  $1. 

Miss  Annie  Chapin,  Hyde  Park,  hood,  50  cents. 

Mrs.  G.  A.  Harned,  Milton,  hood,  SI. 

Mrs.  Charles  H.  Merriam,  Milton,  needle  work,  $2, 

Henry  Harlow,  Hyde  Park,  cross,  Si. 

Miss  Alice  Tucker,  Milton,  tidies,  $1.50. 

Miss  Constance  Whitney,  Milton,  book  marks,  25  cents. 

Miss  Georgie  Sumner,  Milton,  card  case,  50  cents. 

Miss  Ida  Staples,  Dedham,  cornucopia,  50  cents. 
Mrs.  B.  C.  Vose,  Hyde  Park,  embroidery.  Si. 

Miss  H.  A.  Perry,  Hyde  Park,  embroidery,  Si- 

Miss  Nettie  R.  Farrar,  Jamaica  Plain,  handkerchief  box,  $1. 

Mrs.  J.  A.  Soule,  Readville,  Hyde  Park,  cushion,  75  cents. 

Mrs.  A.  M.  Stevens,  Milton,  cushion,  50  cents. 

Miss  E.  L.  Stevens,  Milton,  sofa  cushion,  Si. 

Mrs.  Nellie  Brown,  Oakdale,  slipper  case,  50  cents. 

Miss  Alice  Tolman,  Walpole,  scrap  bag,  50  cents. 

Mrs.  Leander  Britton,  Stoughton.  underclothing,  Si. 

Miss  Alice  Policy,  East  Walpole,  embroidery  $1. 

Mrs.  S.  M.  Wales,  Dedham,  home  made  linen,  SI. 

Miss  Clara  Tuttle,  Dedham,  toilet  sett,  50  cents. 

Miss  E.  Mosher,  Milton,  silk  patchwork,  SI. 

Miss  Almeda  Converse,  Readville,  French  lace,  50  cents. 

Mrs.  Warren  Ellis,  Norwood,  hair  work,  SI 

Miss  Marion  F.  Hall,  Hyde  Park,  tatting,  50  cents. 

Miss  Susie  Tisdale,  Sharon,  quilt,  $1. 

Miss  S^die  Morse,  Milton,  tidy,  50  cents. 


37 


Mrs.  Eugene  Sanford,  Hyde  Park,  paintings,  $2. 

George  L.  Crowd,  Milton,  cut  pictures,  Si. 

James  T.  Tibbets,  Readville,  writing  desk,  $1. 

L.  P.  Winchenburg  (ten  years)  drawn  rug,  $1. 

Mrs.  Wm.  H.  Fales,  Foxboro',  tidy,  50  cents. 

Roger  Sumner,  Milton,  wooden  pinchers,  50  cents. 

Miss  Katie  Bradlee,  Milton,  tidies,  75  cents. 

Mrs.  John  Crawford,  Readville,  knit  doll,  50  cents. 

Miss  Louise  Starr,  Hyde  Park,  50  cents. 

Miss  Helen  Fiske,  Hyde  Park,  needle-work,  50  cents. 

Mrs.  George  Haggctt,  Readville,  toilet  sett,  75  cents. 

Miss  Hoffman,  Randolph,  rustic  pictures  and  mats,  $1.50. 

Miss  Sarah  J.  Ellis,  Norwood,  card  case  and  match  box,  50  cts. 

Mr.  Geo.  Gould,  Milton,  picture  frames,  gratuity,  $1. 

Miss  Mabel  Morse,  Milton,  sofa  cushion,  $1. 

Mrs.  Mary  Carter,  Oakdale,  tatting,  50  cents. 

Mrs.  Harlow,  Hyde  Park,  pillow  shams,  50  cents. 

Mrs.  Samuel  Wales,  Dedham,  carpeting,  diploma. 

Miss  M.  B.  Lesseur,  Hyde  Park,  ancient  chair,  diploma. 

Mrs.  John  Vose,  \ 

Mrs.  Wm.  T.  Thachek,  >  Committee. 

Mrs.  Jesse  Vose,  j    . 


38 


Recapitulation    of    Pf<^emiums 


AWARDED  BY  THE 


NORFOLK     AGRICULTURAL     SOCIETY, 


FOK  1875. 


HORSES. 

