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Knight's Mechanical Encyclopedia (ed. Knight) 10 0 Browse Search
Edward H. Savage, author of Police Recollections; Or Boston by Daylight and Gas-Light ., Boston events: a brief mention and the date of more than 5,000 events that transpired in Boston from 1630 to 1880, covering a period of 250 years, together with other occurrences of interest, arranged in alphabetical order 4 0 Browse Search
Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 1 1 1 Browse Search
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. 43,927PlanerAug. 23, 1864. 44,063AtwaterSept. 6, 1864. 44,382MeloneSept. 20, 1864. 45,278StackpoleNov. 29, 1864. 45,972CadwellJan. 24, 1865. (Reissue.)1,930Atkins et al.Apr. 11, 1865. 47111,129MacaulayJan. 24, 1871. 112,189SmithFeb. 28, 1871. 112,678BennorMar. 14, 1871. 112,747StackpoleMar. 14, 1871. 113,407DinsmoreApr. 4, 1871. 114,424DulaneyMay 2, 1871. 115,117SidenbergMay 27,536HarrisAug. 6, 1867. 79,983IsbellJuly 14, 1869. 88,665Parham et al.Apr. 16, 1869. 91,684StackpoleJune 22, 1869. 93,460MacaulayAug. 10, 1869. 94,384BlanchardAug. 31, 1869. 94,924SupleeSept. 5,535BromleyApr. 9, 1872. 127,982MerrickJune 18, 1872. 129,195WilliamsJuly 16, 1872. 129,761StackpoleJuly 23, 1872. 130,288FairfieldAug. 6, 1872. 136,626TiffanyMar. 11, 1873. 138,381ColesApr. 2868. 79,296AllisJune 30, 1868. 80,815EnholmAug. 11, 1868. 81,219ShiverAug. 18, 1868. 82,655StackpoleSept. 29, 1868. 91,327Garcin et al.June 15, 1869. 93,214MansonAug. 3, 1869. 95,069AyerSept.
Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 1, Chapter 8: early professional life.—September, 1834, to December, 1837.—Age, 23-26. (search)
as President of Antioch College, Yellow Springs, Ohio, from 1852 till his death. Sumner passed a day with him at the College in 1855. Sumner's social range in Boston was, at this period, quite limited; but the few families he visited were those on whose fidelity and sympathy he could always count. He was on a familiar footing in the houses of Hillard, Samuel Lawrence, Robert B. Forbes, and Park Benjamin, then living with his sisters, who afterwards became Mrs. J. Lothrop Motley and Mrs. Stackpole. Hillard's kind words had opened the doors of some of these houses to Sumner. Oliver Wendell Holmes, then a young physician, visited most if not all of these families. There was no want of good talking at a dinner or supper where Hillard, Benjamin, Holmes, and Sumner were gathered. Sumner was accustomed to call at William Sullivan's and Judge William Prescott's, both friends of his father; at Jeremiah Mason's, Samuel Austin's, and Mrs. James Perkins's. He frequented the rooms of M
1864 Ship Tavern, Noah's Ark, Ann street, built, 1646 Kept by John Viall, Vintner, 1655 Injured by an earthquake, 1663 Owned by Thomas Hutchinson, 1713 Purchased by the James family, 1794 Street widened, house removed, 1859 Stackpole, removed for Post-Office site, July, 1868 Triangular Warehouse, Roebuck passage, built, 1700 Merchants Row, removed, 1824 Williams House, Washington st., above Dover, removed, Sept., 1866 Old persons Aquitamong, an Indian, aged 1 State Arms, kept in King street, 1653 Star, corner of Hanover street and Link alley, 1708 Swan, kept near Scarlet's Wharf, 1709 Sun, kept in Corn court, 1727 In Batterymarch street, 1797 Salutation, in Salutation alley, 1731 Stackpole, kept in Milk street, built, 1732 Removed for new Post-Office, July, 1868 Spear's, kept in Purchase street, by Spear, 1789 Three Horse Shoes, kept near the Mall, 1732 Tant's, kept in Ann street, by Tant, 1789 Taft's, kept in Wing