The Westford Wardsman, September 8, 1917
Center. George F. White is having the house [at 62 Main St.] recently purchased by him painted white with green blinds. This handsome old colonial house with its careful modernizing adapts itself to this color scheme finely. Mr. White has had the west wing remodeled into an up-to-date sleeping porch. The cottage house occupied by his farmer is also being painted white.
Mr. and Mrs. William R. Carver’s little daughter Elizabeth has been quite sick this week causing them much anxiety. This of course has prevented her from returning to school for the opening of the fall term.
Mrs. Della Blood is sick at a Lowell hospital, where she recently underwent a serious surgical operation.
The fall term at the academy opened Tuesday morning with an enrollment of fifty-seven scholars, thirty-two girls and twenty-five boys. Mrs. Harold W. Hildreth [nee Edith M. Lawrence] is the third teacher, thus resuming the position she formerly occupied before her marriage and responding to the call for service just as much, even if in a different way from her husband drafted for service in the army.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Colburn went to Alton Bay, N.H., for the holiday to visit Mrs. B. H. Streeter. Starting on the return trip for home trouble with their auto obliged them to stay over another day.
J. Herbert Fletcher motored to Ludlow, Vt., for the holiday and brought back Mrs. Fletcher and John who had been spending a two weeks’ vacation there.
Miss Lillian Sutherland goes to Dracut to teach this year instead of Wilmington, which change is a decided promotion.
The assessors have not yet committed the book to the tax collector to enable him to get the bills out, although they expect to very soon. These necessary though not always welcome visitors to the property holders will be received in due time.
Miss Jennie Ferguson returns to her teaching in Springfield after spending a greater part of her summer vacation taking a special summer course in English literature at Columbia university.
We are told that Miss Margaret Sullivan will not return to State Line, where she has taught for two years, but will remain at home this year.
Warren E. Carkin is confined to his home with illness.
The Ladies’ Aid society will hold an all-day meeting at the parsonage with Mrs. Lincoln next Thursday. A good attendance is desired.
Joseph E. Knight observed his seventy-ninth birthday anniversary August 28 in good health and spirits. The day was made pleasant by a visit from a married daughter, Mrs. Campbell, her husband and family. George T. Day also recently observed an eighty-fourth birthday anniversary.
Edgar W. Parker of South Chelmsford, who has conducted a meat and provision route through our town for a number of years, has discontinued this route for the present, owing to ill health.
Mrs. Porter Wright of Lowell, who formerly lived in town, has been visiting old friends this week.
Alfred Sutherland goes to the vocational school in Lowell this fall. He no longer assists at George T. Day’s, where he has helped for about eight years.
The men of the home guard held their regular weekly drill Tuesday night at the town hall and marching in the village streets. The new uniforms and rifles for the men have arrived and the company is thereby well equipped. This is the M.S.G. company L, known as the 97th. At the business session Tuesday evening J. A. Cameron was chosen treasurer and the following committees appointed: C. L. Hildreth, M. E. Riney, Francis Lowther, finance; Capt. W. J. Robinson, Wm. C. Roudenbush, Rev. H. A. Lincoln, auditing; A. W. Hartford, M. E. Riney, James May, George Wilson and Wm. E. Wright, entertainment.
Fred Armstrong, whose parents recently removed to Wakefield, has come back to Westford to complete his year at the academy and will make his home with Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Loveless.
A beautiful set of pictures loaned by the Library Art club, “Old Salem doorways,” is on exhibition at the library.
The Westford Oaklands played the Forge Village team at Forge Village in the forenoon Labor day with a score of 13 to 9 in favor of the former. In the afternoon the Oaklands crossed bats with the Elmiras of Lowell at Whitney playgrounds with a victory for the Oaklands of 15 to 12. Leon F. Hildreth has made a most efficient manager for the home team this summer and a good series of games has been arranged for and carried out.
