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Western Massachusetts a History 1636-1925 Vol III $35.00 (on hold)
New York and Chicago: Lewis Historical Publishing Company, 1926
This volume is biographies. e-mail me to see if your family member is in
volume 3 after checking the surname list below.
Surnames from volume 3&4: Abbott Achim Adam AdamsAddis Adriance Ahearn Albee
Allbee Alden Alderman Aldrich Allen Allis Allyn Ames Anderson Andre Andrews
Angers Antone Argy Aronstam Ashman Astill Atherton Atkins Adkins Audren
Austin Authier Averill Babcock Bacon Bagg Bailey Bayley Baker Ball Ballou
Bangs Barber Bardwell Barker Barnard Barnes Barney Barr Barrus Barrows Barry
Barstow Bartkiewicz Bartlett Barton Bascom Batchellor Batchelor Baxter Beals
Beaman Bearse Beaumier Becker BeckmannBeers Belcher Belden Baildon-Bayldon
Bell Bement Bemis Benjamin Benson Berger Bergmann Berry Betsold Bickford
Bicknell Bidwell Bigelow Billings Billing Birnie Bisbee Bliss Boardman
Bodfish Boland Bolles Bolton Bond Bonneville Boom Borrner Bosworth Bothwell
Bourbeau Bourne Bowles Bowman Boyd Boyle Boynton Bradley Bradway Brainerd
Brand Brandle Bray Breor Brewer Brewster Bridges Bridgrman Brigrham Brown
Brownell Browning Brunelle Bryant (Briant) BucklandBuckner Bugbee Bulkley
(Bulkeley) Bulman Bump Bunnell Burden Burdick Burgess Burke Burnett Burnham
Burns Burr Butterfield Buzzee Byrne Cadorette Cadwell Cady Calhoun Campbell
Cande Canedy Carl Carlisle Carman Caron Carroll Carson Carter Cary (de
Kari-de Kary) Case Casey Cassidy Caswell Chaffln Chandler Channel Chapin
Charest Charles Charlton Charron Chase Cheney Chevalier Childs Chipman
Christensen Churchill Clair Clapp Clark ClarkeCleary Cleeland Cleveland
Clough Coates Coe Coo Coes Conn Colby Collingrwood Comey (McComey) Comins
Conant Conaty Conlin Connelly Connor Coogan Cook Cooke Cooley Coolidge
Cooney Cooper Copeland Cordes Corsiglia Costello Couch Couillard Cowls
(Cole) Coxen Craft Crafts Crawford Crean Crevier Crocker Cronin Crook
Crosier Crossman Crummett Cruttenden Cummings Cunningham Currier Curtin
Cushing Cushman Cutler CymanDe Falco De Witt du Mont Daggett Daignault Dale
Daley Daniels Darling Davenport Davidson Davies Davis Dawley Day Dayton
Dearden Decker Deinlein Delano Dempsey Denham Dennett Derry Devanny Dexter
Dibble Dietz Dingman Dion Dix Dodd Dolan Donais Donaldson Doran Dorr Dow
Dowd Dower Downey Downs Drapeau Driscoll Dunbar Dunn Dunnell Duryea Dwight
Dwyer Dyer Easland Eberhardt Eberlein Edwards Egan Ehrltch Eisold Elder
Elliot Ellis Ely Elihu England Enslin Entwistle Erard Esleeck Evans Evarts
Ewing Eyre Fagan Fairbanks Fairchild Fairfield Fairhurst Fallon Fargo
Farnham (Farnum) Farnsworth Farr Farrar Farwell Fassett Fausey Fein Feldman
Ferrier Ferry Field (del Feld Feld) Finn Finneran Fisher Fitz Gerald
Fletcher Fligier Flore Flynn Foley Folsom (Foulsham) Foot Fortin Foss Foster
Francis Frankowski Franz Frary French Frost Fuller Fyfe Gagnon Galbraith
Gale Gallagher Galleher Gallup Gamwell Gange Gardner Gass Gath Gay Gaylord
Gelineau Gerke Grandison Gibbs Giddings Gilbert Gillett Gilmore (Gillmore)
Glazier Gleason Goddard Goddu Godfrey Godin Goewey Gold Goldin Goodrich
Gordon Gurdon Gottesman Gould Graham Grandchamp Granfield Grange Grant
Graves Greeley Green Greene Greer Greile Griffin Grise Groark Gunsolus Haas
Hadley Hafey Hagyard Haigis Hales Halford Hall Hiland Hamilton Hammond
