Browsing named entities in Benjamin Cutter, William R. Cutter, History of the town of Arlington, Massachusetts, ormerly the second precinct in Cambridge, or District of Menotomy, afterward the town of West Cambridge. 1635-1879 with a genealogical register of the inhabitants of the precinct.. You can also browse the collection for Lemuel Blanchard or search for Lemuel Blanchard in all documents.

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t gallery: Messrs. Edward Gardner, Samuel Whittemore, the 3d, Thomas Russell, William Cutter, John Adams, John Swan, Seth Wyman, John Hutchinson, Aaron Swan, Lemuel Blanchard, Benjamin Piper, Samuel Butterfield, Caleb Hovey, Philemon Russell. The fore seat in the side gallery: Messrs. Zechariah Hill, William Hill, Capt. Stephen15454 Wm. Adams, jr.1721191311 Wm. Bowman17101051166133112179 Lt. Daniel Brown1711761263700146 Joseph Belknap178261269120220 Jason Belknap1718963220090 Lemuel Blanchard1743417651710194 Israel Blackington171176212167122 Israel Blackington, jr.171176212167122 Wm. Butterfield1711023121031010 Samuel Butterfield17312114241411ich he was unable to preach for five sabbaths.—Anniversary Discourse. 1790 Voted to choose a committee to assist Samuel Cutter, Jr., in a lawsuit with Lemuel Blanchard, which took rise on his making distress on him for a parish tax. That a committee of three persons be appointed to repair to the General Court, or any commit
lacks was regarded in the light of an annoyance. It was common in those times for the more wealthy inhabitants to own slaves. They were tenderly treated and well cared for, but the boys suffered with cold in winter when exposed to out-door work, and were lazy and faithless in summer. Thomas Adams, the father, with the younger children of the third wife, about the time of the beginning of the American Revolution, prepared to remove to his Cambridge farm at Ashburnham. As late as 1794, Mrs. Blanchard, his daughter, kept tavern in a house formerly his, in West Cambridge, on the old road to the colleges. The father of Gov. Hill removed in 1798 to Ashburnham, and the remainder of the article in the Farmer's Monthly Visitor is devoted to that place. By this woman my father had three children, and with my sister and myself mixed up with them made a large family, and a tavern continually filled with company of all grades—a poor place to bring up children, 1 guess you will say. But here wa
, Worc. Rec.) 22 Jan. 1744-5, died aged 104; and by third w. had Lydia, b. 20, bap. 24 Aug. 1755, Menot., m. first, Lemuel Blanchard, and second, Joseph Thorndike, Esq., Jaffrey, N. H., 30 July, 1795; Lucretia, b. 2, bap. 7 Aug. 1757, Menot., m. Ethwin of Charlestown, 20 June, 1784 (Chas. Rec.) See Wyman, 7, 419. Thomas the father is styled gentleman in a deed to Lemuel Blanchard in 1778. [See par. 19, for servants and others at his house.] Capt. Thomas Adams was a Pct. committeeman and assessckman, and settled in Cambridge.—See Lincoln's Hist. Worcester, 287, 294. Widow Fidelity Blackman of Camb. sold to Lemuel Blanchard in 1778, land with dwelling-house and barn, bounded on country road, the school-house lot or proprietors' lands, andand d. 25 June, 1841, a. 45. Oliver W. m. Sarah J. Warren, 17 Aug. 1842. (Oliver W. Blake d. 12 Oct. 1848, a. 29.) Blanchard, Lemuel, o. c. Menot. 2 May, 1779, had Thomas, b. 20 Apr., bapt. 2 May, 1779, and a son, b. 27 Apr. 1783. Lemuel the
, 131,137, 169, 192-93, 270, 280, 323, 334 Bell, 70, 191, 193 Bellows, 193, 331, 332 Bemis, 32,42,93,97,167-69, 178, 193, 200, 237, 247, 248, 252, 276,292, 298, 310 Benham, 340, 344, 345 Benjamin, 193, 218, 311 Bennem, 157, 340 Bennett, 193, 259 Bent, 193, 226, 266 Bernard, 53, 82, 90 Berry, 191, 193, 348 Billings, 288 Blackington, 18, 58, 61, 94, 95, 128, 193-94, 264, 293, 328 Blackman, 194, 219 Blackstone, 343 Blake, 154, 194, 239, 313, 334 Blanchard, 94, 96, 107, 150, 165, 184, 194, 221, 238,310, 343 Blasius, 153 Blodget and Blodgett, 58, 97, 105, 194, 248, 251, 260, 284, 292, 316 Blood, 223, 236 Bloxham, 359 Boardman, 194, 198, 239, 342 Bodge, 194, 199 Bonaparte, 111 Bond, 67, 122 Bordman, 2, 91, 194 Boutell, 195, 330 Bouton, 70 Bowdoin, 131 Bowers, 196, 216 Bowes, 33, 84, 92, 195, 204, 208, 268 Bowman, 58, 78, 95, 97, 108, 150, 167,168, 184, 195, 198, 204, 216,220, 222, 278, 290, 316, 32