Mr. and Mrs. David L. Greig quietly observed their thirtieth wedding anniversary Friday of this week.
Miss Ruth Tuttle returns to her teaching at Winthrop and Miss Elizabeth to Cleveland, Ohio.
The Edward M. Abbot Hose Co. held their monthly meeting and try out on Tuesday evening. A committee to arrange for the monthly suppers for the winter months was appointed.
Among the little people in this village starting the long road of education and who entered for the fall term at the Wm. E. Frost [school] were Edna Hamlin, Genevieve Blaney, William Carver, Donald White and Lawrence Hill. There are forty-four little people in Miss Wright’s class with a prospect of fifty. The total enrollment at the school is 140.
Miss Helena Denfield, who returned to her teaching at the academy this week, will board at Mrs. Walters the same as last year.
Regular services were resumed at the Congregational church last Sunday with good attendance and good interest. Communion service was held at the close of the morning service and at the evening service, “Hymns and hymn writers,” conducted by the pastor made an interesting meeting.
Doing Good Work. The Red Cross and French Aid societies are both doing good work as the cooler weather comes in. Now that the fall season comes and the lower town hall may be more in demand and as the men’s home guard need the closets for their uniforms and muskets the Red Cross and the French Aid will move back to their former quarters in Library hall, which in cooler weather answers the purpose nicely. The day for the Red Cross work will be Wednesday afternoons and the French Aid the same as usual, Thursday afternoon. The moving from the town hall will take place in time for the meeting next Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. Edward Fisher has loaned a sewing machine for the winter which takes the place of the one owned by the Ladies’ Aid society. Special mention and commendation should be made of the work accomplished by the ladies at the east village or Chamberlain’s corner. Besides attendance at the regular meetings of the Red Cross they meet each week at homes of the members in their vicinity thus making an auxiliary branch and have accomplished good results in knitting, sewing and bandage work.
Recent gifts to the treasury of the local Red Cross treasury by generous members have amounted to about fifty dollars. There are also a number of devoted workers who have accomplished the knitting of one pair of stockings a week for many weeks.
About Town. Porcupine is the subject and shooting at it is the predicate. The camp of the Abbot Worsted Company, Forge Village, is the scene, and last Saturday, the day when a porcupine, which has been patrolling around Forge pond for some time, patrolled too near camp life and climbed a tree after startling campers. An unorganized guard of “safety first” was called out, and after practicing load, aim, fire several times the porcupine sued for peace and got it from a shot fired by R. F. Pott, of Crescent, Iowa. [Would that be a “Pott shot”? Ed.]
Seth W. Banister is surveying for Smith & Brooks, of Lowell, at Concord.
Last week Friday wires got crossed with live wires and made a circuit to the ground at Capt. Peletiah Fletcher place. Guy R. Decatur ran to the rescue of the ground and was thrown to the ground as though he was a feather. The grass was singed and burned, and environments were dangerous until the wires were separated, and relocated.
Perley E. Wright went to Dover, N.H., last Saturday with auto truck and brought home three registered Jersey cows for George F. White, the recent purchaser of the Charles H. Fletcher farm. Mr. White keeps only high grade stock.
The Old Oaken Bucket farm folks and the F. A. Snows and others of West Chelmsford spent Labor day with the W. R. Taylors at camp at Forge Village.
Sweet corn is selling in the Boston market as high as thirty-five cents per bushel, six dozen in the bushel. Thirteen bushels of sweet corn will buy a bag of meal. Keep right at it brethren in the swapping business on that basis and you will lay up something pretty handsome.
