Showing posts with label Genealogy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Genealogy. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Postcards From a Lost Town: Enfield, Massachusetts

Before there was the Quabbin Reservoir, there was the Swift River Valley. There were the towns of Greenwich, Enfield, Prescott and Dana. There were the villages of Millington, Doubleday and Bobbinville. There were lives and people and parties and progress. There were farms and headstones, swimming holes and ice houses. Fields were tilled, palm hats were woven, game was hunted. The three branches of the Swift River were fished for their fruit and harnessed for their power. Largely settled by land grants awarded to the men who fought in the Indian Wars, this fertile Valley was home to some of the heartiest stock in New England.

Dave Robison of Chicopee is a descendant of that stock, that particular breed of Yankee who can tame a wild forest and make it a working farm, who can coax sustenance year after year from the rocky earth, who can build to withstand the ages and survive frigid and unforgiving Winters to see another Spring. Dave can trace his North American ancestry back to the settling of Plymouth and 22-year old English pilgrim William Bassett, who bravely dared to cast his fate to the winds and sail off to the New World from Europe, arriving on the Massachusetts coast aboard the 'Fortune' in 1621. One-hundred and fifty-two years later, in 1773, a descendant of William Bassett - also named William - moved his young family lock, stock and barrel to the central Massachusetts town of Hardwick from Norton. Perhaps the death of his son, Calven, just one week after the celebration of his second birthday in February of that year prompted the move to fresher pastures for 23-year old William, his 20-year old wife Anna (Lane) and his infant son, William. Tragedy is impetus for many changes.

William and Anna had four more children and lived to be 89 and 69, respectively. Remarkably long lives for the times and conditions they had to endure, including William's service in the Revolutionary war. One of William and Anna's children - the fifth one to be exact - Ephraim Lane Bassett, Sr., was Dave Robison's great-great-great-grandfather. He lived in Enfield for most of his life - including its ending - with his wife Tabitha (Newton). He was named after Anna's father, Ephraim Lane.

Ephraim, Sr. and Tabitha had nine children, all of whom stayed in the Enfield area and most of whom were disinterred from what were once thought to be their final resting spots and moved to Quabbin Park Cemetery in Ware prior to the flooding of the Valley, where they can be visited today. Their ninth and last child, Ralph Harmon Bassett, was Dave Robison's great-great-grandfather. The combination of long life-spans and prolific production of progeny blessing this old New England family ensured that pilgrim William Bassett's bloodline would feed the pulse of the New World and the West Central Massachusetts frontier for ages to come.

Dave has done extensive research on the Swift River Valley area as a by-product of tracing his family genealogy, the results of which can be seen at his awesome web site (link), and has graciously shared these old postcards that capture some of the never-again-to-be-seen sights of the town of Enfield with EWM to share with you. Thank you, Dave.



The church was the center of spiritual, social and political activity in nearly every early New England town. The Congregational Church was built on land donated by Captain Joseph Hooker in 1787 , the year that the precursor to the town of Enfield - the South Parish of Greenwich - was incorporated. Enfield would evolve from the South Parish, officially coming to life as a town February 18, 1816, on land carved from the acreage of neighbors Greenwich, Belchertown and Ware. Originally a somewhat mundane structure, the church wasn't crowned with a steeple until 1814, when it also received its belfry and bell. The same year, the building was turned so that its front door faced Enfield's Main Street. In 1873, the church got another face lift with the installation of the clock beneath the belfry, an improvement undertaken and underwritten by the town. The church fell to fire on August 2, 1936, a conflagration suspected to be arson that claimed the outlying chapel as well as the home of Mabel Haskell. The chapel bell survived the blaze, and in 1938 found a new home at the New Salem Central Congregational Church.



The Town Hall was the last building to be razed in the center of Enfield. On September 10, 1938, a final auction of goods and buildings acquired by the Massachusetts Water District Supply Commission (MWDSC) during property purchases and takeovers vital to the construction of the Quabbin Reservoir was held in this handsome building. Indeed, even the Town Hall itself was on the block, sold for the high bid of $550 to be hauled away forever, brick and beam. Enfield's last town meeting was held in the hall on April 8, 1938. Enfield's Town Hall is probably best remembered as the site of the April 27, 1938, Farewell Ball, "commemorating the passing of the Town of Enfield and Swift River Valley", held the evening before the town's dissolution and attended by as many 3,000 souls. At the stroke of midnight, McEnelly's Orchestra played Auld Lang Syne while weeping townsfolk held each other close on the dance floor. By the time the song was over, the town of Enfield had ceased to exist.