Hampson Hancock Hanson Hapgood Harlow Harrington Harris Harrison Hartnett
Harwood Haskins (Hoskins) Hastings Hatch Havill Hawkins HawleyHayes Heady
Healy Hegy Hemenway (Hemingway) Hemond Hendee Hennelly Henry Herbert Hersey
Hewitt Heyman Herman Hickey Hicks Higgins Hillenbrand Hills Hiltpold
Hitchcock Hobart Hobson Hodskins Holden Holland Hollingworth Hopkins Horton
(Houghton) Hosford Howard Hosmer Houghton Howard (Hayward) Howes Howland
Hoyt Hubbard Hughes Huntington Hurlbut Hurley Hurowitz Huxley Ingraham Ives
Jahrling Jangro Jarvis (Gervais) Jarvis Jeannotte Jeffway (Geoffroy) Jenks
Johonnott Johnson Jolly Jones Joslyn (Josselyne-Joslin) Jubinville Judelson
Kahl Kamberg Katz Kaynor Keedy Keefe Keegan Kellogg Kelly Kendrick Kennedy
Kenney Kentfield Kerigan Ketchen Keyes Kiely Kienle Killeen Kimball King (Kinge-Kynge)
Kingsbury Kingsley Kinne Kinney Kneeland Knight Knowlton Knox Koch Kohlhofer
Kolwicz Kossick LaFleur LaRiviere Lacey Lally Lane Langtry Lasker Latham
Lathrop Lawler Lawley Lawrence Leach Leahan Lee Lekousjyk Leonard Leopoulos
Lewis Ley Lilley Lindholm Liston Locke Lockwood Long Longley Loomis Loretan
Loud Lovelace Lowell Ludden Luippold Lunt Lyman (Leman-Lyeman) Lynch Lynn
Lyon Lyons MacDonald MacKenzie McCarthy McClench McCool McCorkindale McCoy
McDonald McElwain McGarry McGinity McGrath McGregory McKechnie McLaughlin
McMahon McPeck McQueston (MacQueston) Mackintosh Madden Magranis Maher
Mahoney Malley Manning Manson Manley Marble March (Merz) Mariz Marlow Martin
Martinelli Marvell Mason Mattoon Maynard Mayo Medlicott Meehan Mellen Mercer
Merriam (Meriam) Merrill Metcalf Miller Mills Minott Mitchell Mitten
Montague Montgomery Montmeny Moore Moreau Morey Moriarty Morton Mosher Mowry
Mullany Mullen Mulligan Mullins Mulrone Murphy Murray Myers Mytinger Nay
Neal Neild Nelson Nevins Newell Newton Nicholson Niles Nilsson Nim Noble
Nolen Noonan Novak Nowak O'Callahan O'Connell O'Connor O'Donnell O'Hearn
O'Malley O'Neil O'Neill O'Shea Oatman Oberempt Odette Ogan Oliver
Oppenheimer Osborne Otto Owen Paddock (Pezdek) Page Paine Parfitt Parker
Parmele ( Parsons Paper Co. The) Parsons Partridge Payne Poach Pearson Pease
Peck Peirce (Pers) Peirson Pelissier Pelletier Pepin Perkins Petersen Petit
Phelps Phillips Pierce Pinney Pitcher Plumb Plunkett Polmatier Pomeroy Pond
Porter Potter Potvin Power Powers Pratt Prediger Prentiss Preston Price
Pringle Proctor Proulx Prouty Puffer Punderson Purrington Putnam (Puttenham)
Quinn Rahar Raidy Rainey Raleigh Ramage Ramsdell Randall Ransom Rathbone Ray
Redstone Reed Reedy Reopell Retallick Reynolds Rhodes Rice Rich Richards
Richmond Ricketts Riddell Riley Rist Robbins Roberts Robinson Robson Roche
Roe Rogers Roney Rooney Root Roote Rose Rosenblum Rosenzweig Ross Ruder
Russell Rust Ryan Ryhysc Ryther Sainte-Marie St. Onge San Soucie Samble
Sanctuary Sanderson Sanford Sauers Savage Savery Sawyer Sayre Scanlon
Schnare Schortmann Schott Schtihle Schwenger Scott Searle Seavey Sedgwick
Segur Sessions Severance (Severans) Seybolt Shannon Shattuck Shaw Shea
Sheehan Shepardson Sherman Shipman Shovan Shuart Shumway Sibley Siegel
Simmons Simons Simpson Sinclair Singleton Sisson Skillingrs Skinner Slate
Slavin Slocomb Sloper Smart Smead Smith Snow Spaulding (Spalding) Spear
Spellman Sprague Squier Stafford Staples Starkweather Starzyk Steams