Jason  Houghton, $17.00 

Wm.  T.  Cook,  (Foxboro),  12.00 

H.  R.   Bird,  .  ." 11.00 

W.  E.  Coflin, 10.00 

F.  B.  Ray, 10.00 

C.  A.  Bigelow, 10.00 

C.  L.  Copeland, 8.00 

J.  A.  Hutchins 7.00 

H.  W.  Tilton 7.00 

J.  Allen, 7.00 

A.  T.  Browne, 7.00 

J.  H.  Farrington, 7.00 

J.  Ware 7.00 

W.  T.  Cook,  (Milton),  .  .  7.00 

F.  L.  Gerald, 6.00 

Emery  Hawes, 6.00 

S.  C.  Ferry, 6.00 

D.  F.  Decatur 5.00 

C.  F.  Howard, 5.00 

D.  Kelley, 5.00 

J.  W.  Bradlee, 5.00 

John.  M.  Twitchell,  ....  4.00 

H.  Briggs, 4.00 

C.  H.  Heustis 4.00 

J.  W.  Hamblin, 4.00 

O.   Hodgkins 3.00 

W.  L.  Faxon, 3.00 

H.  Trowbridge, 3.00 


HORSES. — Extra  Premiums. 

R.  VV.    Hamblin, $70.00 

H.  Beckwith, 65.00 

T.  E.  Clark, 45.00 

S.  S.  Putnam,  Jr., 40.00 

J.   C.  Dyer, 40.00 

J.  A.   Paine 20.00 

S.  T.  Capron,  .......  20.00 

E.  G.  Perkins, 15.00 

Oliver  Deane, 10.00 

F.  B.  Ray, 10.00 

T.    Raymond, 10.00 

H.  C.  Turner, 10.00 

A.  T.  Holmes 10.00 

J.  W.  Reals 10.00 

J.  H.  Farrington, 10.00 

C.  S.  Harper, 10.00 

J.  W.  Bradlee, 5.00 

RURAL    SPORTS. 

John  Manning, .  $8.00 

A.  Thompson. 5.00 

Moses  Bass, 2.00 

PLOWING. 

Josiah  Ware $15.00 

Bigelow  &  Sawin, 15.00 


39 


William  Fales, 15.00  i 

Henry   Goukling, 10.00 

D.  F.  Decatur 10.00 

U.  L.  Pierce 10.00 

N    Farriiigton,  Jr 10.00 

Blackmail.  Bros., 5.00 

J.  Hutchins  &Co.,  ....  5.00 

S.  K.   Bayley, 5.00 

P.  McNamara 5.00 

WORKING  OXEN. 

S.  K.  Bayley, 10.00 

H.  L.    Pierce, 7.00 

BULLS. 

Napoleon    Harvey,  ....  $10.00 

ILL.  Pierce 10.00 

H.  L.  liacon, 5.00 

Geo.  S.  Fciry, 5.00 

K.  P.  Buroess, 5.00 

E.  M.    Carey, 5.00 

Thomas  Curley, 2. 00 

COWS. 

H.   L.  Pierce, $25.00 

H.  E.    Bacon lo.oo 

Charles  Faulkner, 10. UO 

Dennis  Muiphy, 10.00 

Henry   Chaftinr 7.00 

Edward  McKenna,    ....  5.0U 

J{.  C.    Vo.se 4.00 

C.  F.  Pepper, 4.00 

HEIFERS. 

H.  L.  Pierce $7.00 

E.  P.   Burgess, 6.00 

C.  M.  S.  C'hnrchilll,  ....  5.00 
Charles  S.  Sarofent,  ....  4.00 
Charles  Faulkner, 4.00 

D.  F.  Decatur, 2.00 

SWINE. 

N.   Farrington, $21.00 

J.  H.  Farrington, 20.00 

National  Sailor's  Home,  .  14.00 

E.  Cotter 12.00 

J.  H.   Davenport 4.00 

il.  W.  Tilton 2.00 

S.  K.  Bay  lev 2.00 


POULTRY. 

M.  I.  Ellis, 18.00 

J.  F.  Mooar 16.00 

E.  C.  Aklrich 12.00 

A.  F.  Stevens, 12.00 

A.  II.  Drake, y.uo 

J.  B.  Tilley y.OO 

Geo.  Miles, 8.00 

J.E.    Sherman, 7.00 

Francis   Codman, 5.00 

L.   E.  Gray 5.00 

W.    T.  Cook,    (Milton),  .  5.00 

David   Cartwright,   ....  3.00 

E.  P.    Cassell 3.00 

E.  Lunt, 3.00 

VV.  E.  Sumner, 3.00 

McLean   C.  Chuichill,  .   .  3.00 

E.  A.   Fluet, 1-00 

J.  H.  Barney 50 

VEGETABLES. 

