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Typescript transcription of gravestone inscriptions of Dudley Cemetery.
Scenic sites and a proud community make Raymond the bucolic New Hampshire town it is today. The local cast of characters has its own unique story set in the heart of the Granite State. Local author Paul Brown has mined 250 years of town history, from the early settlement to the post-World War II boom. Search for the truth behind the conflicting stories of how the original Freetown became known as Raymond. Meet legendary locals like Dudley Tucker and dig into local legends like the mystery of Scud Lyman. The stories behind the Great White Rock and even Clint Eastwood connections color the history of Raymond. Join Paul Brown as he charts the remarkable course of Raymond history.
Offers a guide to the shrines, graves, and memorabilia of jazz, blues, country, rhythm and blues, and rock musicians.
This work is arranged by cemetery and plot, and includes information on Lakeview, Pine Hill, Hersey, Wolfeboro Center, North Wolfeboro and South Wolfeboro Cemeteries. It includes an every-name index, and an appendix with maps. In addition to the cemeteries listed above, family graveyards have also been researched. Some of the names included are: Tibbetts, Perkins, Cotton, Rust, Jenness, Nute, Avery, Brown, Smith, Young, Haines, Dudley, and more. The maps of the cemeteries are very detailed and have plot locations marked out. The entries include plot number, row number, and/or section number.
Caswell Carl Elkins (b. 1847) was born in Newberry, Indiana and married Martha Ann Phillipps (b. 1851) in Fairfield Missouri in 1871. They moved to California. Ancestors, descendants, relatives and allied families lived in California, Missouri, Indiana, Maine, England, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Nevada, Oregon and elsewhere.
Professor Wertenbaker here explains how the headright system, tobacco cultivation, and the importation of slave labor transformed the colony of Virginia from largely a society of yeoman farmers to a planter aristocracy.