The calendar program of the sewing circle and Branch Alliance of the First Parish for 1917-18 has been issued. The officers for the year are Mrs. Anna M. Richardson, pres.; Mrs. Herbert V. Hildreth, v.p.; Miss A. G. Flanders, sec.; Miss Emily F. Fletcher, treas.; Miss A. Mabel Drew, asst. treas.; Mrs. George T. Day, chairman postoffice mission and cheerful letter; Mrs. L. H. Buckshorn, religious intelligence; Mrs. H. V. Hildreth, Mrs. H. K. Frost, Mrs. Eben Prescott, Mrs. Harold W. Hildreth, directors. Regular meetings on second Thursday in the month at 2:30. Honorary members, Mrs. B. H. Bailey, Mrs. H. B. Hall; in memoriam, Mrs. J. M. Barnard, Mrs. W. F. Balch, Mrs. Alvan Fisher, Mrs. John M. Fletcher, Mrs. H. M. Seavey. The first meeting of the season will be held next Thursday afternoon; subject, “The divinity not the deity of Jesus,” Mrs. Eben Prescott.
Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Haviland and Miss Dorothy Haviland, of Southboro, and R. F. Pott, of Crescent, Iowa, were guests last week of the W R. Taylors camping at Forge pond.
A company of men are busy laying new rails on the curves of the Stony Brook road at Westford station.
Mrs. Joseph T. Richardson of the Lowell road, and John Hardy, of Ayer, conductor on the Lowell and Fitchburg railroad, were married last Saturday in Ayer by Rev. J. W. Thomas.
The Charles W. Whitney family have been entertaining relatives from Athol. A return visit is being set to plans.
Mrs. George Littlefield, of Bangor, Me., is visiting at the home of her brother, Norman Phillips, on the Lowell road, near Westford station.
The Old Oaken Bucket folks visited Camp Banister on the Lowell road Wednesday evening.
Services will be resumed at the Unitarian church on Sunday.
Norman Phillips, recently of the Fletcher Cold Spring farm, has secured a position on construction work on state highways.
Much is said in Agricultural papers about the thirty-five-cent-dollar. Too often it is a thirty-five-cents’ worth of judgment that is the working foundation of the shortage. As a remedy take a dose of common sense.
Graniteville. What came near being a serious automobile accident took place on the Harvard road last Monday night when Edward Healy, of this village, owner of a Ford car, was driving a party of young men, including Henry Healy, George Hanson and Friel Hanson, of this village, and John Healy of Forge Village, home from a visit in Harvard. While riding along the state highway the machine struck a low place in the road, causing a blowout of one of the tires, and sending the car off the road down an embankment and into a stone wall. All five of the young men were thrown out clear from the machine, but aside from a severe shaking up and a few minor bruises no one was seriously injured. They were surely fortunate. The auto was badly wrecked.
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Carmichael have recently returned from a very enjoyable visit spent with relatives in Wilton, N.H.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred M. Defoe, with their little daughter Evelyn, have been spending the past few days with friends in Willimantic, Conn.
Miss Bertha Galbraith, of Springfield, has been a recent guest of Mrs. Julia Moran and Miss Lilley Mae Moran.
Miss Stella Shattuck has recently returned to her home here, having spent the past few months in Rhode Island and Maine.
Many members of the Methodist church attended the camp meeting in Sterling recently.
There was no formal celebration of the holiday here, Monday, many people spending the weekend at the numerous beaches.
The local boys who have recently been drafted and accepted by the local exemption board will report in Ayer during the present week.
Miss Louise Newman, of Manchester, N.H., and Miss Bessie Larkin, of North Chelmsford, have been recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Provost.
All the public schools were opened last Tuesday morning for the beginning of the fall term. The same staff of teachers are in charge [at the Sargent school] and include Miss Issie Parker, principal, Miss Lillian Wright, Miss Esther Smith and Miss Mary A. Dunn.
J. Austin Healy has recently purchased a house lot from Miss Fannie McCarthy on Broadway and is now putting in the foundation for a new house.
