hide Sorting

You can sort these results in two ways:

By entity
Chronological order for dates, alphabetical order for places and people.
By position (current method)
As the entities appear in the document.

You are currently sorting in ascending order. Sort in descending order.

hide Most Frequent Entities

The entities that appear most frequently in this document are shown below.

Entity Max. Freq Min. Freq
Mathew Cradock 62 0 Browse Search
Charles Brooks 60 2 Browse Search
America Lafayette 44 0 Browse Search
John Brooks 32 2 Browse Search
Richard Russell 29 1 Browse Search
New England (United States) 26 0 Browse Search
Henry C. DeLong 23 1 Browse Search
Nathaniel Wade 20 4 Browse Search
Jonathan Wade 20 4 Browse Search
Carrie Smith 18 0 Browse Search
View all entities in this document...

Browsing named entities in a specific section of Medford Historical Society Papers, Volume 15.. Search the whole document.

Found 8 total hits in 6 results.

Caleb Swan (search for this): chapter 19
A Medford author's residence. Referring to Francis Green, a Medford author, we said (page 83, Vol. Xviii), As yet we have not learned his dwelling place. Had we consulted our former pages we should have found the following (page 97, Vol. Xv), Francis Green,. . . came to Medford about 1798, and two years later occupied the house later belonging to Samuel Swan (Watson house.) We have received the following from the author of the above, which by request we insert, If the editor will refer to the October issue of the Register, page 97, he will find a statement which disproves [?] the one made on page 83. . . 1915. We have now learned where was the dwelling-place of Francis Green, and on the authority of Caleb Swan, as noted by our contributor, state it to have been in that house next north the old third meeting-house, which was more recently known as the Watson house, and a few years since demolished.
Samuel Swan (search for this): chapter 19
A Medford author's residence. Referring to Francis Green, a Medford author, we said (page 83, Vol. Xviii), As yet we have not learned his dwelling place. Had we consulted our former pages we should have found the following (page 97, Vol. Xv), Francis Green,. . . came to Medford about 1798, and two years later occupied the house later belonging to Samuel Swan (Watson house.) We have received the following from the author of the above, which by request we insert, If the editor will refer to the October issue of the Register, page 97, he will find a statement which disproves [?] the one made on page 83. . . 1915. We have now learned where was the dwelling-place of Francis Green, and on the authority of Caleb Swan, as noted by our contributor, state it to have been in that house next north the old third meeting-house, which was more recently known as the Watson house, and a few years since demolished.
Francis Green (search for this): chapter 19
A Medford author's residence. Referring to Francis Green, a Medford author, we said (page 83, Vol. Xviii), As yet we have not learned his dwelling place. Had we consulted our former pages we should have found the following (page 97, Vol. Xv), Francis Green,. . . came to Medford about 1798, and two years later occFrancis Green,. . . came to Medford about 1798, and two years later occupied the house later belonging to Samuel Swan (Watson house.) We have received the following from the author of the above, which by request we insert, If the editor will refer to the October issue of the Register, page 97, he will find a statement which disproves [?] the one made on page 83. . . 1915. We have now lear] the one made on page 83. . . 1915. We have now learned where was the dwelling-place of Francis Green, and on the authority of Caleb Swan, as noted by our contributor, state it to have been in that house next north the old third meeting-house, which was more recently known as the Watson house, and a few years since demolished.
A Medford author's residence. Referring to Francis Green, a Medford author, we said (page 83, Vol. Xviii), As yet we have not learned his dwelling place. Had we consulted our former pages we should have found the following (page 97, Vol. Xv), Francis Green,. . . came to Medford about 1798, and two years later occupied the house later belonging to Samuel Swan (Watson house.) We have received the following from the author of the above, which by request we insert, If the editor will refer to the October issue of the Register, page 97, he will find a statement which disproves [?] the one made on page 83. . . 1915. We have now learned where was the dwelling-place of Francis Green, and on the authority of Caleb Swan, as noted by our contributor, state it to have been in that house next north the old third meeting-house, which was more recently known as the Watson house, and a few years since demolished.
A Medford author's residence. Referring to Francis Green, a Medford author, we said (page 83, Vol. Xviii), As yet we have not learned his dwelling place. Had we consulted our former pages we should have found the following (page 97, Vol. Xv), Francis Green,. . . came to Medford about 1798, and two years later occupied the house later belonging to Samuel Swan (Watson house.) We have received the following from the author of the above, which by request we insert, If the editor will refer to the October issue of the Register, page 97, he will find a statement which disproves [?] the one made on page 83. . . 1915. We have now learned where was the dwelling-place of Francis Green, and on the authority of Caleb Swan, as noted by our contributor, state it to have been in that house next north the old third meeting-house, which was more recently known as the Watson house, and a few years since demolished.
A Medford author's residence. Referring to Francis Green, a Medford author, we said (page 83, Vol. Xviii), As yet we have not learned his dwelling place. Had we consulted our former pages we should have found the following (page 97, Vol. Xv), Francis Green,. . . came to Medford about 1798, and two years later occupied the house later belonging to Samuel Swan (Watson house.) We have received the following from the author of the above, which by request we insert, If the editor will refer to the October issue of the Register, page 97, he will find a statement which disproves [?] the one made on page 83. . . 1915. We have now learned where was the dwelling-place of Francis Green, and on the authority of Caleb Swan, as noted by our contributor, state it to have been in that house next north the old third meeting-house, which was more recently known as the Watson house, and a few years since demolished.