K.  P.  Sumner, $20.00 

John   V(jse IG.OO 

James  Mackintosh,  ....  15.00 

J.  B    Tilley, 10.00 

E.  Paul, 8.00 

Alltn   Colburn 6.00 

Thomas  B.  Griggs,  ....  6.00 

W.  T.  Cook,  (Milton),  .  .  4  00 

William  McDonald,  ....  3.00 

B.  C.  Vo.se, 3.00 

A.  F.  Stevens 3.00 

D.  F.   Decatur, 3.00 

Timo.  Corey, 2.00 

A.  Hunt, 2.00 

S.  S.  Somes 1  00 

J.  H.  Farrington, I.OO 

Henry   Bird, 1.00 

PEARS. 

Theodore  L^-man, $11.00 

Josnua  VV.  Vose, 10.00 

John  L.  Bird 8.00 

Edward  Sumner, 6.00 

F.  &  L.  Clapp, 6.00 

B.  F.  Radtord 4.00 

Cyrus    Curtice, 4.00 

J.'  J.  Raynes 4.00 

A.   W.   Benton 4.00 

John  D.   I'.radlee, 3.00 

R.  K.  Sumner, 3.00 


40 


J.  H.  Spear, 3.00 

W.  I.  Griggs 2.00 

James  S.  Whitney 2.00 

A.  D.  Capen, 2.00 

J.  W.  Page, 2.00 

E.  Reed,  , 2.00 

Horace  Eaton, 1.00 

L.    Clapp, 1.00 

J.  H.   Farrar, 1.00 

Russell    Churchill,  ....  1.00 

J.  W,  Talbot, 1.00 

Timothy  Smith, 1.00 

T.  P.  Swift 1.00 

J.  M.  Williams, 1.00 

APPLES. 

F.  &  L.  Clapp $23.00 

C.  L.  Copeland, 6.00 

J.  VV,  Vose, i.OO 

James  Breck, 3.00 

Charles  Stearns, 3.00 

John  L.  Bird 2.00 

JohnD.  Bradlee&Co.,  .  .  2.00 

Mrs.  Elkins, 1.00 

Emery  Hawes, 1.00 

Sumner  Bagley, 1.00 

Thomas  P.  Swift, 1.00 

GRAPES  AND  OTHER  FRUITS 

Horace  Eaton, $8.00 

C.  S.  Locke 5.00 

J.  W.  Talbot, 4.50 

Edwin   Reed, 3.00 

E.  Paul, 3.00 

Nathaniel   Gay, 3.00 

R.  W.  Sumner 2.00 

Charles  Sprins:, 2.00 

B.  F.  Radford, 2.00 

J.  W.  Vose 2.00 

N.   Longfellow, 2.00 

B.  C.  Vose, 1-00 

C.  F.   Holt.    ........  1-00 

Mrs.   Sarah  Watson,  ...  1.00 

BREAD. 

Mrs.  Nathaniel  Gay.  .  .  .  $5.00 

Mrs.    Henry    Blackman,  .  3.00 

Mrs.  Nathan   Longfellow,  3.00 

Mrs.  Charles  Blackman,  .  2.00 

Mrs.  B.   N.  Sawin 2.00 

HONEY. 

Mrs.  W.  U.  Fairbairn,  .   .    $2.00 


William    Eldridge,  .  . 
DAIRY. 


1.00 


^5.00 
3.00 
2.00 


James  R.  Fisher,  .  .  . 
Blue  Hill  Stock  Farm, 
Mra.  Lucius  Clapp,  .  . 

SEEDS. 


Adam  Mackintosh,  ....    $2.00 
J.  B.  Tilley, 1.00 

FLOWERS. 

E.  Roberts $10  00 

B.  C.  Vose, 9.00 

John   Vose, 5.00 

N.  T.  Davenport, 5.00 

J.  D.  Davenport, 3.00 

Mrs.  M.   B.   Lesseur,  .  .  .  1.50 

Miss  Helen  A.  Fiske,  .  .  .  1.00 

Mrs.  B.  C.  Vose, LOO 

Miss  Fannie  Staoles,  .  .  .  1.00 

M.  W.  Briggs, 50 

PICKLES,    PRESERVES,    &c. 