Education was important in Enfield. In 1854, the town had 271 students ages 4 - 16 attending class in eight districts. By 1890, the town's public library boasted a collection of 2,000 volumes. By 1892, Dave Robison's great-grandfather, Edward Bassett, had won Emma Tuggey's heart. The two were married on July 16th of that year. Tragically, Emma died of cancer in 1916 at the age of 45, taken too soon from her husband and children, including Dave's grandmother, Hazel Bassett, the second of six.



A picturesque hotel along the main drag completes many a small town in rural Massachusetts and the small town of Enfield was no exception, the Swift River Valley Hotel settling on its foundation across the street from the Post Office for many a year, playing host to the weary traveler. William Galvin was Proprietor of the establishment when the Quabbin construction came.



The Enfield Manufacturing Company was established in the late 19th century and located near the center of town. With the use of hydro-power, the mill produced wool products and employed many local folks, including some of Dave Robison's ancestors.



The Swift River Company was the dominant business in Smith's Village, which was about a mile north of Enfield Village (the two of which comprised the Town of Enfield). Smith's was indeed a company-store type of arrangement, with most of the village's buildings and property - including tenement dwellings and houses occupied by company employees - owned by the Swift River Company. Expanded from property acquired from Packard Ford in 1822, founder David Smith included relatives Alvin and Alfred Smith in the mill's ownership in 1845, selling each partial interests. In 1852, the Smith's formed the Swift River Company, which continued under family control until 1913, when the property was sold. The mill was owned by the Federal Fabrics Corporation when it was sold to the MWDSC in 1926.



Known by locals as the "Rabbit Run" because of its frequent starts and stops at the multiple railroad stations along its trek through the Swift River Valley, the Athol Branch of the Boston & Albany railroad brought the world to Enfield and Enfield to the world on singing rails for more than six decades. The opening of the railroad in 1871 was a boon to Valley icemen, farmers and manufacturers, giving them access to consumers in Boston, Springfield, New York and beyond. Folks from the cities built summer camps and clubs in the newly accessible paradise and many local students took the train to school each day. Stations were located in: New Salem, North Dana, Morgan's, Greenwich Village, Greenwich, Smith's Village and Enfield. The railroad was dismantled in 1935.



Dave Robison's relatives were probably down there in town when this photo-postcard was taken from Quabbin Mountain. Before the flood. Before the drive of a Metro's unquenchable thirst - heartless in its need - turned a valley to a lake, homesteaders to gypsies.



Today, Enfield's voices whisper as ghosts beneath blue water. Go and listen...You will hear them.

Thanks again, Dave, for giving EWM a chance to share these images.

For more Quabbin history, check out the EWM exclusive feature, The Quabbin Page.

Thinking about visiting Quabbin? Take a look at the Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation's Quabbin page: http://www.mass.gov/dcr/parks/central/quabbin.htm for directions and more information.

As always, thanks for stopping by and take care.



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Saturday, December 8, 2007

Of Icemen and Presidents: Photos of Northampton at the Dawn of the 20th Century

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, in 1910, my great-grandfather, Robert Grant, was living at 61 Main Street in Northampton, Massachusetts, with his wife of six-years, my great-grandmother, Mary, and his three children: Martha, the oldest at 6 years old (and the little girl who was destined to become my grandmother), Helen, 3, and son Robert, 2. In a somewhat-chilling sign of the times, the Census Bureau in 1910 included on its form the queries, under the heading, "Mother of how many children": "Number born" and "Number now living." My great-grandparents, Robert and Mary, were three for three.

Robert's mother-in-law, the widower Mary Waldron, also resided with the young family at the time of the 1910 federal census. Apparently, there was some confusion on the matter of Mary's age on the census-taker's part - perhaps a reflection of Mary's eagerness to impress her vigor upon the clip-board wielding gentleman at the door? - we'll never know. But it is a bit odd that her age is listed as 58 in the year 1910, considering the same census page also notes that she emigrated from Ireland in 1850. Had she traveled as a twinkle in her mother's eye?