Stebbins Steele Steiger Steimer Steuerwald Stevens (Stephens) Stevenson
Stewart Stimson Stoddard Stone Stoughton Stowell Strecker Strickland Strong
Sullivan Summers Sunn Surprenant Swanson Swift Swirsky Sykes Taber Tait
Talmadge Tannatt Tassone Taylor Teague Teahan Tenney Terry Tessier Tetreault
Thibert Thompson Thouin Tifft Tilton Toniolli Tower Towne Traver Trott True
Tucker Tupper Turnbull Turner Tuttle Underwood Van Heusen Van Norman Van
Train Vaille Vanderlick Vining Wadsworth Wagner Wakelin Walker Wall Wallace
Walpole Walsh Waltz Ward Ware Warner Warren Washburn Waterhouse Waterman
Webber Weis Welch Wellington Wellman Wells Wentworth Weschler West (West
Boylston Manufacturing Co. ) Westervelt (Van Westervelt) Weymouth Whalen
Wheat Whipple White Whiting Whitman Whitmore Whitney Whittier Whittlesey
Wichrnann Wickham Wilcox Willcox Williams Willard Willis Willson Wilson Wing
Wolcott Wood Woodburn Woodlock Woods Wooster Wright Wyatt Young Zujewski
Pages 1-448 pages, hardbound, good condition, covers have some spots on
them, corners bumped.
Amherst
The Village of Amherst Mass. A Landmark of Light
$34.95
Frank Prentice Rand
The Amherst Historical Society, 1958
Narratives
PART ONE: COLONIALISM, AND THEREFROM-A COLLEGE
Norwottuck
Precinct Days
District Days
Rebellious Patriots
Disunion Within
Law and Disorder
Amherst Academy Emeritus
A College on the Hill
PART Two: INDUSTRY, AND THEREFROM-ANOTHER COLLEGE
The Industrial Era
Via Amherst
Channels of Communication
Fire and Water
Traders and Tradesmen
Farmers and Agriculturists
PART THREE: VIOLENCE, AND THERE FROM-ORDER
Battle Cries of Freedom
Crime and Punishment
The War to End War
Sportsman's Park
Still Another War
Democracy in Action
PART FOUR: NATURE, AND THEREFROM-SCIENCE
Our Amherst-a Garden
Acts of God
Family Doctor
Observers of the Natural World
PART FIVE: CREATIVENESS, AND THEREFROM-BE
A Ride with Brown
Printers' Ink
Highlights on Footlights
With Clef and Palette
Amherst Authors-Mostly Poets
PART Six: ASPIRING ENTERPRISE, AND THEREFROM ENLIGHTENMENT
Master Spirits Embalmed and Treasured
Outpost of Piety
Renewal by Shock
The University-Manifest Destiny
Investments in Literacy
Lamps of Faith
VILLAGE, VALE
APPENDIX
Public Servants
Pastorates
Some Amherst Clubs
College Presidents
Acknowledgment
Index
Pictures:
House and Site Maps end papers, Heart o' Town jacket, Charles Frederick Morehouse
frontispiece, The Strong House, The Stockbridge House, A 1772 map, Rev. David Parsons,
Jr., Dr. David Parsons, 3rd, Second Meetinghouse and Parsonage, Amherst
Academy, Mount Pleasant Institute, Amherst College, about 1850, Factory Hollow Falls, Mill
Valley Falls, The Hills Hat Factory, The Burnett Hat Factory, Amherst House, Hygeian
Hotel, A 1908 Trolley Car, The Merchants Row Fire, The Palmer Block Fire, Merchants Row,
about 1865, Merchants Row, about 1895, Phoenix Row, about 1840, Phoenix Row, about 1890,
The Amherst College War Memorial, The Wildner Reception, The Village Green, 1889 164, The
Common, 1929 165, The Common after the Hurricane, In Front of Merchants Row, The Dickinson
Houses, The Frost Birthday Dinner, The Jones Library. The North Amherst Library, Munson
Memorial Library, The Goodell Library, The Folger Library, The Converse Library, Amherst
College, 1955, The Lord Jeffery Inn, The University from the Southeast, The University
from the Northeast.