Mrs.  John  Vose, 5.00 

Mrs.  Edward  Sumner,  .  .  3.00 

Mrs.  J.  W.  Talbot.  ....  2.00 

Mrs.  R.  W.  Sumner,  .  .  .  1.00 

STRAW  WORK. 

Mrs.  Sally  Boyden,  '  .  .  .    $5.00 

CARRIAGES,     WAGONS,  &c. 

C.  S.  Harper $8.00 

CABINET  OF  BIRDS  AND  IN- 
SECTS. 

Geo.  E.  Brown,  ......  $3.00 

F.  F.   Brown.  .  , 1-00 

Charles   Mansfield 1.00 

Charles  F.  Holt, 2.00 

LADIES    WORK, 

See  pages  35-G-7 $55.50 

$1500.50 


4:1 


Treasurei^'s   Repoi\t. 

C.  C.  Churchill,  in  account  with  Norfolk  Agricultural  Society. 

Dr. 

To  balance  Dec.  31,  1874 $1,153  34 

cash  of  uew  members 67  00 

"     "     Commonwealth 600  00 

"  proceeds  of  Fair,  1875 1,487  89 

"  from  all  other  sources 3,13156 

$6,439  79 

Contra.        Cr. 

By  cash  paid  incidental  expenses $2,997  63 

''        "     premiums 1,275  75 

"        "     Secretary's   Salary 100  00 

"        '♦    Treasurer's       "      100  00 

"        "    Interest  on  debt 1,852  34 

Balance  in  Treasury 114  07 

$6,439  79 

C.  C.  CHURCHILL,  Treasurer. 
Dedham,  Dec.  31,  1875. 


42 


r»    Tl    O    C    E    E    33    I    ISI    G    S 

on  the  occasion  of  the 
Ty/enty-Seventh       Annivee^sary 

OF  THE 

NORFOLK     AGRICULTURAL     SOCIETY, 

THURSDAY  AND  FRIDAY,  September  30th,  and  October  1st,  1875. 


Tlie  '27th  Annual  Exhibition  of  the  Norfolk  Agricultural  Society 
was  held  at  Readville,  on  Thursda}'  and  Frida}',  September  30tb, 
and  October  1st,  1875.  The  vreather  was  very  unfavorable  during 
both  days,  interfering  very  much  with  the  convenience  of  contribu- 
tors and  visitors,  and  causing  a  serious  falling  off  in  the  usual  at- 
tendance. This  result  was  the  more  to  be  regretted  as  the  display 
in  many  of  the  Departments  was  unusually  fine.  The  following 
is  a  brief  recapitulation  of  the  leading  features  : 

Of  Horses,  the  leading  contributors  were  Col.  Henry  S.  Russell, 
President  of  the  Society,  William  T.  Cook  of  Foxboro',  Francis  B. 
Ray  of  Franklin,  and  Wm.  E.  Coffin  of  Dorchester. 

Of  Stock,  the  principal  exhibitors  were  Henry  L.  Pierce  of 
Canton,  the  Lawrence  Farm,  by  Henry  M.  Mack,  Dorchester,  and 
Messrs.  Henry  Chaffin  and  Charles  Faulkner  of  Brookline,  H,  E. 
Bacon,  Walpole,  and  Edward  P.  Burgees  of  Dedham. 

Swine  were  exhibited  by  the  Messrs.  Farrington,  respectively  of 
Canton  and  Milton,  National  Sailors'  Home,  Quincy,  H.  W.  Tilton, 
Walpole  and  others. 

Of  Poultry,  contributions  were  made  by  M.  I.  Ellis,  Norwood, 
A.  H.  Drake,  Stoughton,  L.  E.  Gray  and  J.  E.  Sherman,  Foxboro', 


4;j 

J.  B.  Tilley,  Brookline,  J.  F.  Mooar,  and   K.  C.   AUliici!,   ilvd-j 
Park,  A.  F.  Stevens,  Needham,  and  olliera. 

