Author Archive

Archdiocese of Boston: new searchable records from Foxborough and Georgetown

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St. Mary’s church in Foxborough from 100 Years of Progress, page 753

Today we’ve added six new volumes to Massachusetts: Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston Records, 1789-1920 from St. Mary in Foxborough and St. Mary in Georgetown. This update adds over 6,400 records and over 24,000 names to search.

St. Mary’s in Foxborough became an independent parish in 1880. Prior to this date, various priests from a few different parishes would come to say mass in this area. They had a church in this town as early as 1859.

In 1873 the church of St. Mary’s in Georgetown was dedicated. For some time, it was a mission of the church in Haverhill. As the Catholic population in this area grew, St. Patrick’s in Groveland began as a mission of this parish.

We’d like to thank Sam Sturgis for his help making these parishes available online.

The new volumes are listed below:

St. Mary (Foxborough) Baptisms and Marriages, 1880-1901
St. Mary (Foxborough) Baptisms, 1896-1901

St. Mary (Georgetown) Baptisms and Marriages, 1874-1890
St. Mary (Georgetown) Baptisms and Marriages, 1874-1890 (copy)
St. Mary (Georgetown) Baptisms and Marriages, 1891-1898
St. Mary (Georgetown) Various, 1898-1916

Please note: This database is available to Individual-level and above NEHGS members only. Consider membership.

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Early Vermont Settlers: new Fort Dummer sketches

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An excerpt from a 1724 letter containing a plan of Fort Dummer (Thomas Stoddard / Public domain)

Today we’ve added eight new sketches to Early Vermont Settlers, 1700-1784, highlighting families who lived at Fort Dummer. The new sketches include Major John Arms, Valentine Butler, Joseph Kellogg, Col. Josiah Willard, Col. Josiah Willard, Jr., Nathan Willard, Wilder Willard, and William Willard. We’ve also added “Fort Dummer Soldiers“, a document containing shorter notes regarding the lives of soldiers who served at Fort Dummer (but did not become residents of Vermont). See the first page of “Fort Dummer Soldiers” for more information on who is included and why. Scholars of this region and time period should also consult Scott Andrew Bartley’s article, “The Connecticut River Valley Before Settlement and the Soldiers of Fort Dummer,” in Vermont Genealogy, (24 [2019]: 135-162).

Scott Andrew Bartley’s study project tracks heads of families who lived in Vermont prior to the Revolutionary War.  His sketches so far have focused on Windham and Windsor counties.

The latest cluster of sketches focus on families who lived in Fort Dummer, the precursor to Brattleboro, Vermont. Fort Dummer was established during Dummer’s War, a series of conflicts between settlers of the Massachusetts Bay Colony and Native Americans. The main conflict of Dummer’s War centered around boundaries–what belonged to the American colonists? What land belonged to the Native Americans? What land belonged to the British? These conflicts took place from 1722-1725 along the Kennebec River in Maine, in Nova Scotia, and in western Massachusetts. Brattleboro was established in 1753 as part of the New Hampshire land grants (when both New Hampshire and New York laid claim to the present state of Vermont).

Steel Smith‘s sketch (from Windsor) was also updated.

Please note: This database is available to Individual-level and above NEHGS members only. Consider membership.

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Archdiocese of Boston: new searchable records from Amesbury and Watertown

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St. Joseph in Amesbury, from the Archive, Archdiocese of Boston

Today we’ve added ten new volumes to Massachusetts: Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston Records, 1789-1920 from St. Joseph in Amesbury and St. Patrick in Watertown. This update adds over 35,400 records and over 125,100 names to search.

The first iteration of St. Joseph’s church in Amesbury was dedicated in 1866. Ten years later, the church was already ready to expand, and a second, new church was dedicated in 1876. Many French Canadians attended this parish.

Early Catholics in Watertown may have attended a mission church in Waltham before organizing to form their own parish. St. Patrick’s church was completed in 1848. See James S. Sullivan’s 100 Years of Progress for more information on the changing boundaries of this parish.

We’d like to thank Sam Sturgis for his help making these parishes available online.