Robert was 32 in 1910, and he and his wife Mary, five years his junior, owned their home at 61 Main Street free and clear of a mortgage, thanks to Robert's job as superintendent of his half-brother William's ice company, Grant Ice Company. William Grant, twenty years older than Robert, had emigrated to the United States from the family homestead in Nova Scotia over 35 years prior to that Spring day in 1910 that the census-taker knocked at his younger sibling's door, and was proprietor of the well-established Northampton business by the time Robert headed south from the village of Upper Stewiacke in 1899. In 1905, Alfred Grant followed his older half-brother William and younger brother Robert to Northampton, and into the family business, and in 1910 was employed as a foreman at the ice company. The nation's future president and her 30th, Calvin Coolidge, was mayor of Northampton.

The 1920 census shows a grimmer picture of the life of the Grant-Waldron family. Robert and Mary have added two children to the tally, Mildred, 9, and Robert, 5. But two names are missing from the census page, the empty spaces heartbreak institutionalized. Mary has followed her mother into widowhood and mourning, husband Robert and son William having both passed in the past decade, the two censuses bookends of change.

Perhaps the elder Mary had given up her coy hedges on her true lifespan by the later census, for tragedy ages all, with no reverse. My great-great grandmother, Mary Waldron had lived to see 80 by 1920, the year Silent Cal was elected Vice-President.

The photographs below capture Northampton in the first decade of the 20th Century. From the the Library of Congress Detroit Publishing Company Collection, these are the streets and sights that were trod upon and spied by icemen and presidents.


Main Street, Northampton, Mass. (c1907)


Draper Hotel, Northampton, Mass. (c1907)


Post Office, Northampton, Mass. (c1907)


High School, Northampton, Mass. (between 1900 and 1906)


Forbes Library, Northampton, Mass. (between 1900 and 1906)
(Home of the Calvin Coolidge Presidential Library and Museum)


Public Library (Memorial Hall), Northampton, Mass. (c1907)


Court House, Northampton, Mass. (c1904)


Court House, Northampton, Mass. (c1904?)


Main Street and Court House, Northampton, Mass. (c1907)


For more on Northampton and the Grant-Waldron clan, and a look at the folks who were my forebears, check out the earlier EWM post, 'My Paternal Pedigree.'

As always, thanks for stopping by, and take care.



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Saturday, September 15, 2007

Surfin' the Western Mass. Web


Here's a collection of local web sites folks might find interesting. From history to sports, the arts to the outdoors, you'll find plenty to peruse surfin' the Western Mass. web!

(Updated: October 5, 2010)


* * *

The Arts


Early American Paintings: Chester Harding

"During his almost fifty-year career, which began in the frontier towns of Kentucky, Missouri, and Ohio and peaked in Boston in the 1830s, Chester Harding painted more than a thousand portraits." --From the Worcester Art Museum web site.

http://www.worcesterart.org/Collection/Early_American/Artists/harding/biography/content.html


Marlene Rye

"Travel in your mind back to a time as a child when you were in the “wilderness”: backyard, vacant lot, roadside, field, or forest. Remember how the world looked as you crawled through the grass, each individual blade becoming a towering tree, rocks transformed into mountains. Visualize looking through the brambles and thickets of your backyard and feeling the enormity of that space juxtaposed with the closeness of the surrounding branches. See a field, feel the openness of the air and the closeness of the warm ground beneath, expanding and contracting the space at the same time. These sensations are at the heart of my work." --Marlene Rye

http://www.marlenerye.com/


"One of the Primitive Sort": Chester Harding Becomes an Artist in the Early 19th-Century Countryside

"Chester Harding, born in Conway, Massachusetts, survived by working in a variety of country crafts as he related in his 1866 autobiography My Egotistigraphy." --From the History Matters web site.

http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/6476/

* * *

Blogs


Western Massachusetts Blogs (On-site link)

http://explorewmass.blogspot.com/2007/02/wmass-blogs.html

* * *

Commerce & Industry


A Millers Falls Home Page

"This page serves as the directory to an encyclopedic study of the Millers Falls Company for the years in which it was located in Massachusetts." --From the Millers Falls Home Page web site.