The  displa_y  of  Fruit  was  in  many  rospects  tlie  largest  and  best 
ever  niu<le  by  the  Society.  Of  Pears,  Hon.  Marsltall  P.  Wilder, 
exhibited  114  separate  varieties,  not  ior  premuim,  and  contribu- 
tions were  made  by  John  D.  Bradlee  and  Joshua  W.  Vose  of  Mil- 
ton ;  Col.  Theodore  Lyman,  Brookline,  F.  and  L.  Clapj)  and  J.  S. 
Bird  of  Dorchester ;  Edward  Sumner,  Dedhum,  and  others.  Of 
Apples,  as  usual,  F.  &  L.  Clapp,  Dorchester,  were  the  leading  con- 
tributors, but  fine  displays  were  made  by  C.  L.  Copeland,  John  D. 
Bradlee  and  James  Breck,  Milton,  and  others.  Of  Grapes,  Horace 
Eaton,  Quincy,  J.  W.  Talbot  and  N.  B.  White,  Norwood,  and  C. 
S.  Locke,  West.Dcdham,  were  the  principal  exhibitors. 

The  display  of  Plants  and  Flowers,  owing  to  the  frosts  of  the 
preceding  week,  was  not  equal  to  that  of  former  years.  Yet  fine 
exhibitions  were  made  by  E.  Roberts  and  B.  C.  Vose  of  Hyde 
Park,  N.  T.  Davenport  aiid  John  Vose  of  Milton,  and  others. 

The  Show  of  Vegetables  was  of  unusual  excellence,  the  leading 
contributors  being  R.  P.  Sumner,  W.  T.  Cook,  Milton  ;  James 
Mackintosh,  Needhara  ;  Allen  Colburn  and  E.  Paul,  Dedham,  and 
others. 

The  contributions  of  Bread  and  Butter  v/ere  of  average  number 
and  quality.  Of  Pickles  and  Preserves,  a  fine  display  was  made 
by  Mrs.  John  Vose  and  Mrs.  R.  W.  Sumner,  Milton,  Mrs.  Edward 
Sumner,  Dedham,  and  Mrs.  J.  W.  Talbot,  Norwood. 

In  the  Department  of  Ladies'  Work,  the  contributions,  tliough 
not  as  extensive  as  on  former  occasions,  wore  tasteful  and  in  many 
cases  elegant.  ^ 

In  the  department  of  manufactures  the  display  was  uuicii  larger 
tlian  usiud,  embraciiig  specimens  of  the  famous  macliine  liolting 
from  Messrs.  Geo.  R.  &  Wm.  R.  Mann,  Sharon,  a  large  and  val- 
uable display  of  braided  silk  and  linen  fish  lines  from  Geo.  H. 
Mansfield  &  Co.  of  South  Canton  ;  patent  boot  and  shoe  counters 
and  soles  from  S.  C.  &  I.  G.  Phinney  of  Stoughton,  sample  card 
machine  and  hand  awls  from  the  New  England  Awl  and  Needle 
Co.  of  West  Medway  ;  anti-moth  carpet  lining  from  Willard  Lew- 
is of  Walpole;  writing  inks  and  mucilage  from  Charles  B.  Tower 
of  Hyde  Park  ;  bench  vises  from  the  Brainard  Milling  Machine 
Co, ;  carriages  from  C.  S.  Harper,  Sharon,  &c. 


44 

On  Thursday  forenoon,  the  Ploughing  and  Drawing  Matches 
took  place,  and  the  afternoon  was  devoted  to  the  examination  of 
contributions  by  the  several  committees  and  to  trotting  on  the 
course. 

On  Friday,  the  first  performance  was  the  cavalcade  of  all  horses 
on  exhibition  on  the  track.  At  12  o'clock  m.  a  procession  was 
formed  under  the  direction  of  Lieut  W.  B.  Fenner  of  Roxbury, 
Chief  Marshal,  which,  preceded  by  the  Sharon  Band,  marched  to 
the  tent,  when  after  prayer  by  Rev.  A.  K.  Teele,  D.D.,  of  Milton, 
Chaplain  of  the  Day,  the  President  of  the  Society,  Col.  Henry  S. 
Russell  of  Milton,  invited  the  company  to  partake  of  an  excellent 
and  substantial  dinner  prepared  by  L.  E.  Reed  of  Boston,  at  the 
close  of  which  the  orator  of  the  occasion,  Col.  Theodore  Lyman 
of  Brookline,  was  introduced  to  the  audience  and  delivered  the 
address,  which  will  be  found  in  full  in  the  opening  pages  of  this 
volume.  Brief  addresses  were  also  made  by  Col.  Marshall  P.  Wil- 
der of  Dorchester,  the  Honorary  President  of  the  Society  ;  Judge 
Edmund  H.  Bennett  of  Taunton,  delegate  from  the  State  Board  of 
Agriculture  ;  Edward  L.  Pierce,  Esq.,  of  Milton,  and  Hon.  Rich- 
ard Goodman  of  Lenox  ;  after  which  the  proceedings  in  the  tent 
were  brought  to  a  close  and  the  company  adjourned  to  the  track. 