337 pages, hardbound
Essays on Amherst's History (Mass.) $35.00
Amherst, Mass: The Vista Trust, 1978
Table of contents: PART ONE, The Factionalism
of the Founding Fathers 17301800, Early Amherst by Hugh F. Bell and Andrew
Raymond, A Day in 1800 by Hugh F. Bell, PART TWO, The Enterprises, Contentions, Civic Consciousness, and Customs of Nineteenth
Century Amherst, The Rise and Decline of Manufactures and Other Matters George R.
Taylor, A Dry and Thirsty Land by Theodore Baird, The Growth of Civic
Consciousness by Polly Longsworth, An Amherst Neighborhood in 1870 by Helen von
Schmidt, Two Generations of Amherst Society by Susan H. Dickinson, PART THREE, The self-conscious Small Town
19001945, Versions of Community by Doris E. Abramson and Robert C. Townsend, A
Half Century of Change in Town Government by David A. Booth, An Immigrants
Boyhood in Amherst by Edward Landis, PART FOUR, The Great Change 19461976, The Gown
Overwhelms the Town by Theodore P. Greene, Toward
Responsive Government by Winthrop S. Dakin, Public Education in Amherst by Rhoda
S. Honigberg, Planners and Developers by James A. Smith, The Changing Climate
of Amherst by Philip Truman Ives, An Amherst Bibliography by Sheila Rainford, Index.
452 pages, hardbound, dj, VF/VG, in bodart cover.
Alumni and Non-Graduates of Amherst College 1872-1896 $19.95
Compiled and edited by W. L. Montague, M. A., Ph. D., Class of '55
Amherst, Mass 1901
Sample pages
A biography of alumni. Usually gives full name, date and place of birth, parents names,
High School, business, degrees, spouse, spouses father, spouses father's place of
residence, date of marriage, number of children and if deceased the cause date and place
of death. (see sample pages)
492 pages hardbound, worn corners
Deerfield
Deerfield Epitaphs $45.00
Copied by C. Alice Baker and Emma L. Coleman
Deerfield, Mass: The Pocumtuck Valley Memorial Association, 1924
(From the Introduction) "ACTING upon
the request made several years ago by the New England Historic
Genealogical Society of Boston, Miss C. Alice Baker of Cambridge and
Deerfield began the work of copying the inscriptions on the gravestones of
the old burying ground in this town. The town records of New England often
lack facts which the graveyards can supply, and when a stone
disappears as indeed happened between the beginning and ending of
this copying the record is lost.
For this purpose the Genealogical Society is always glad to furnish
suggestions as to methods, to supply durable paper and to care for
manuscript copies in its library.
In this case, the manuscript has been held until the Pocumtuck Valley
Memorial Association found a fitting time to print. Many hands have, from
time to time, helped with the copying, but the undersigned, who after Miss
Baker's death, assumed the obligation of finishing the work acknowledges
especially the help of Miss Lucy Pratt."
49 pages, 6x9 hardbound, good condition
The New England Outpost - War & Society in Colonial
Deerfield $ 18.00 (New Book) (In print $25.00)
Richard I. Melvoin
(from the book flaps) Deerfield, Massachusetts, is known to many as a
remarkably well-preserved colonial village and the site of Deerfield Academy, the
prestigious prep school. But in the first half-century of its existence, Deerfield Jay
uneasily at the farthest edge of a bloody frontier. In the years from 1665 to 1715,
Deerfield came under armed attack thirty times, culminating in the "Deerfield
Massacre" of 1704 when over half the population was killed or captured by French and
Indian raiders, and half the town was burned.
