Sunday, September 28, 2008

Patrolman Benjamin May

Jamaica Plain News.



Brewer Street (Bromley, 1905). The Benjamin May house is opposite the end of Thomas Street.



May Street, 1874. The house of Benjamin May is along May Street. Both sides of May Street were once part of May Farm.




John May, master of the vessel "The James", and a carpenter, was born in 1590. He sailed between London and New England in the 1630s, before coming to Massachusetts with his family as part of the Great Migration of the Puritans to New England, and settled in Roxbury near the Great Pond in about 1640. His first wife died in 1651, and he remarried. His first son, also named John, was born in England in 1631, and became a carpenter like his father. The second John married Sarah Brewer Bruce, widow, daughter of Daniel and Joanna Brewer, and had eight children. Offspring number four was another John, first surviving son, born in 1663. This John married Prudence Bridge in 1684, and went on to become a church deacon and a Selectman of the town of Roxbury, and is buried at the Eustis Street burial ground in Roxbury. Of his many children, Benjamin was number eleven, born in 1708. When his first wife, Mary Williams, died leaving him with five children, he remarried Abigail Gore, widow of John Gore. His first child, Lemuel, was born in 1738, and would live until 1805. Lemuel served as Lieutenant in Captain Child's company, the 3rd Roxbury, in Colonel William Heath's regiment. His 1st Suffolk Company commission was signed by George Washington, and he would later be known as Captain Lemuel May. Lemuel married Abigail Davis, and they had two daughters before she died. He remarried Katharine Williams, and had nine more children, of whom three survived to adulthood. The first surviving son was Benjamin, born 1781. Benjamin married Mary Starr, and farmed the old homestead. They had four children, including Lemuel, born 1814. Lemuel married Lucy Ann Kent and had two sons. Their first son - takes big breath - was Benjamin, born in 1848, who married Sarah J. Moffatt, and is the gentleman featured in today's entry.

In this one branch of the May family, we have a Bridge, a Williams, a Gore and a Starr - all names known in Jamaica Plain history. The Bridge family were early settlers of the land along Centre street at today's Moss Hill, adjacent to the May property. The Williams family was one of the biggest land holders in Roxbury. The Gores gave us Paul Gore street, and the name Starr Lane we owe to one branch of that family. The May name was still on property between the eponymous May street and the new Arborway in 1905, but by 1914 the last of the old homestead land was in non-May hands. Perhaps the building of the Arborway across the old farm land was too much for the family to take.

Patrolman Benjamin May lived in his grandmother's old house on May street until moving into a Gothic cottage house at 9 Brewer street. Which is two-three houses up away from the house I grew up in, the son of a Boston policeman. Which brings the entire story home for me. A tenuous connection to early Jamaica Plain, but a connection nonetheless.

The story below honors Patrolman May's service to the community, and is of special interest in that it informs us that Lemuel May ran the Omnibus service between Jamaica Plain and Boston. There's a neat little tidbit!

Addendum: When you read Roxbury history, you get a sense that it was a small world. Here are some of the connections that show up in the May genealogy. Eleazer May, grandson of the first John, sold his land to Benjamin Fanueil. That land would in time become the Samuel G. Goodrich (Peter Parley) estate, and the southern portion would be laid out as Green street. Abigail May, first daughter of Captain Lemuel May, would marry Moses Brewer and become the mother of Captain Charles Brewer. A cousin,also named Abigail May, would marry Joseph Brewer, and later donate land to the Eliot School. Susannah, daughter of Benjamin (b. 1781), married Alexander Dickson, whose house remains on Green street today.



Jamaica Plain News February 15, 1908


POLICEMAN MAY'S RETIREMENT.


His Many Years in the Police Department and Life-long Residence in Jamaica Plain Full of Interesting Incidents.



Patrolman Benjamin May, whose retirement from the police force of Boston at his own request and by virtue of the age limit was mentioned in the News at the time, was not only one of the oldest men, in point of service in the police department, but is one of the longest continuous residents of Jamaica Plain now living and in touch with the life of the present day, and his life and service are filled with interesting incidents of the changes that have occurred in Jamaica Plain during the past sixty years as well as in his personal career as a police officer. The announcement of his retirement two weeks ago being made only the night before the News went to press, only a brief mention of the event was made then. The News is pleased to present in this issue a fuller account of Patrolman May and his interesting life and service as a policeman and a life-long resident of Jamaica Plain.