http://www.oldtoolheaven.com/


Peerless Handcuff Company

"Peerless® Handcuff Company was established in 1914 in Springfield, Massachusetts. Over eighty years later, the classic swing through design of the original Peerless® handcuff, continues to be the industry standard." --From the Peerless web site.

http://www.peerless.net/about.htm


Shop Western Mass
P.O. Box 303
Turners Falls, Massachusetts 01376
(413) 863-7752

"Welcome to Shop Western Mass, the first online store dedicated solely to products from Western Massachusetts!" --From the Shop Western Mass web site.

http://www.shopwesternmass.com/


* * *

Genealogy


New England Historic Genealogical Society

"Founded in 1845, New England Historic Genealogical Society is the oldest and most respected nonprofit genealogical organization in the country." --From the NEHGS web site.

http://www.newenglandancestors.org/


Western Massachusetts History & Genealogy

"Over the years—in conducting my own family research—I have collected interesting books and ephemera of a historical nature." --From the WMH&G web site.

http://www.westernmasshistory.com/index.shtml

* * *

History


Massachusetts Historical Society

"For more than two centuries the MHS has been collecting and preserving materials relating to the history of our commonwealth and our nation. The holdings of the MHS encompass millions of rare and unique documents and artifacts vital to the study of American history." --From the MHS web site.

http://www.masshist.org/welcome


Massachusetts Poorhouse History

"To provide a clearinghouse for information about 19th century American Poorhouses for ... history buffs, genealogists, teachers/students, and others with a similar interest."--From the Poorhouse Story web site.

http://www.poorhousestory.com/poorhouses_in_massachusetts.htm


Mt. Holyoke Historical Timelines

"The Mt. Holyoke Range is located in the Connecticut River valley of western Massachusetts. It is the home of the Prospect House, the original section of which was built in 1851 with several additions thereafter. Battered by the Great Depression and the Hurricane of 1938, the property was donated to the state. Today the renovated Summit House is the showpiece of Skinner State Park. I created the first version of this historical timeline when I was webmaster for the Friends Of the Mt. Holyoke Range. It is still a work in progress with much more material to add. Please send suggestions, corrections or material to Robb Strycharz." --From the Mt. Holyoke Historical Timelines web site.

http://www.chronos-historical.org/mtholyoke/index.html


The New England Anomaly

"The Journal of Unusual Folklore, History and Lifestyle in the American Northeast." --From the NE Anomaly web site.

http://www.newenglandanomaly.com/


Our Plural History: Springfield, MA

"Our personal history of people places and events makes each of us unique, but our plural history weaves a multifaceted fabric that is more beautiful than its individual threads. Explore Springfield's multicultural past and discover a new sense of place." --From the OPH web site.

http://ourpluralhistory.stcc.edu/


Pioneer Valley History Network

"Celebrating local history in western Massachusetts." --From the PVHN web site.

http://www.pioneervalleyhistorynetwork.org/


Raid on Deerfield: The Many Stories of 1704

"In the pre-dawn hours of February 29, 1704, a force of about 300 French and Native allies launched a daring raid on the English settlement of Deerfield, Massachusetts, situated in the Pocumtuck homeland. 112 Deerfield men, women, and children were captured and taken on a 300-mile forced march to Canada in harsh winter conditions." --From the Raid on Deerfield web site.

http://1704.deerfield.history.museum


Springfield-History.com: A Virtual Historical Society for the City of Springfield, MA

"We will present stories about Springfield's history, advocate for historical preservation, and provide a place for users to contribute their own knowledge of Springfield's past." --From the Springfield-History web site.

http://www.springfield-history.com/

* * *

Maps


Trails, Rails and Roads: Maps (On-site link)

http://explorewmass.blogspot.com/2007/02/maps.html

* * *

Miscellany


Old Man Scanlon's

Genealogy, whales, trains and more!