New England Outpost, Richard Melvoin's engrossing history of Deerfield's beginnings,
reveals a rich tapestry of New England life on what was then the frontier. We learn how
Deerfield was settled by Puritan farmers from Dedham and other established towns, how the
fledgling institutions of the church and local government tied the new settlement to the
rest of New England, and how these ties were threatened as successive European wars
between England and France spilled over into their North American colonies.
Most important, Melvoin shows us the unexpected complexity of the Indians' role in all
these events. Until the early 1700s the balance of power in Deerfield, and throughout the
New England frontier, was not shared solely between French and English colonists, but was
divided as well among more than a dozen Indian tribes. The Indian attitude to colonial
settlement was thus never simple. It was part of a complex pattern of relations among
different tribes, including bloody wars, that sometimes did more than the colonial
invaders to weaken the Indians' hold on their land.
Rich in the incidents and adventures of the early frontier, and alert to the surprising
dimensions of Indian life, New England Outpost is fascinating history
RICHARD 1. MELVOIN is Assistant Dean of Admissions at Harvard-Radcliff
College. Formerly he was Dean of Studies and Chairman of the History Department at
Deerfield Academy His Ph.D. in history is from the University of Michigan. He lives in
Wayland, Massachusetts, with his wife and two daughters.
368 pages, 6x9 hardbound, dust jacket
Historic Deerfield: Houses and Interiors $17.50
Samuel Chamberlain and Henry N. Flynt. Illustrated by Samuel Chamberlain
New York: Hastings House, 1965.
Revised and enlarged edition of “Frontier of Freedom” (Hastings House,
1952)
145 pages, 7 x 10 hardcover, no DJ, b & w photos by Samuel Chamberlain;
very good condition
Easthampton
Gods Stewards Samuel & Emily Williston $14.95
Frank P Conant
Easthampton, MA Williston Northampton School 1991.
The story of Samuel & Emily Williston, founders of Williston Academy. They
also founded Easthampton Rubber Thread Company and the Glendale Elastic
Fabrics Company which were forerunners of the United Elastic Corporation.
Table of contents: Beginnings 1795-1822, Starting with Buttons 1823-1831,
Success and Tragedy 1832-1837, A compact Fulfilled 1838-1841, New Directions
1842-1848, Manufacturer 1849-1859, The Civil War Years 1860-1865, Reverses
1866-1872, Valedictory 1873-1885.
143 pages, 9x6 hardbound, dust jacket has a few scratches, very good
condition.
Gill
Vital Records of Gill, Mass. to the Year 1850 $18.50
Boston: NEHGS 1904
THE TOWN OF GILL, Franklin County (formerly in Hampshire County, until 1811), was established September 28, 1793, from a part of Greenfield.
February 28, 1795, a part of Northfield was annexed to Gill.
March 14, 1805, the island called Great Island was annexed to Gill after April 1, 1805.
97 pages, covers stained. inside front cover paper is splitting at seams
in several places, pages in good condition.
Great
Barrington
Vital
Records of Great Barrington, Massachusetts to the Year 1850
$39.95
Boston, Mass.: New England Historical Genealogical Society, 1904
Town of Great Barrington, Berkshire County, Was Established June 30, 1761,
from a Part of Sheffield. February 16, 1773, a Part of Great Barrington Was
Included in the New District of Alford. February 16, 1773, Lands Adjoining
Great Barrington Were Annexed. October 21, 1777, a Part of Great Barrington
Was Included in the New Town of Lee. February 11, 1779, a Part of Great
Barrington Was Annexed to Alford. During 18, 1819 Part of Great Barrington
Was Annexed Alford.
89 pages, 6 x 9 hardbound, edge wear, Corners bumped, covers have light
soiling.