Patrolman May's service in the police department covered thirty-nine years, at his retirement at the age of sixty, two weeks ago, thirty-four being spent as a member of the police force of the city of Boston, and five years as a special officer of the town of West Roxbury. During these thirty-nine years, Patrolman May rendered the most faithful and efficient service and when his retirement was announced he received the highest commendation from the head of the police department and left active service with the warmest regard of his fellow officers. Through all the changes in the department he was uniformly efficient and devoted to his duty and his retirement now with a pension will enable him to enjoy a well-deserved rest.

Officer May was born in Jamaica Plain a little over sixty years ago and practically all his life has been passed in his home town. His public service began in 1866 when he became a member of the old hand fire engine company known as "Fountain No.1." During his service as fireman was thrown from the engine while making a run and was considerably cut and bruised and laid up for some time, and this mishap led to his resignation from the fire service. He was a member of the fire department until 1869 however, when he was appointed a special police officer in the old town of West Roxbury. After the annexation of West Roxbury to Boston he became a member of the police force of that city, his appointment dating from May, 1874. He was assigned to Div. 13, the Jamaica Plain station, and remained here until 1890, when he was transferred to the Back Bay station. He remained there until about a year ago, when he was again transferred to Div. 13, from which station he was retired.

Not alone as a fireman and police officer has Mr. May served with credit and efficiency. He also won some distinction in the early days as a bell ringer in Jamaica Plain, he having tolled the bell on the Unitarian church at the corner of Centre and Eliot streets upon the occasion of Governor Andrews' death, and by the request of the late Stephen Weld, having rung the bell on the old engine house (which stood where Seaver's block now stands) to announce the glad tidings of Lee's surrender. On this occasion he rang so long and vigorously that people became alarmed and came rushing to the engine house to find out where the fire was. There fear however, was soon changed to rejoicing when they learned the cause of the ringing of the bell.

Mr May was the son of Lemuel May who ran the first omnibus line from Jamaica Plain to Boston before the days of horse cars. The stable and starting place of this line was on Thomas street and hourly trips were made, the fare being 25 cents each way, and Mr May assured his friends that women did not go to Boston bargain hunting every day those times. As a lad Mr. May used to ride on the seat of the omnibus with his father or the driver and there learned, by holding the reins of the six horse team, to become the excellent horseman and driver he has always been. Before the time Mr. May's father started the omnibus line from here to Boston he says many people used to walk the distance, and others wait for the weekly trip of the Boston-Providence stage, which ran through Jamaica Plain and which was the only public conveyance from here to Boston at the time. The Providence stage, he says, never lacked a full load both ways between Jamaica Plain and Boston.

Mr. May has been a member of the Roxbury Historical Society, and has a deep interest in as well as a full knowledge of local history. His retirement after these thirty-nine years of active and arduous service will bring him the leisure and rest in his Brewer street home which he has so well earned.

Source of the May genealogy: A Genealogy of the Descendants of John May, Who Came From England to Roxbury in America.

Monday, September 22, 2008

Jamaica Plain's Soldier's Memorials

Soldier's Monument (Civil War), Centre and South streets.



I've had this project in mind for a while, and over time I've chipped away at finishing it. My intention was to find all the soldier's memorials in Jamaica Plain and document them with photographs. The list is not yet complete, but I figured that I'd post what I had, and add those I've missed as I find them. I've chosen not to go to the American Legion and get a listing of locations. I'd rather find them as I walk the streets, making note of them as they deserve to be recognized. The memorials for individuals sit on the top of street signs, easily overlooked by harried commuters and pedestrians. They were certainly meant to be noticed by those who had them erected - the families and friends of the young men who left Jamaica Plain and never came home. Each had a story to tell, and each left a hole in the lives of their survivors. My father and two uncles left to fight in Europe and the Pacific, and all came home safe and sound. To those who lost loved ones, a sign overlooking a busy intersection could only have been small consolation, but a consolation nonetheless.




I've added in this memorial to firefighter John W. "Jack" Carlson of Engine Co. 28, from the "new" fire station on Centre street.


Walter street burial grounds Revolutionary War Memorial - Arnold Arboretum.




Revolutionary War Memorial - Soldier's Monument, Centre and South Streets.



Tollgate Cemetery - Irish War Veteran's Memorial



World War I World War II Memorial - Arborway and Centre Street



Tollgate Cemetery - Irish American War Veteran's Memorial




World War I Car Barn Memorial - Arborway at old MBTA headquarters.