http://oldmanscanlon.com/

* * *

Museums


Museums of Western Massachusetts (On-site link)

http://explorewmass.blogspot.com/2007/03/museums-of-western-massachusetts.html

* * *

Nature


The Connecticut River Homepage

"A World Wide Web Site Containing Information About the Biology, History, and Geology of New England's Largest River." --Professor Ed Klekowski

http://www.bio.umass.edu/biology/conn.river/


National Wild & Scenic Westfield River

"From its origins in the Berkshire Hills in Western Massachusetts, the Westfield River links together historic villages, prime farmlands, pristine wilderness areas, and waterfalls and gorges of remarkable quality. In recognition of these “outstandingly remarkable” resources, over 78 miles of the Westfield River’s headwater tributaries and three major branches are designated as a National Wild & Scenic River." --From the WRWS web site.

http://www.westfieldriverwildscenic.org

* * *

News


Local News Sources (On-site link)

http://explorewmass.blogspot.com/2007/02/local-media.html

* * *

Photographs & Postcards


Classical High School, Springfield, Massachusetts

The Standard Electric Time Collectors' Photo Gallery

http://clockhistory.com/setclocks/classical_high/


Hampden County Postcards

"These postcards are from Springfield, Massachusetts, most were published in the early 1900's and are considered to be in the public domain." --From the HCP page.

http://www.hampdencountyhistory.com/springfield/postcards/index.html


The Houses of Springfield, Massachusetts

"Welcome to the Houses Of Springfield website. My name is Ralph Slate and I am a Springfield resident who enjoys the older architecture of the city. I've been collecting old photos of Springfield houses and thought it might be a good idea to make them available for others to see." --From the Houses web site.

http://www.housesofspringfield.com


ImageMuseum

"We created this site to collect, display and preserve historical images from cities, towns and places in Western Massachusetts (Hampden, Hampshire, Franklin and Berkshire counties)." --From the IM web site.

http://imagemuseum.smugmug.com


Joe's Wilbraham Photo History Page

"Here you will find possibly the largest on-line gallery of Wilbraham (Massachusetts, USA) photos that exists today." --Joe Roberts

http://www.rocketroberts.com/wilbraham/wilbhis.htm


Lisa's Postcard Page

"Welcome to my postcard page. I have tried to provide information useful to collectors whether they are old or new." --Lisa

http://www.lisaspostcards.com/

(Note: Not a local site, but chock-full of valuable information on postcard history. Trying to fix a date to a postcard? Visit Lisa's...)


Mornings on Maple Street

"A collection of articles, stories, photographs, the Lewis Hine Project, and much more by Joe Manning" --From the Maple Street web site.

http://www.morningsonmaplestreet.com/index.html


The Notch and Other Nearby Places

"I have fond Mountain Day memories of the Notch, a pass on Route 116. I've also included some views from Mount Holyoke (the mountain), and some other nearby views that didn't seem to fit in anywhere else." --From the N&ONP web site.

http://www.mtholyoke.edu/~dalbino/notch.html


Old Photos of Springfield, MA

"My photo collection and some old postcards of others." --From the Old Photos web site.

http://freepages.history.rootsweb.com/~dickbolt/Springfield.html


Old Postcards of Jacob's Ladder Trail

"Vintage Postcards of Jacob's Ladder Trail, Route 20, Berkshire , Hampden and Hampshire Counties, Massachusetts ; Includes Postcards of Becket, Chester, Huntington, Lee, Russell ,Westfield and Woronoco, Massachusetts." --From the Old Postcards web site.

http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~shirleyb/jacobsladder/index.html


Postcards at EWM (On-site link)

http://explorewmass.blogspot.com/search/label/Postcards

* * *

Sports


Westfield Wheelmen Vintage Base Ball Club

"Our mission is to educate, entertain, preserve, and promote the game of base ball as it was played during its formative years in the city of Westfield during the 19th century." --From the Wheelmen web site.

http://wwvbbc.tripod.com


William "Adonis" Terry - The Forgotten Legend of 19th Century Baseball

"Born in Westfield Massachusetts William Terry, nicknamed "Adonis," spent thirteen full seasons playing in the major leagues, had an amazing career, worthy of Hall of Fame recognition but he has been sadly overlooked. This site is dedicated to his memory." --From the William Terry web site.

http://adonisterry.tripod.com

* * *

Structures


Cinema Treasures: The Paramount

"Built in 1926, at a cost of over $1 million the Paramount Theater was the most ornate theater in Western Massachusetts in its glory days as a picture palace." --From the Cinema Treasures web site.