The  races  on  the  course  began  at  2  o'clock  p.m.,  under  the  di- 
rection of  the  Judges,  Alden  Bartlett  of  West  Roxbury,  William 
E.  Angier  of  Milton,  and  J.  Freeman  Ellis  of  Stoughton,  and 
were  carried  through,  notwithstanding  the  showers  which  continued 
to  fall  during  the  afternoon. 

During  the  interval  of  the  races,  the  famous  stallion  Smuggler 
was  driven  around  the  track  much  to  the  satisfaction  of  the  large 
crowd  of  spectators.  During  the  afternoon  the  Hyde  Park  Fire 
Department  visited  the  grounds  in  the  course  of  their  annual 
parade.  Good  order  prevailed  during  the  entire  exhibition,  which 
gave  promise  of  being  one  of  the  best  ever  held  by  the  Society. 
But  rain  during  a  portion  of  each  day,  ending  in  a  pouring 
storm  on  the  second,  kept  away  many  visitors,  and  occasioned 
much  discomfort  to  all  those  Who  were  present. 

The  duties  of  Chief  Marshal  were  admirably  performed  by 
Lieut.  W.  B.  Fenner  of  the  Roxbury  Horse  Guards,  assisted  by 
Orderly  Sergants  C.  E.  Fox,  and  A.  W.  Carleton,  and  Coporals  F. 
H.  Gobs  and  John  Bleiler,  all  of  the  same  corps. 


45 


PFFICEI^S     OF     THE     SoCIETY,      1873. 


President  i 
HENRY  S.  RUSSELL of  Milton. 

Honorary  President; 
Hon.  MARSHALL  P.    WILDER of  Dorchester. 

Vice-Presidents ; 

HOxN.  OTIS  GARY of  Foxborough. 

ALONZO  W.  CHEEVER of  Wrentham. 

JOHN  QUINCY  ADAMS of  Quincy. 

ALFRED  W.  WHITCOMB of  liandolph. 

THEODORE  LYMAN of  Brookline. 

WILLIAM  R.  xMANN of  Sharon. 

Corresponding  and  Recording  Secretary: 
HENRY  O.  HILDRETH of  Dedham. 

Treasurer; 
CH AUNCEY  C.  CHURCHILL of  Dedham. 

Executive  Committee : 

E.  C.  R.  WALKER of  West  Boxbury. 

ALBERT  B.  BALCH of  MedfieU. 

CHARLES  F.  CURTIS of  West  Boxburg. 

AUGUSTUS  P.   CALDER of  West  Boxbury. 

WILLIAM  T.  COOK of  Foxborough. 

ELLIS   TUCKER 0/  Cariton. 

HENRY  M.    M ACK of  Dorchester. 

DAVID  W.  TUCKER of  Milton. 

ATHERTON  T.  BROWN 0/  Brookline. 

Finance  Committee  and  Auditors : 

IRA  CLEVELAND of  Dedham. 

WILLIAM  J.  STUART of  Hyde  Park. 

ELIPHALET  STONE of  Dedham. 


40 


GI 

ALVA  MOlilUSON. 
DAVID  11.  BATES. 

WILLIAM  J.   HYDE. 
GEORGE  GRIGGS. 

EDMUND   TUCKER. 
JAMES  T.  SUMNER. 

SOLOMON  J.  BEAL. 

LUTHER   EATON. 
ALLEN  COLBURN. 

LEMUEL  CLAPP. 
SAMUEL  J.  CAi'lCN. 
AARON  D.  CAPEN. 

HENRY  GOULD  IN  G. 
EPHRAIM   WILSON. 

JAMES  CAPEN. 
FRANCIS  D.  WILLIAMS. 