Lieut. Charles M. Poole - Arborway and South Street - under the Casey Overpass.



Cpl. Joseph E. Johnson - Johnson (Green Street) playground. (Click on the picture to expand and read).




Walter Botolinski - Beethoven and Arcadia Streets.


PFC David C. Holden - Brookside Avenue and Montebello Road.




John P. McCartin - Call Street and Carolina Avenue.





Lieut. John T. Carr -Centre Street and Arborway.




Lieut. Edward J. Murray - Centre Street and Arborway.




Cpl Robert Englehart - Centre and Aldworth Streets.





Joseph Kelly - Centre and Forbes Street.





Hicks - Centre and Myrtle Streets.





Sgt. Robert R. Snow - Centre Street and Seaverns Avenue.



Sgt. John Paul Taillon - Centre and Walden Streets.




Felix J. Russo Jr. - Forest Hills Street and Brookley Road.



Robert M. Englehart - Heath and Schiller Streets


William A. Carly - Lamartine Street and Lamartine Place.





PFC. Robert Bachar - Lamartine and Oakdale Streets.




PFC George Kapinsky - Montebello Road and Marmion Street.





John J. O'Brien - South Street and Asticou Road.





Alexander Arredondo - South and St Rose Streets.




Daniel M. Kellett - South and Child Streets.





John J. McBride - South and McBride Streets.




Henry A. Pezella - Pond Street and Jamaicaway.





James McGuire - South and Prince Streets.




Lieut. Michael P. Vaughn - Centre and Hathaway Streets.





Horace Farnham - Elm and Newbern Streets.





Richard E. Cochran - Hyde Park Avenue and Walk Hill Street.






Bernard L. Russo - Centre and Ballard Streets.





Sean O'Connor - Centre and Dunster Streets.





Myron B. Whitcomb - Centre and Eliot Streets.




Matthew O. Gorman - Pond and Prince Streets.





Charles H. Nowell - Pond and Woodland Streets.




Chester Pagel - Walk Hill and Wachusett Streets.




Charles Franklin Briggs - Walk Hill and Wenham Streets.




Charles F. Barry - Washington and Burnett Streets.




William Gorman - Washington Street and Rossmore Road.


William E. Canary Memorial - Centre street and South Huntington avenue. Note the flagpole on the island at the fork in the road.




The base of the William E. Canary memorial - shown above.

Thursday, September 18, 2008

JP Businesses - 1905

Just a couple of thoughts. First, what ever happened to magnetic healers? Also, what were Cuban chips?












OUR $3.00 LINE


OF

LADIES' BOX CALF BLUCHER CUT BOOTS


HAVE BEEN REDUCED IN PRICE TO


$2.50


VOGEL VOGEL VOGEL



130 GREEN STREET, JAMAICA PLAIN







Begin the New Year Right!

How?


Why, by having footwear in readiness for any weather. STORM RUBBERS, WARM OVERSHOES, and THICK-SOLED STREET SHOES all will be needed in quick succession during January. These can be found at reasonable prices at

Heerbrandt Shoe Co.'s

146 Paul Gore Street Jamaica Plain








FUN! FUN! FUN!


LET NO INNOCENT MAN ESCAPE

AT THE GREAT

MOCK COURT TRIAL


under the auspices of


BOSTON POST 200 G.A.R.

Curtis Hall Jamaica Plain

Wednesday evening, February 8th.

One of our most respected citizens will be charged with BREACH OF PROMISE. Regular court rules.Startling developments, Ludicrous situations, Local Hits. An evening of refined fun.

Prices 25, 50 and 75 Cents.

Open at 7:30 Court called at 8:00






G.L. GREENWOOD

MAGNETIC HEALER

19 Burr Street, off Spring Park Avenue.

Jamaica Plain

Office Hours: 10:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. except Sunday, Monday, Tuesday; evenings by appointment. Will call at patients home when desired.






MRS. PAULINE R. ORRICK

FRENCH DRESSMAKER

(Imported models).

8 Thomas Street Jamaica Plain.






Dr. John A. Watts

DENTIST


6 GORDON STREET JAMAICA PLAIN

Opposite Railroad Station.






L.W. SCOTT, D.D.S.