http://cinematreasures.org/theater/1261/


Historic Buildings of Massachusetts

"This blog will feature historic buildings from throughout Massachusetts, although right now the focus is on Boston, Cambridge and Salem." --From the HBM web site.

http://mass.historicbuildingsct.com/


The Hoosac Tunnel, Florida - North Adams, Massachusetts

"This website strives to be the most robust source of Hoosac Tunnel information on the Internet...On this website you will find old pictures, new pictures, historical information, and maps!" --From the HoosacTunnel.net web site.

http://www.hoosactunnel.net/index.php


Roads and Highways of the Pioneer Valley and Western Massachusetts

"This page specializes in routes and roads of Westfield, Springfield, Pittsfield, Lenox, Lee, Northampton, Agawam, and soon Williamstown, Greenfield, and other hilltowns like Blandford, Otis, Beckett, et cetera, with history and photos." --From the Roads and Highways web site.

http://homepage.mac.com/kefkafloyd/valleyroads/

* * *

Towns & Cities


Choose Springfield, Massachusetts

"Springfield, MA is known as "The City of Homes" because of its abundance of historic and contemporary housing." --From the Choose Springfield web site.

http://www.choosespringfieldmass.com/

* * *

To suggest a web site for listing on this page, please leave a comment or contact: explorewmass@yahoo.com.

As always, thanks for stopping by and take care.



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Saturday, May 12, 2007

My Paternal Pedigree

246 years ago, 61 year-old Robert Barnhill, his wife and family (including grandchildren) boarded the ship "The Hopewell" and made the perilous journey across the North Atlantic from their home in Donegal, Ireland to Nova Scotia, Canada.

Robert Barnhill was my paternal grandmother's great-great-great-great grandfather.

In the Spring of 1762, Robert, his son John, along with many other mostly Presbyterian Irish land grantees with names like Crowe, Baird, Wilson and Deyarmond, took up residence in Londonderry Township, in present-day Colchester County, Nova Scotia, and began farming the land.

They've been there for generations now.

Having lots of children was then and is still the norm in my family.

Robert Barnhill and his wife (whose name I haven't been able to confirm) had six children, all of whom resettled with them in interior Nova Scotia with their spouses and children.

Alexander Deyarmond and his wife Mary Barnhill, Robert's daughter, also had six children, three boys and three girls. Alexander was a farmer who settled in Isgonish, Nova Scotia, now known as Lower Belmont. He and Mary were married in Donegal, Ireland in 1755, when Mary was 17 and he was around 20.

Elizabeth Wilson, who married Alexander and Mary (Barnhill) Deyarmond's second-oldest son, John Deyarmond, in 1793, at the age of 18, came from a family of ten children. Not to be outdone, her and John had twelve. Elizabeth had her last child, Susan in May of 1821. She was 46. She lived to the ripe old age of 91, dying on August 23, 1866 in Isgonish, Nova Scotia.

Elizabeth's father, Thomas Wilson, was born in Ireland in 1745. He emigrated to Nova Scotia sometime before 1771 and settled in Masstown. Her mother was Mary McDormand, who was born in 1749 in Masstown and who represents the first generation of my family born on North American soil, 27 years before the American Revolution.

John and Elizabeth (Wilson) Deyarmond named their fifth daughter Letitia, after John's youngest sister.

Born in 1803 in Isgonish, Nova Scotia, and Christened in Masstown, Letitita Deyarmond was my paternal grandmother's great-great grandmother. She married Charles D. Graham, a fairly recent Scottish immigrant to Canada, in Burnside, Nova Scotia, in November of 1836. They got a late start at 33 years old each at the time of their wedding, but still managed to have six children.

Charles D. Graham was the son of Charles Graham, whose birth is recorded as in the Abbey of Dundrennan, Scotland, December 10, 1772, and Marian Hyslop, born on June 22, 1774, also in Dundrennan. He was the fifth of eleven children. Charles D. was born on April 20, 1803 in Stockings, Scotland, and died at the age of 83 on March 4, 1887 in Burnside, Colchester County, Nova Scotia. He and his wife Letitia, who lived to be 78, passing away on January 29, 1882, are both buried in Graham Hill Cemetary, Nova Scotia, where many of my ancestors rest for the ages.