Granby
Granby Mass. Bicentennial 1768-1968 $25.00 (out of Print)
The Town of Granby 1968
History of Granby with lots of photographs. Includes listing of soldiers from the French
and Indian wars through Korea
320 pp. hardcover
Greenfield
A Pictorial History of Greenfield Massachusetts
$38.00
The Greenfield Historical Society, 1953
Produced for the 200th anniversary of Greenfield. Lots of great pictures
with captions. Includes a Cities Service flyer commemorating the 200th
anniversary of Greenfield with a timeline of its history.
(From the introduction)
For fifty-three years Mr. Charles E. Winslow of
Greenfield has been patiently gathering together these remarkable
pictures, many of them going back to the infancy of the camera. He has
given his collection to the Historical Society of Greenfield, where it
is on permanent display. The Society, in order to make this almost
direct experience of Greenfield's past available to all as well as to
posterity has published this volume. edited by Mr. Winslow. We feel that
its value will increase with the 'ears.
Greenfield has existed as a town for two centuries, but
how it may have looked before the advent of the honest and unflinching
eye of the camera, we can only guess. In this book, however, we are able
to show a very good overall picture of what one might have seen here
from 186o to about 1900. The camera does not flatter, as we all have
regretfully observed; on the other hand, it tells few lies. We all tend
to regard its record as veracious; we know that a thing in the past had
reality when we see photographic evidence. So, although our pictures of
Greenfield may not show all the romantic beauty inherent in the light
and color of a once-charming village scene, they will transmit a genuine
feeling of solid kinship with a departed yesterday.
The sequence in which the pictures are arranged was
planned, although a little loosely, to present the impressions of a
newcomer in Greenfield at any time from 186o until 1900. First he would
have been aware of the Common ("Bank Row"), the heart of the matter then
as now. Next he would have become familiar with the ways of travel in
and out of town, the river, the railroads, the trolley cars, and the
many bridges. After a few days he would have found his way up and down
Main Street, observed the schools, the post-office, and all the side
streets. After becoming an established citizen associated with one of
the growing industries he might have joined the Cycling Club or the
Comedy Club or one of the many other delightful social activities of a
pleasure-loving period.
Since the photographs of the 1860's and 1870's were taken with very long
exposures on glass plates prepared by the operator, it is little wonder
that a stage-coach rolling up the dusty street to the grateful
refinements and refreshments of the Mansion House, may be a little
blurred. The best procedure in enjoying very old photographs is to close
the eyes half-way and let imagination go to work from there, filling in
the brightness and movement of the grand old scene. Then open the eyes
wide and really use them, remembering that the most minute detail in a
photograph was something actually there, and that its nature and meaning
will reappear with patient study. These pictures deserve and need the
most careful study if we are fully to recapture the sense of the past.
The ladies will stroll once again in the handsome garden of the Hovey
house; the three shabby musicians playing on Main Street will again
strike up a haunting melody from "The Bohemian Girl"; the first trolley
will clang stubbornly at an unconvinced nag; perhaps Thackeray or
Wendell Phillips or Emerson will stroll out of the Davis house on
Federal Street. Or is it, perhaps, the late winter of 1888 with the
whole town as silent as the moon, buried in drifts of snow ten to twenty
feet deep? Or is it such a motionless moment in a breathless August
afternoon that not a rig is stirring the powdery dust on East Main
Street, and no sound is heard but one locust singing reveille from an
elm in front of the Pratt house to one sleeping G.A.R. veteran on the "piazzer"
of the "Gun Shop across the way? The final conclusion from all these
pictures is un-escapable — that a more leisurely life than ours must
have been the lot of Victorian Greenfield. We think of it, perhaps too
romantically, perhaps correctly, as a time of long afternoons, hammocks,
long novels, long snug winters with cutter-racing and sociable's, of a
generally easy pace, careful choice of language, and profound
seriousness and optimism about man and his fate.
NOTE: Many of the earliest pictures in this book were
taken by C. M. Moody; many of those taken in the period around 1900 are
by Mr. Winslow; several were taken by the late T. C. Forbes (Forbes
camera shop) The photograph of the village blacksmith was taken by the
famous Allen sisters of Deerfield....
101 pages, 7x9 hardbound, very good condition.
Hadley
Under a Colonial Roof-Tree (Hadley, Mass.)