DENTIST


703 Centre Street Cor. Burroughs Street





Mrs. Priscilla Mayer

Dressmaker


15a Gordon Street Jamaica Plain





MISS ANNA H.B. ENGLISH

Vocal and pianoforte teacher

20 Spring Park Avenue, Jamaica Plain

Ladies' Orchestra for Receptions, Banquests, Dancing Parties, etc




Green Street Hand Laundry


103 Green Street

GEO. T. JAQUES, Proprietor

Telephone 266-4

Finest work and lowest prices in the city, all work called for and delivered
.






I. HELLER

THE LADIES' TAILOR


94 Green Street, Room 2

Full line of Paris and New York models on Hand. Suits made to order in the latest styles.




--- MURDOCH
---

Have you tried our famous CUBAN CHIPS? They are delicious and fresh daily. Everything in the line of Candy home-made.

684 CENTRE STREET




Source: Jamaica Plain News, 1905

Monday, September 15, 2008

Lost Green Street

Cor. Green and Oakdale, 1905 (J.P. News)


Bromley, 1905 (BPL)


The picture above comes from an advertisement in the Jamaica Plain news for E.M. Fisher's Cold Blast Market. The store was at the no longer present corner of Green and Oakdale streets. It is now the corner of the Green Street playground, along the Southwest Corridor park and cross-corner to the Green Street Orange Line station. The store was featured two entries ago as the A.J. Ford Cold Blast Market, so apparently the name remained as management changed. In the map above, the building is owned by Gertrude C. Marsh. If you select the picture and blow it up to full size, you'll see that two trees grew up in front of the building, apparently right through an extended roof/awning over the sidewalk. This is the first picture I've ever seen of this building, so I though it was worth presenting on its own.

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Builders And Contractors - 1899

CHAS. O'MALLEY,

House Painter and Decorator


NEAR BOYLSTON STATION.

Painting in all its branches. Ceilings whitened, tinted and decorated in designs of any period or style. First class work solicited from architects, builders and owners. Orders for jobbing attended to.






JAMES COCHRANE,

HOUSE PAINTER AND PAPER HANGER
.

Ceilings painted and tinted.
Graining and glazing.

183 BOYLSTON ST., Shop:

Jamaica Plain 11 Elm st.






THOMAS MINTON,

CONTRACTOR
.

Office: Hyde Park Av., Forest Hills.

Sand furnished for all descriptions of work, 50 cents a load at the bank on Keyes st., near Franklin Park. $1 a load delivered within reasonable distance. All orders promptly attended to.






CARRIAGE BUILDER,

C.C. CHASE
,


Blacksmithing and Horseshoeing,

767 Centre St., opp. Greenough Ave.





ROWEN BROS.,

PLUMBING


Gas Fitting and Furnace Work.

Jobbing promptly attended to

45 GREEN ST., JAMAICA PLAIN

Agent for Glenwood Range, Hot Water Heating for Dwellings.

Connected by Telephone.






F.H. WILMARTH,

ELECTRICIAN


And

ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES.


723 Centre St.





THOMAS O'LEARY,

Contractor,

Concrete and Asphalt Paving
.

STREETS, DRIVEWAYS, SIDEWALKS, BREWERY FLOORS, CELLARS, CARRIGE WASH STANDS.

Cor. Centre and Paul Gore Streets.

Jamaica Plain







JOHN H. TRAUB,

Painter and Glazier
,

Estimates given on all kinds of Painting, Whitening and Tinting.

29 Goldsmith Street, Jamaica Plain.






Godfrey & Thomas

LICENSED


Plumbers and Gasfitters,

Tin Roofing, Donductor Work, Stove and Furnace Repairs.

769 Centre St., Jamaica Plain.

(Opposite Greenough Ave.)

B.F. Godfrey H. Thomas.

Telephone 210-3






J.T. BUTLER


Carriage and Sign Painter,

11 Burroughs St., Jamaica Plain.





Kimball & Jones,

Carriage Manufacturers
.

Repairing in All its Branches

No. 11 Burroughs St.,

Jamaica Plain.






D. JOHNSON & CO.,

CARPENTERS AND BUILDERS
.

Plans and Estimates Furnished at Short Notice.

LUMBER OF ALL KINDS ALWAYS ON HAND.

Jobbing of Every Description Promptly Attended To.

SHOP, No. 7 BURROUGHS STREET, JAMAICA PLAIN.

EDMOND J. HIGGINS.






GILMORE & McKAY
,

Successors to John H. McKay

CARPENTERS
,

Repairing of all Kinds Promptly Attended to.