Forge Village. Harold Reed, a camper occupying one of the cottages at Forge pond, narrowly escaped being drowned last Saturday evening about six o’clock. Cries for help were heard and a number of residents hurried to the pond. John Sullivan and James Kelley, Jr., started out in a boat. The man was struggling to keep afloat opposite Tanglewood cottage, while an empty boat was a considerable distance away. They assisted him into the boar and he was taken to the home of Mrs. James Kelley, Sr, where he was attended by Dr. W. H. Sherman. Just how he fell out of the boat he would not explain.
The schools of the town opened for the fall term Tuesday. At Cameron school the same corps of teachers will be in charge of the different grades, Miss Letitia V. Ward, as principal, Miss Mary A. Garvey of North Chelmsford, and Miss Abbie M. Blaisdell of Wamesit and Miss Eva F. Pyne, who has recovered from her recent illness, as to be able to resume teaching.
Mr. and Mrs. Percy Hargreaves and baby son, of Somerville, spent the weekend and holiday at the home of Mrs. Hargreaves’ grandmother, Mrs. M. A. Lowther. The baby was baptized Frederick Lowther last Sunday afternoon by Rev. Williston M. Ford at St. Andrew’s mission.
The Misses Alice and Josephine Ricard spent the weekend and holiday in Taunton as the guests of Miss Clara Lamy.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Sheehan and two daughters, the Misses Helena and Catherine, and Miss Emma Dufort, of Leominster, were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Daly over the holiday.
Percy Barnes was the guest of George Wilson last week Friday.
Mrs. George Wyman and daughter Mabel, of Camden, N.J., who have been visiting relatives here and in Worcester the past month, returned home on Saturday.
Mrs. Edward C. Croule, of Chelsea, who is spending this summer at Forge pond, held a knitting bee at her cosy cottage last Saturday afternoon. About 20 of the campers responded to the invitation to knit for Uncle Sam and a large amount of work was done. Everyone here is knitting or sewing for the Red Cross. At the home of Mrs. Fred Davis a number of women are to be seen knitting every afternoon and every spare moment. Perhaps one of the oldest is Mrs. Jane Baker, mother of Mrs. Davis, who has knit many pairs of stockings, while Mrs. Davis has knitted over fifty pairs, besides sweaters and other articles.
Mrs. Gertrude Miner and two children, of Dorchester, are spending this week as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Shattuck, of the Tadmuck farm.
Miss Kathleen M. Wilson spent last Saturday and Sunday in Sterling.
The Forge Village A.C. played two [baseball] games on Labor day and lost both of them. The first game was won by the Westford Oaklands, and the Snow West Ends captured the second. Both games were played on the Cameron school grounds and the largest crowd of the season was present in the morning. The local team had some of its best players absent, which probably accounts for the loss of both games. This week Saturday afternoon the soccer football club will play the Methuen team on the home grounds.
Services Sunday at St. Andrew’s mission will be held at 4:30 in the afternoon. There will be no Sunday school until the latter part of the month.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Provencher, of North Adams, spent the weekend and holiday at their cottage at Forge pond. Their niece, Miss Lottie Parrott, who has been visiting here the past two weeks, returned with them.
The Misses Katheryn Brown, Agnes and Margaret Thompson spent the holiday at the beach
J. Henry Brown returned to Clinton Monday after an enjoyable vacation of ten days at his home here.
The Misses Edith and Carolyn E. Precious spent the holidays with relatives in Townsend Harbor. Little Miss Olive M. Keefe, of Townsend Center, returned with them for a visit at the home of her aunt, Mrs. John Carmichael.
Mr. and Mrs. Archie M. Bennett and little daughter Catherine, of Boston, returned home last Saturday after an enjoyable visit at the home of Mrs. Harriet E. Randell.
Burton Griffith has returned from a visit of several days with his brother, Eugene Griffith, of Pascoag, R.I.
A daughter [Vera O’Hara] was born on Wednesday [Sept. 5, 1917,] to Mr. and Mrs. James O’Hara.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Whigham, of Barre, motored to the village Monday and visited their many relatives.