The new volumes are listed below:

St. Joseph (Amesbury) Baptisms, 1867-1887
St. Joseph (Amesbury) Baptisms, 1887-1900
St. Joseph (Amesbury) Confirmations, 1867-1894
St. Joseph (Amesbury) Confirmations, 1883-1920
St. Joseph (Amesbury) First Communions, 1895-1920

St. Patrick (Watertown) Baptisms, 1855-1877
St. Patrick (Watertown) Baptisms, 1877-1895
St. Patrick (Watertown) Baptisms, 1896-1919
St. Patrick (Watertown) Marriages, 1855-1895
St. Patrick (Watertown) Marriages, 1896-1908

Please note: This database is available to Individual-level and above NEHGS members only. Consider membership.

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Archdiocese of Boston: new browsable records from Holy Cross (Boston) and Our Lady of the Presentation (Brighton)

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Cathedral of the Holy Cross, from the Archive, Archdiocese of Boston

Today we’ve added fifteen new volumes to Massachusetts: (Image-Only) Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston Records, 1789-1920 from Holy Cross in Boston and Our Lady of the Presentation in Brighton. We’ve also updated five volumes from Holy Cross in Boston. This update adds over 2,200 new pages to browse.

Learn more about the current status of this project in our new webinar, Archdiocese of Boston Catholic Records Project: We’re Expanding!. Make sure you are logged in to our site to view the archived webinars, available to watch for free! This webinar happened on February 20, 2020 (so you can find it easily in the list).

The Church of the Holy Cross was established in Boston in 1788; as the Catholic population grew in the city, it become the Cathedral. In 1800, the first Cathedral was built on Franklin Street in the South End. By 1866, a new, larger building was needed, so construction began on the current church on Washington Street. Since, the Cathedral has continued to be a center of Catholicism in New England.

Our Lady of the Presentation was established in 1909 in the Oak Square neighborhood of Brighton. Construction on a church building began in 1913 and the church was dedicated in 1921.

We’d like to thank volunteers Kim Bonner, Eileen McCarthy, Katie McCarver, Angela Napolitano, Ross Weaver and Bill Wolfendale for their help making this update possible.

If you need help navigating this collection, please consult our how-to video.  The new volumes are listed below:

Holy Cross (Boston) Baptisms V.16, 1908-1910
Holy Cross (Boston) Baptisms V.17, 1910-1920
Holy Cross (Boston) Baptisms, 1920
Holy Cross (Boston) Confirmations, 1907-1916
Holy Cross (Boston) Confirmations, 1917-1920
Holy Cross (Boston) Convert Confirmations, 1916-1920
Holy Cross (Boston) Convert Confirmations, 1920
Holy Cross (Boston) Index to Baptisms, 1911-1915
Holy Cross (Boston) Marriages, 1906-1908
Holy Cross (Boston) Marriages, 1908-1911
Holy Cross (Boston) Marriages, 1911-1917
Holy Cross (Boston) Marriages, 1918-1920

Our Lady of the Presentation (Brighton) Baptisms, 1909-1920
Our Lady of the Presentation (Brighton) Confirmations, 1915-1920
Our Lady of the Presentation (Brighton) Marriages, 1910-1920

The following volumes have been updated. Previously they were truncated to only display records from before January 1, 1901. Now they are presented on our site in their complete form:

Holy Cross (Boston) Baptisms V.15, 1900-1908
Holy Cross (Boston) Marriages V.11, 1897-1905
Holy Cross (Boston) Confirmations, 1895-1906
Holy Cross (Boston) Index to Baptisms, 1852-1910
Holy Cross (Boston) Index to Marriages, 1850-1905

Please note: This database is available to all NEHGS members.  Learn more about becoming a NEHGS guest member (free).

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2 new sketches: Early New England Families, 1641-1700

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Watertown historic marker by Daderot [Public domain]

Today we’ve updated Early New England Families, 1641-1700, adding two new sketches featuring John Sawin (m. 1641, 1651) and Daniel Smith, both of Watertown.

Early New England Families, 1641-1700 is written by Alicia Crane Williams. This study project highlights heads of families mentioned in Torrey’s New England Marriages to 1700. Learn more about this project, through one of Alicia Crane Williams’ most recent Vita Brevis posts on the subject.

We’d like to thank Sam Sturgis for his help adding these sketches to our database.

Please note: This database is available to Individual-level and above NEHGS members only. Consider membership.

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Archdiocese of Boston: new searchable records from Arlington and Brockton

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St. Edward’s in Brockton (Tichnor Bros. Inc., Boston, Mass. [Public domain])

Today we’ve added eight new volumes to Massachusetts: Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston Records, 1789-1920 from St. Agnes in Arlington and St. Edward in Brockton. This update adds over 16,100 records and over 61,900 names to search.