ERASTUS  L.    MKICALF. 
JOHN  W.  RICHAKD60N. 

EVE 

HENRY  A.  DARLING. 
WILLIAM  J.   STUART. 

CHARLES  C.  ^  SEWALL. 
ELIJAH  THAYER. 

WILLARD    P.   CLARK. 
CLARK   PARTRIDGE. 

ALBERT  K.    TEELL. 
LYMAN  DAVENPORT 


Board  of  Trustees. 
IIKLLINUIIAM. 
CORGE  H.   CROOKS. 
liUAlNTKL:L;. 

GEORGE   WALES. 
E.  A.    HOLLINGSWORTH. 
liUOOKLlNE. 

CHARLES  STEARNS. 
WILLIAM  J.  GRIGGS. 
CANTON. 

ADAM  McINTOSH. 
NATHANIEL  S.   WHITE. 
COIIASSET. 

ABRAHAM  II.  TOWER. 
DEDLIAM. 

JEREMIAH  W.  GAY. 
AUGUSTUS  B.  ENDICOTT. 

JOSEPH   E.   HALL. 
GEORGE  DORR. 
DANIEL  SFEAR. 
.  OVElt. 

BENJAMIN  N.  SAWIN. 
AMOS  W.   SHUMWAY. 
bOXiiOROUiiil. 

CHARLES  F.   HOWARD. 
JAMES  F.  LEONARD. 
FRANKLIN. 

HIRAM    W.    JONES. 
FRANCIS   B.    RAY. 
I10L]iU<;()K. 
RETT    E.  HOLBROOK. 

ilVDE  PARK. 

CHARLES  F.    GERRY. 
C.  L.  FARNSWORTH. 
MEDFIELD, 

ALONZO   B.    PARKER. 
R.    T.    LOMBARD. 

MEOWAY. 

WILLIAM   DANIELS. 
MILTON  M.  FISHER. 

MILTON. 

CHARLES  L.    COPELANl). 
JOSHUA   VV.    VOSE. 


47 


NEEDHAM. 


ABEL  F.  STEVENS. 
CHARLES  H.    MANSFIELD. 


WALTEll    H.    FISHEH. 
ERASTUS  DUPKE. 


JAMES  R.  FISHER. 
ISAAC   ELLIS. 


JOSEPH  VV.  ROBERTSON. 
LEMUEL   BILLINGS. 


H ENRY    B LACK M A N . 
JAMES   MACKINTOSH. 


NORFOLK. 


LUCAS   POND. 

GEORGE   E.    HOLBROOK. 


NORWOOD. 


JOSIAH  W.  TALBOT. 
SIDNEY  E.   MORSE. 


QUINCY. 


CHARLES    A.     HOWLAND. 
WILLIAM   L.  FAXON. 


RANDOLPH. 


J.  WHITE  BELCHER. 
WILLIAM  PORTER. 


ROLAND  WORTHINGTON. 
J.  AUSTIN  ROGERS. 
ISAAC  HAYDEN. 


ASAHEL   S.    DRAKE. 
LEWIS  W.    MORSE. 

LUCIUS  CLAPP. 
NENRY   BIRD. 

WILLARD   LEWIS. 
HENRY   M.    PLIMPTON. 


EPHRAIM  MANN. 
SETH  MANN,  2d. 


KOXBURY. 


JOSEPH  H.    CHADWICK. 
GEORGE   CURTIS. 
SAMUEL  LITTLE. 


SHARON. 


GEORGE   R.   MANN. 
THOMAS   DECATUR. 


STOUGHTON. 


ROBERT  PORTER,  Jr. 
ALBERT  H.   DRAKE. 


WALPOLK. 


EDMUND    POLLEY. 
NAAMAN    B.   WILMARTH. 


WEST  ROXBURY. 


ALFRED  S.    BROWN. 
JOSEPH  W.   PAGE. 


JAMES   HUMPHREY. 
ALBERT   TIRRELL. 

JOHN   F.   CO  WELL. 
EBENEZER   B.    PARKER. 


HAMILTON  J.   FARRAR. 
GEORGE   S.  CURTIS. 


WEYMOUTH. 


ERASTUS    NASH. 
JAMES   L.    BATES. 


WRENTHAM. 


CHAUNCEY   G.    FULLER. 
ROBERT  P.    GKANT. 


J^/^^ 


V  4 


>--»^_^l    4 


Vv