Mrs. William Hunt and the Misses Maude and Lillian Hunt have returned from an enjoyable visit spent with relatives in Barre and Ware.
Miss Ethel Collins won the first prize offered by the Westford Grange for the best essay on the American flag. Miss Carolyn Precious won the second prize and Miss Pamelia Precious took third honors.
Ayer.
News Items. With this issue we begin the fiftieth year of the establishment of this paper.
Since the supply of water at Camp Devens has been taken from the newly installed water service at the camp the pumps at the pumping station have been able to keep a full supply in the standpipe for all purposes. Before the camp service was put in the water was provided by the town of Ayer.
The United States government has acquired by lease the immense tract of land lying between the crossing near St. Mary’s cemetery to White’s bridge at Woods Village, and from the Greenville branch track of the Nashua river, the land running southerly from L. W. Phelps’ land to the west of St. Mary’s cemetery to Nonaicoicus brook. The large plateau, including the old trotting park to the west of the railroad track, is to be used for a remount station and for stables sufficient to quarter between 7000 and 8000 horses. A side-track has been put in from the Greenville track on the land of Michael Mullin, better known as the William McHugh place. Capt. Littaner is to have charge of this branch of the service. The property leased includes the Mullin, Edward James heirs, L. W. Phelps and Stone places. A building has already been raised on the Phelps place.
District Court. Thursday morning, as usual, was a very busy one. C. F. Worcester associate justice, assisted Judge Warren H. Atwood in disposing of the long list of cases. The first case called was that of Richard M. Yarnold, of Westford, who was charged with assault and battery on his wife. He was found guilty and fined ten dollars. He appealed through his counsel, John M. Maloney, associate justice of the court, and was held in $100 bail for the October sitting of the superior court.
Francis McCabe, Arthur Kelly, Albert Head, Owen Flannery and Nicholas Martin were found guilty of cruelty to horses and each were fined $20. Kelly appealed and was held in $100 for the October session of the superior court. Joseph E. Perry, charged with a like offense, was found guilty and his case placed on file. All the defendants are teamsters employed at camp Devens for Coleman Brothers. The evidence produced showed the horses to be in very poor condition, with sores on their bodies, indicating plainly neglect to provide for the animals. Perry, who was recently employed, was found to be not guilty of intentional neglect, as he was unaware of sores on the horses which were covered by the harness. Coleman Brothers, it was learned, has 266 horses at work in the camp grounds, the animals being quartered in six stables. The prosecuting officers were Theodore W. Pearson and Inspector Dyson, representing the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.
Pay for Camp Garbage. A contract which provides for the payment to the government of $21,600 for the privilege of removing all garbage and waste from the Ayer cantonment has been awarded by the war department to the S. A. Meagher Company soap manufacturers, of Milton. The contract also stipulates that the successful bidder must supply all containers for garbage and refuse and must make two removals daily for one year, beginning September 1. The government reserves the right to cancel the contract at thirty days’ notice.
Altogether, ten companies submitted bids to the government, but only one besides the Meagher company offered to pay for the privilege. This was the Eastern Oil and Rendering Company of 92 State street, Boston, its offer being $7600. All the others asked to be paid varying amounts for the work. The Boston development and sanitary Company, which has the contract for removing Boston’s garbage, asked $72,000 for the work, with the provision of paying certain credits to the government, which in the course of the year probably would not exceed $10,000.
The successful bidder was required to furnish a bond of $25,000. It is estimated that there will be about seventy tons of manure, ten tons of kitchen garbage, and quantities of tin cans, waste paper, fat, bones, grease, dead animals and other refuse for removal daily. Equipment to carry out the contract will cost between $20,000 and $25,000, it is calculated.
Work at the cantonment has not yet been started, pending arrangements which are to be made by the government.
Camp Notes. Two medical units from Fort Benjamin Harrison, Indiana, and the Pittsfield Ambulance company, will look after the sanitation work.