Marian's parents were Andrew Hyslop, born sometime in the 1740's, and Margaret Donaldson, birthdate unknown.

Marian was 21 when she and Charles had their first child, Andrew, on January 13, 1796 in Robertown, Scotland. She gave birth to her tenth child, son George in the town of Rockfield in Pictou County, Nova Scotia in 1820, exact date unknown. She was 45 or 46.

Charles Graham, who had emigrated to Nova Scotia with his son Charles D. and other members of his family in the 1830's, was the second child out of six of William Graham, a Scotsman born in 1741, and Janet Kirkpatrick. William Graham died in Dundrennan on June 25, 1828. Depending on his exact birthdate, he would have been 86 or 87 years old. Janet Kirkpatrick was his second wife. William's first wife was Jean Gordon.

Charles D. and Letitia (Deyarmond) Graham settled in Burnside after their marriage, and, as stated before, had a family of six, both starting relatively late in life late at the age of 33 at the time of their marriage. My great-great grandmother, Rebecca, was born in Burnside in 1839, their fourth child and second daughter.

Rebecca Graham married Peter Grant on July 4, 1864 in the town of New Glasgow, Pictou County, Nova Scotia. Peter was born in 1826, presumably in Nova Scotia, to William and Catherine (Grant) Grant. Catherine was born in Scotland sometime in the area of 1789-1801, and died in Earltown, Colchester County, Nova Scotia on January 21, 1874. Peter's father William was born around 1796. Peter was one of eight children.

Peter's marriage to Rebecca was his second. His first marriage was to Christy MacKenzie, born in 1825. They had four children together. The last, John, was born around 1856.

Peter and Rebecca had seven children, giving Peter eleven offspring total.

They settled in Upper Stewiacke, Colchester County, Nova Scotia where my great grandfather Robert, their youngest son, was born sometime around 1875. Peter Grant would have been around 49 when Robert was born. Peter and Rebecca (Graham) Grant's youngest child, daughter Nellie M. was born in 1879, when Peter was 53 or so and Rebecca was around 40.

Robert Grant emigrated to the United States in 1899, settling in the town of Northampton, Massachusetts. He married Massachusetts-born Mary L. Waldron in 1904. Records show that they were married in Lower Stewiacke, Colchester County, Nova Scotia, Robert probably taking the opportunity to show off his blushing bride to his family back in Canada.

Mary L.'s mother was also named Mary and was born in the North of Ireland around 1840. She emigrated to the United States in 1860 and was married to Patrick Waldron, also of Irish descent and born in 1842. They spent at least a little time in Maryland, their oldest son John, having been born there in 1874 or so. In 1880, Patrick Waldron was employed as a laborer in Northampton, Massachusetts, and Mary was working as a housekeeper. In addition to John and Mary L., they had a middle child, son Thomas Waldron.

John, Thomas and Mary lived with their mother Mary for a time in a rented home on Smith Street in Northampton after she was widowed, and before Mary L. married Robert Grant. In 1900, when Mary L. was 21, she was working as a skeiner at one of Northampton's silk mills. Her brother John was a barber in Northampton as he would be for all of his working life. Thomas was a carpenter and worked as a millwright in various local factories including manufacturers of items as diverse as hosiery and boxes.

In 1910, Robert and Mary L. (Waldron) Grant were living at 61 Main St., in Northampton, Massachusetts, with their three young children, Martha, 6, Helen, 3 and William, 2. The oldest, Martha Violet Grant, was my paternal grandmother, born on March 18, 1904. Widowed mother-in-law Mary Waldron resided with them.

Robert and Mary eventually had two more children, Mildred, born in 1911 and Robert, born in 1912.

At that time, my great grandfather Robert worked as superintendant at his older half-brother William Grant's firm, Grant Ice Company, located in Northampton.

William Grant, Peter and Christy (MacKenzie) Grant's oldest son and second child, had come south from Nova Scotia in the late 1800's, settling in Northampton with his wife Martha. He ran a successful ice business and employed his half brothers Alfred and Charles, as well as Robert.