Elm St., Cor. of Seaverns Ave.






PETER SCHNEIDER,

Carpenter and Builder
,

14 Egleston St., Jamaica Plain.






MOSHER & YOUNG,

Carpenters and Contractors


89 Green St.,

Jamaica Plain.

Estimates made on New Work. Job Work Solicited.

Telephone Jamaica 139-2






F.G. RHODES,


SLATE, TIN AND GRAVE


ROOFER


Rear of 38 Oakdale St., Jamaica Plain





T.A. ROSS,

CARPENTER AND BUILDER


199 Green St., Jamaica Plain

Jobbing of all kinds promptly attended to.






W.C. BATES,

Civil Engineer and Surveyo
r,

BARTLETT'S BLDG, JAMAICA PLAIN,

Contractor's and Mechanic's work Measured.






D.G. McDONALD,

CARPENTER AND BUILDER
,

27 Keyes St.,

Estimates cheerfully furnished.






ALBERT A. AYERS,

Carpenter and Builder,


2 Starr Lane, off Centre St.
,

Sash Blinds and Doors, 7 Green St.,

Jobbing of all kinds promptly attended to.

Residence: 47 Holbrook St., Jamaica Plain.





JOHN J. FOLAN
,

Plasterer and Stucco Worker,

Orders Promptly Attended To.

GREEN STREET JAMAICA PLAIN






Established 1872

M. GATELY,

MASON WORK OF ALL KINDS
,

Jobbing Promptly Done - Estimates Furnished.

SHOP REMOVED TO 164 BOYLSTON AVENUE

Orders at 201 Green Street.

E.A. Brown's Store

Residence 14 Alden Place





JOHN J. FLYNN,

Contractor & Builder


17 Otis Street, Boston

Woolsey Block

Jamaica Plain.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Jamaica Plain Stores and Businesses - 1899

The following advertisements were taken from the Jamaica Plain News, February, 1899. The Hotel Morse is still there on Green street. The store that was on the corner of Jamaica and Woodman streets was in the first floor of the apartment building that still stands there. 3357 Washington street is across the street from the police station. John Gorman shoed horses in the lot beside the Our Lady of Lourdes hall on Brookside avenue. Woolsey square, on the west side of the Jamaica Plain train station at Green street, is long gone. Norcross & Myrick was at the present site of the post office on Centre street. 133 Green street is where condos now overlook the Green street playground. Keazer and Atherton's store was at Centre and Burroughs streets. A.J. Ford's, at 122 Green street, must have been where the playground is now. And finally, Trott's store sat at the corner of Centre and Thomas streets, where Dunkin Donuts now holds down the fort.



McLaughlin Brothers
,

Upholsterers,

No. 181 Green street

Under Hotel Morse

Telephone 23-3





Save 10 per Cent. and buy your


Groceries, Provisions, Family Ales, Wines and Liquors
.

Of J.W. Patterson & Co.,

Cor. Woodman and Jamaica Streets.






WHEN YOU EAT BREAD... EAT NOTHING BUT THE BEST

Go to the

GREEN STREET HOME BAKERY


and get a loaf of HOME MADE MILK BREAD

every Saturday afternoon at 4:30 and Sunday mornings.

Try our Coffee Cakes and English Buns.

JAMES STEPHENS, Proprietor.





WILLIAM T. MCLAUGHLIN CLARENCE W.MCGUIRE

W.T. McLAUGHLIN & CO.,

Wholesale and retail dealers in

FLOUR, HAY, GRAIN, AND MILL-FEED


Office and Storehouse: 3357 Washington st, cor. Green, Jamaica Plain

Telephone no. 199-3, Jamaica





JOHN GORMAN


PRACTICAL HORSE SHOER


Chronic Interfering and Over Reaching

Horses Promptly Remedied.

Lame Horses Treated.

---------------------------

Horses Sent For And Returned.

51 BROOKSIDE AVENUE JAMAICA PLAIN

Telephone 303




C.O. Bennett & Son.


Dealers in

PROVISIONS


Woolsey Square, Jamaica Plain




NORCROSS & MYRICK

GROCERS

Corner Centre and Myrtle Sts.

Jamaica Plain.

Connected by telephone.





CITY CASH PRICES


FOR

Meats, Fish and Provisions

AT

THE PEOPLE'S


MARKETING AND PROVISION STORE,

113 & 115 GREEN STREET,

All kinds of Poultry, Game, Fruit, Butter and Eggs.