$25.00
Aria S. Huntington
Cambridge: Riverside Press 1892
Fireside chronicles of early New England
Table of contents: The old house, Our ancestry of freemen, The entrance to
the woods, The spire of Hatfield church, A diary of long ago (Elizabeth
Porter), The house, from the garden, Fireplace in the long room, Later
life in the old mansion, The family burial-place, Appendix.
126 pages, hardbound, good condition, covers are faded and have light
smudging on them, corners bumped.
Hatfield
Hatfield Massachusetts 1670-1970 $39.95
Hatfield, Mass: The Tercentenary History Committee, 1970
Table of contents:
AUTHORS
Chapter 1 — Mrs. A. Cory Bardwell, Chapter 2 — Mrs. Philip Z. Maiewski,
Chapter 3 — Mrs. Gordon A. Woodward, Jr., Chapter 4 — Mrs. Samuel Osley,
Chapter 5 — Mrs. Gordon 0. Williams, Chapter 6 — Mrs. Robert C. Byrne,
Chapter 7 — Mrs. Francis W. Cole, Jr., Chapter 8 — Mrs. Chester J.
Jablonski, Chapter 9 — Mrs. Richard D. Belden, Chapter 10 — Mrs. Henry
Betsold
Chapter 1 — A CLEAR CALL (1670 - 1700)
Indians Well Established the First Settlers
Early Hatfield
Discipline and Diligence Dispute with Hadley
First Meeting House First Stockade Built
Hatfield's Bloodiest Massacre Peace Brings Growth and Changes
First School Established King Williams' War
New Industry Begins
Chapter 2 — A TIME OF TRIAL AND TERROR (1700 -1730)
Queen Anne's War
Farming
Chapter 3 — DRUMS OF WAR (1730 -1760)
Religious Influence
Boundaries and Laws
Transportation
French and Indian War Daily Tasks
Industry and Agriculture
Chapter 4 — TORIES AND TAXES (1760 - 1790)
Israel Williams
Religion and Politics
Hatfield's Role in the Revolution Shays' Rebellion
Chapter 5 — THE TURN OF THE CENTURY (1790 - 1820)
Party Politics
Clothing
Busy as Bees
Borning Rooms and Coffin Doors
Food
Drink
Hatfield's Bridge from Path to Pike
An Excursion Schools and Books
Hampshire County Formation
Chapter 6 — THE THRIVING YEARS (1820 - 1850)
Broomcorn
Oliver Smith
New Congregational Church
Education and Social Life
Valley Settlements Established In the Beginning
Chapter 7 — CHANGING TIMES (1850 -1880)
The First Immigrations
Tobacco
The Old Lead Mine
75,000 Men for 90 Days
The Smiths
Chapter 8 — LEGACIES AND NEW FACES (1880 -1910)
Hatfield Legacies
Polish Immigration
Central European Immigration
Period of Changes
Social Gatherings
Electric Roads
Hatfield's Utilities
Chapter 9 — WITHIN RECALL (1910 -1940)
Transportation Innovations
Education Facilities Increased
World War I
The "Flu" — Daylight Saving — New Town Hall Depression Years
U.S. Post Office
1927 Flood 1936 Flood 1938 Hurricane
Chapter 10 — FROM BENTS TO BEDROOMS (1940 - 1970)
World War II
Bedrooms Needed Schools
Sports and Clubs
92 page 6x9 Hardbound, good condition
Holyoke
Holyoke, Massachusetts, A Case History of the Industrial Revolution in
America.
$75.00
Constance McLaughlin Green.
New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1939.
425 pages, 6 x 9 hardcover with dust jacket; illus. front piece, foldout
rear map, good condition; dust jacket soiled, stuck to cover, and inside
clipped. <con>
Ludlow
A History of Ludlow,
Massachusetts
1774-1974
$65.00
Herbert L. McChesney
Ludlow, Mass: Bicentennial Committee 1978
Table of contents; List of Illustrations, List of Maps, Ludlow Before 1774, Town
Government, The Churches, Cemeteries, Education, The Hubbard Memorial Library,
Agriculture, Industry and Business, Nationalities, Transportation, Communications and
Utilities, Public Safety, Military History, Houses, Natural Disasters, Sports, Recreation
and Entertainment, Clubs and Organizations, Appendix: A. Division of the East Outward
Commons, B. The Letter from Ludlow, England, C. Town Government, D. School and Ministry
Lands, E. Churches, F. Ludlow Residents in the Armed Forces, CG. The Bicentennial
Celebration, H. "Farms of Ludlow", Bibliography, Index, Sources of
Illustrations.