Charles W. Grant emigrated to the United States in 1894 and was a boarder with William and Martha for a time. He was a laborer.

Alfred S. Grant, his wife Mary and their infant son Donald moved to Northampton from Nova Scotia in 1905, and by 1910 had added two daughters, Marion and Genevieve to their family. Alfred worked as foreman at Grant Ice Company and rented a home at 20 Cedar Street in Northampton. He became a naturalized citizen of the U.S. in 1914.

William and Martha Grant often kept boarders at their home, including workers at the ice company. Norman Taylor was a boarder of theirs at South Street in Northampton and worked as a teamster along with fellow boarder William Mcgrath, driving the teams of horses that pulled the ice wagons.

Norman Taylor ended up marrying the second youngest daughter of Peter and Rebecca (Graham) Grant, Charlotte R. Grant, who came to the States in 1914, more than likely meeting her through her half-brother William, or brothers Alfred, Charles or Robert. They settled in Palmer, Massachusetts, taking up residence at 276 South Main Street. They had a son, Kenneth G. Taylor, in 1910. Norman and Charlotte owned Palmer Trucking Company in 1920 and also had boarders, including Charlotte's youngest sister Nellie.

My great grandmother Mary L (Waldron) Grant had a somewhat tragic life, with husband Robert being crushed to death by a Grant Ice Company ice wagon with his brother Alfred at the reins and her youngest child, son William, perishing after being struck by a car in Northampton while riding his bicycle. Both sad events happened sometime between 1910 and 1920.

In 1910, she and Robert had owned their home on Main Street in Northampton free and clear, in 1920, she lived in a mortgaged home at 19 Lassell (?) Avenue with her three children and 80 year old mother, Mary. By 1930, Mary L. Grant was renting a home at 57 Crescent Street in Northampton for $20 a month with her two laid off children, Mildred, 19, who when employed, worked as a stringer in a local hosiery factory, and Robert, 18, who usually worked for the Grant Ice Company as a chauffeur. In April of 1930, Mary L. (Waldron) Grant, who had not had to work while Robert was alive, was working as a laundress at a local college. She was 52.

My grandmother, Martha V. Grant, married my grandfather, Frederick Alamed in 1925.

My grandfather had emigrated from Portugal in 1920. His name when he first came to the United States was Fernando d'Almeida, but he had it changed to Frederick Alamed, probably in an attempt at Americanization. It is said that he was dashing and debonair and quite cosmopolitan. He drove a sportscar and dressed very well.

My grandmother was given a hard time by her family when she announced that she would be marrying my grandfather. He had very dark skin and she was warned that all of her babies would turn out black. To my grandmother's credit, she was undeterred and married him anyway. They had five fine and handsome children together, one daughter and four sons, my father the second youngest.

In 1930, Frederick and Martha Alamed were living in a home they owned at 198 North Maple Steet in Northampton and they owned a lunch room in town that Frederick operated. According to the 1930 census, their home was valued at $6400 and they owned a radio set, no doubt a technological necessity of its time.

Eventually, they would move to Westfield, Massachusetts, where they lived until their deaths. He served for a time as an auxiliary Westfield policeman.

My grandfather was an avid outdoorsman and had a passion for hunting and fishing. He made his own wine and Portuguese sausage in his cellar, which, like most Portuguese homes, had a full kitchen in the basement.

My grandmother was a superb cook of both Portuguese and Irish dishes. They had a traditional family and my grandmother never worked outside of the home.

She had a very "New England" drawl, "Ay-uh" being one of her favorite affirmative replies. Her superstitions rubbed off on me too, I knock wood and throw salt over my shoulder to this day, along with many other ancient evil-avoidance rituals she taught me.

Every so often, they would travel to Nova Scotia to visit my grandmother's relatives who remained there.

My grandfather died in August of 1975, the year he and my grandmother celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary. He was 71.

My grandmother stayed in the family home on Dartmouth Street for a time after my grandfather's death, but the upkeep of the house and her advancing age eventually led to her moving in with my parents, bless them, where she died peacefully in her sleep on January 8, 1995, not far from her 91st birthday.

Her and my grandfather are buried side-by-side in St. Mary's Cemetery in Westfield, Massachusetts.

As always, thanks for stopping by and take care.



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