TREDENNICK & COWLISHAW

Telephone Jamaica 107-3






FISH AND OYSTER

MARKET


The undersigned invites attention to his full supply of Providence River Oysters, as well as his stock of Fresh and Salted fish, which he will deliver at residences with the utmost promptness, and at reasonable prices as the quality of the goods will warrant.

Fancy oysters for parties will also be supplied to order, on the half-shell or otherwise. openers furnished when desired.

Clams in the shell or opened always on hand. The closest attention given to every order with which I may be favored.

W.F. FALLON


CENTRE STREET - JAMAICA PLAIN





INGRAM I. MARGESON

FIRST-CLASS PROVISIONS


Orders called for and goods delivered.

Cor. Green and Washington Sts.

Telephone 304-2





Keazer & Atherton


Groceries and Provisions

693 CENTRE STREET

Jamaica Plain Mass





A.J. FORD


Cold Blast Market

Provisions, Fruits and Vegetables

Fish & Oysters, Butter & Eggs a Specialty

122 Green Street, Jamaica Plain

Telephone 24-2





GEORGE P. TROTT

DEALER IN

BEEF, MUTTON, POULTRY,

GAME, FRUIT, VEGETABLES, ETC.

Orders called for and goods delivered.

757 Centre St, Cor. Thomas St. Jamaica Plain.

Monday, September 8, 2008

Jamaica Plain Vice

I've written about crime in 1870s Jamaica Plain, so it's only fair that I add this entry I found recently regarding a police action in the 1970s. The following is taken from a police report that made its way in to the records of the building permits department. What we have here is the intersection of technology and changing social norms that came out of the post-War years all across America. The location described below is now a popular restaurant at the top of McBride street near South street. I don't remember the event, although I'm sure I heard about it at the time. I also have no doubt that I would have known many of the five hundred (!) present. As the events are contemporary - or at least contemporary to those of us of my age - I've decided to leave out the names of those arrested. My how times have changed!




City of Boston - Police Department

Division 13

Date of Report: November 9, 1973

DRUGS ( ) GAMING ( ) PROSTITUTION AND VICE (X)


Location: 5 McBride street, J.P.

Date and time: November 6, 1973, 9:15 pm

Description of premises: One story wood and brick cafe.

Arresting and Searching Officers: Captains Bulens & Quinlan, Sergt. WT O'Brien, Dets. Smith & Bradley (13), Dets Miller & McCormick (VCU).

Crime(s) Charged: Exhibiting obscene film, allowing premises to be used, hindering & delaying investigator of BPD by refusing to open locked door, overcrowding of limit of 169 to 500 persons on premises, no license to exhibit film or conduct amusement at any time.

Property seized: $744.00 US Currency, 150 admission tickets, one closed circuit TV cassette reproducer by which film was displayed over TV receivers on premises.

At about 9:15 p.m., Tuesday, November 6, 1973, within named police officers abetted by Search Warrant #03929, issued in West Roxbury Court, entered within described premises and found 500 persons, each having purchased admission tickets of $5.00 each, viewing obscene film entitled "Deep Throat" on TV receivers on the premises furnished by cassette reproducer seized on premises as evidence.

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Wanted! Dead or Alive.

This entry comes from the Boston Public Library online collection of documents. They have scanned the original reward poster, but I'll just transcribe it for you here. Notice that by 1849, Roxbury had become a city. This is just two years before the referendum that created the Town of West Roxbury, with Jamaica Plain as its center. Henry A.S. Dearborn held various political offices before he became Mayor of the city of Roxbury. He was instrumental in the creation of Forest Hills cemetery and is buried there. We can only hope that the widow Shepherd was not handled roughly, and that the rascals were apprehended.



250 Dollars Reward!


_________________________________________________________________

In conformity to an Order of the City Council of Roxbury of the 30th July, 1849, I hereby offer a Reward of TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY DOLLARS for the apprehension and conviction of the person or persons who broke into the Dwelling-House of the widow Abigail Shepherd, on Jamaica Plain, on the night of the 22d of July, 1849; provided, that the above reward shall not extend beyond the term of six calendar months from the date of the above named Order of the City Council.

H.A.S. DEARBORN, Mayor.


City of Roxbury, August 1, 1849

__________________________________________________________________

Press of Jos. G. Torrey, City Printer.