608 pages, hardbound, good condition
Northampton
No Ordinary Man - Judge Forbes and His Library 1894-1994
$12.95
Allison McCrillis Lockwood
Northampton, Mass. Daily Hampshire Gazette 1994
Interesting history of the Northampton Library
108 pages, softbound, very fine condition
Rowe
Gold on Mount Grace (Warwick, Mass.) $7.50 (out of print)
Harlan G. Medcalf
Miller's River Publishing Company, 1985
(from the introduction) "Gold On Mount Grace" is the story of a child's life in a small rural town remote from the rest of the world during the days of the opening of the twentieth century - before the days of electricity, the telephone and the automobile.
The author, then a lad of about six years, was returning to the ancestral home, the Goldsbury homestead, built by his
great grandfather in 1826. Capt. James Goldsbury, a leading citizen, lived to be 101 years old, dying in 1898. It was his daughter Ann Maria who had cared for him during his declining years, now living alone, who invited her grand niece, Czarina Goldsbury Metcalf, and children to join her during the summer.
The experiences of "Gold," as the boy was called, and his sister Ethel - at school, church, work and play, in every phase of life in the country - are described vividly.
It was a time when children were left to their own resources to provide amusement..."
Southampton
A Continuing Story - The History of the First Congregational Church of
Southampton Mass 1743-1981 $13.00
Compiled and Published by the History Book Committee First Congregational
Church Southampton, Mass. 1981
Table of Contents: Before the Beginning, the Development of
Congregationalism, the First 60 Years, the Flowering, Mighty Shakings,
Peaceful Years between the Wars, The Last 60 Years, the Church Building,
Former Organizations, the Female Charitable Society, Church Music, Ladies
Aid Society, the Sunday School, Young People Societies, Epilogue, Appendix
190 pages, good condition
Turners Falls
A History of the
First Baptist Church of Turner's Falls, Massachusetts 1872-1922 $10.00
Antonio J. Stemple
Turner's Falls: 1922
Entertaining history of the church.
16 page pamphlet, covers are stained otherwise good condition.
Wales
Wales Massachusetts Centennial 1866 $8.40
Absalom Gardner
Wales, Mass: Wales Historical Society, 1995 reprint, 1866
An address delivered in Wales, October 5, 1862; being the Centennial
Anniversary of the Municipal Organization of the Town; with additions and
extensions upon some matters needful to bring the history of town down to
January 1, 1866. To which is annexed a "Roll of Honor," being a catalogue
of the names, etc., of soldiers from this town who served in the armies of
out government in the late Civil War.
44 page pamphlet, very good condition.
Williamstown
Origins in Williamstown, Massachusetts $38.00
Arthur Latham Perry, LL.D.
Heritage, 1993 (1894) reprint
Williamstown is located in the northwest corner of
Massachusetts. One chapter is devoted to natural and man-made. features of
the area, and includes information on early exploration and residents.
Fort Massachusetts was built In 1745 in response to unrest among the Indians
and French, and the encroachment by Dutch farmers from New York. Life at the
fort is detailed, giving, among other topics, a roster of soldiers copies of
correspondence, and stories of wartime Indian, depredations. The fort gave
rise to the town of West Hoosac which in turn gave rise to Williamstown,
established 1765.
Two chapters describe the towns’ early history, transcribe official
documents, and provide genealogical and biographical details on some
families. The Williams family is closely tied to the area - Captain Ephraim
Williams obtained an early, if not the first, grant to land near Fort
Massachusetts - and one chapter is devoted to biographical information on
the family, especially the military careers of Ephraim and Colonel Israel
Williams. A fascinating history, written with an eloquence rarely used by
authors today
631 pages, 2 vols., illus., index, softbound, new.
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