While the camp buildings are enough advanced in construction for the reception of as many draft troops as may be called, the fact remains that it will be considerable time before the permanent buildings are ready for the full number of recruits that will eventually be encamped here. Judging from present indications the new men will all come in gradually so that the construction will at least keep up with the demands for quarters.
Friends of some of the members of the sixth regiment who are now at the Westfield camp have received letters from them saying they had much rather be at Ayer than in their present quarters.
The remainder of the sixth regiment left Camp Devens for the training camp at Westfield early Tuesday morning, going in a special train by way of the Fitchburg division from here. Their leaving to be assigned places in the new regiments means the total dissolution of the famous sixth as a regimental unit. Another squad left Monday for Camp Yale, New Haven, Conn. None of the men leaving here know anything about their future movements. The opinion prevails, however, that they are bound for foreign service at no distant day.
The two troops of cavalry which recently arrived at the camp from Fort Ethan Allen, Winooski, Vt., are to have charge of the remount station.
Monday was a very quiet day at the military camp. Drills were suspended and many men from nearby places were allowed to go to their homes for farewell visits to their families.
A camp laborer was struck by a steam shovel Monday and taken to the hospital for treatment. He recovered in a short time and was apparently as well as ever.
The work of guarding the containment heretofore done by the men of the 6th regiment is now being performed by the coast artillery companies ordered here. Two more companies arrived Sunday night and four more are coming. The aggregate number, including those now here, will consist of eight companies drawn from the New England states.
The Red Cross ambulance company is encamped within the cantonment and several more ambulances are on the way.
The military police will go abroad with the 26th division, commanded by Major General Clarence R. Edwards. Of the 300 men assigned to this duty only 100 will be mounted. The duty of the military police is to follow the army, arresting suspicious characters and picking up stragglers. The men will be relieved from ordinary camp duties.
The men assigned to the depot brigade, which will be commanded by General Sweetser, expect to be called for foreign service. If this happens they will establish their base in France. As fast as the men on the firing line are put out of service their ranks will be filled by the trained men from the base. The ranks of the latter body will in turn be filled by draft recruits from this country. In other words the recruits will be taken for final training abroad, where they will be placed in readiness at short notice to fill the places of the men on the battle line who have been disabled. In this way the ranks may be quickly filled.
Last Sunday was another big day at Camp Devens. Thousands of people came to visit the soldiers, but got no nearer the camp than the highway, the reason given for the closing of the grounds was that the men were busy in making preparations to leave and should not be disturbed.
The remainder of the 6th regiment was very busy all Monday afternoon, loading their equipment on cars ready to leave at short notice, when the order was given. The long line of mule teams, loaded with the supplies from the camp, made a picturesque sight.
The Pittsfield ambulance company is now quartered in the barracks in the main cantonment. In addition to their training they will be called on for guard duty.
The early morning special train which arrives here from Boston, loaded with camp workmen, usually on Mondays, is boarded by guards from the military camp at the railroad station and all camp men are searched. The main object of this search is to prevent any intoxicating liquors from getting into the camp. This week the men returned Tuesday, Monday being a holiday.
The camp workmen are leaving in large numbers, their services being no longer required. This is especially true with carpenters and other skilled workmen. It is estimated that 3000 or more have left during the past week. The laborers, however, will be needed for some time as their work is necessary to speed up the sewer construction and other very necessary details of the work of construction.
Monday being a holiday there were comparatively few men at work on the main cantonment. Many of the men worked Sunday and loafed on the day following.
The new water service at the camp is furnishing all the water that is needed. The well from which the water is drawn is fifty feet in diameter and is furnishing what is considered to be an adequate supply for years.
An officer at the camp said a few days ago that reporters are more likely to know of the troop movements and their destination than any of the military men. In fact the men are about the last to hear of such matters.
The reasons given by the railroad company as to why the last contingent of the 6th regiment could not be moved to Westfield last Saturday, as expected, were that the company would be unable to handle the soldiers and equipage, in addition to the large weekend traffic including Labor day.
Bids have been asked for by the government for supplying the troops at the camp with refreshments. As a result of the action of the Boston Chamber of Commerce a number of large dealers in ice cream and temperance drinks assembled at the camp Tuesday afternoon. To whom the contract will be given will be known later. A certain well-known beverage, which is being openly and legally dispersed, has been tabooed at the camp.
Capt. Mason D. Bryant, who was recently transferred from Ayer to New London, is recovering from an operation for appendicitis at the Memorial hospital in that city.
Nearly 2000 trunks in addition to many smaller pieces of baggage were handled at the railroad station in three days last week. The baggage is the property of the new officers assigned to the camp to train the draft recruits.
It is estimated that supplies costing $1,000,000 are stored in the immense storehouses at the eastern part of the camp for the use of the draft army.
Sixty secretaries of the Army and Navy Y.M.C.A. gathered in a conference in Ashburnham last week to take action on work at the national army cantonment at Ayer.
The Red Cross unit ordered here during the past week consists of thirteen motor ambulances, an automobile and three motorcycles. The officers in charge are Capt. Robert J. Carpenter and Lieutenants M. H. Walker, Jr., Thomas Littlewood, H. J. Tate and John A. Sullivan.
Brigadier General John H. Johnston, formally took command of the Northeastern department last week Friday, taking the place of Major General Clarence H. Edwards, who is to lead the 26th division to France. Camp Devens comes under the jurisdiction of the new commander, who will make his headquarters in Boston.
An automobile containing an unknown man and woman ran off the road near the military camp last Sunday and went over the embankment. Neither occupant was injured. The auto escaped with little damage.
Fourth Call. The following list contains the latest call of men for physical examination by the local exemption board, to be held on September 10 and 11:
September 10 | ||
Forge Village | ||
Call no. | Serial no. | Name |
1301 | 1701 | Orange, William H. |
Westford | ||
Call no. | Serial no. | Name |
1201 | 1608 | Rafferty, Thomas St., Jr. |
1215 | 1497 | Feeney, John, Jr. |
1217 | 1609 | Richard, Rudolph |
1220 | 1615 | Szilwan, Constantine |
1228 | 1631 | Johnson, Robert A. |
1235 | 1584 | Lapa, Jacob |
1246 | 1666 | Denisvicz, Zachary |
1251 | 1621 | Christianson, Hans C. |
1265 | 1573 | Gualla, Pietro |
1287 | 1661 | Collins, Albert C. |
1296 | 1500 | Flagg, William L. |
1297 | 1506 | Hildreth, Arthur G |
1318 | 1512 | Fordan, Frederic W. |
1329 | 1581 | Kisly, Nicholas |
1332 | 1630 | Fletcher, Ralph A. |
September 11 | ||
Forge Village | ||
Call no. | Serial no. | Name |
1374 | 1711 | Sedach, Wasil |
Westford | ||
Call no. | Serial no. | Name |
1345 | 1627 | Di Palman, Pasquale |
1353 | 1618 | Veroneau, Elmer E. |
1357 | 1586 | Leach, Joseph |
1360 | 1594 | Nelson, Carl O |
1367 | 1493 | Clement, John E. |
1371 | 1649 | Wheeler, Clifford S. |
1378 | 1597 | Clocz, Grzecio |
1387 | 1579 | Heroux, Joseph A. |
1405 | 1605 | Pooisson, Donat |
1409 | 1516 | Meyer, Frederic H. |
1416 | 1663 | Costello, Thomas |
1428 | 1598 | Olson, Linder |
1468 | 1544 | Blanchard, Walter L. |
1469 | 1653 | Bilida, Joseph |
1475 | 1514 | Lydiard, Carl H. |
1479 | 1737 | Porsvas, Aristidis |