Prior to the establishment of St. Malachi (or Malachy) in Arlington in 1872, Arlington Catholics had to travel to St. Peter’s in Cambridge. When the parish began, it also included territory in Belmont and Lexington (which later became their own parishes). In 1900, St. Malachi’s was renamed to honor St. Agnes.

Lord, Sexton, and Harrington describe St. Edward’s in Brockton: “At St. Edward’s, Montello (in the northern part of Brockton), the original temporary wooden church was replaced by a new one erected by Fathers Edwin J. Dolan…and Thomas F. Brannan…His Eminence blessed the cornerstone on October 11, 1914” (History of the Archdiocese of Boston in the Various Stages of Its Development 1604-1943, 718).

We’d like to thank Sam Sturgis for his help making these parishes available online.

The new volumes are listed below:

St. Agnes (Arlington) Baptisms, 1873-1884
St. Agnes (Arlington) Baptisms, 1884-1894
St. Agnes (Arlington) Baptisms, 1894-1902
St. Agnes (Arlington) Marriages, 1873-1899
St. Agnes (Arlington) Marriages, 1898-1920

St. Edward (Brockton) Baptisms, 1897-1913
St. Edward (Brockton) Confirmations, 1898-1920
St. Edward (Brockton) Marriages 1897-1917

Please note: This database is available to Individual-level and above NEHGS members only. Consider membership.

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Archdiocese of Boston: new browsable records from 5 Boston parishes

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St. Cecilia’s Church, January 2020

Today we’ve added twelve new volumes to Massachusetts: (Image-Only) Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston Records, 1789-1920 and updated eight volumes from five parishes across the current city of Boston. This update adds over 2,500 new pages to browse. The new and updated parishes include Our Lady of Ostrobrama in Boston’s West End, Our Lady of Victories (Boston), St. Cecilia in Boston’s Back Bay, St. Francis de Sales (Charlestown) and St. Gabriel in Brighton.

Our Lady of Ostrobrama was established in 1916. Parishioners first worshiped at St. Stephen in the North End before buying a church of their own in Boston’s West End. It was a mission of St. Joseph’s church before eventually becoming an independent parish.

Our Lady of Victories was Boston’s first French Canadian parish, established in 1880, and also know as Notre Dame des Victoires. In History of the Archdiocese of Boston in the Various Stages of Its Development 1604-1943, Lord Sexton, and Harrington relate, “By the end of the [Archbishop] Williams era [i.e. 1907], Notre Dame des Victoires was serving twenty thousand French-speaking people, scattered throughout Greater Boston” (Volume 3, 212).

St. Cecilia was established in 1888 in Back Bay. Many of the congregants were Irish immigrants who worked as servants for the wealthy Protestant families who lived in that neighborhood.

St. Francis de Sales was the second Catholic church established in Charlestown (after St. Mary’s). Situated on Bunker Hill, it was dedicated in 1862.

In 1908, the Passionist Fathers established a monastery in Brighton. The monastery evolved to include a parish church called St. Gabriel’s which became an independent parish in 1934.

We’d like to thank volunteers Kim Bonner, Eileen McCarthy, Katie McCarver, Katie McNally, Linda Weaver, Ross Weaver and Bill Wolfendale for their help making this update possible.

If you need help navigating this collection, please consult our how-to video.  The new volumes are listed below:

Our Lady of Ostrobrama (Boston) Baptisms and Marriages, 1916-1920

Our Lady of Ostrobrama (Boston) Baptisms, 1920

St. Cecilia (Boston) Baptisms, 1919-1920
St. Cecilia (Boston) Confirmations, 1901-1920
St. Cecilia (Boston) Marriages, 1911-1919
St. Cecilia (Boston) Marriages, 1919-1920

St. Francis de Sales (Charlestown) Baptisms, 1908-1920
St. Francis de Sales (Charlestown) Marriages, 1908-1920

St. Gabriel (Brighton) Baptisms, 1912-1920

The following volumes have been updated. Previously they were truncated to only display records from before January 1, 1901. Now they are presented on our site through January 1, 1921:

Our Lady of Victories (Boston) Baptisms, 1898-1905
Our Lady of Victories (Boston) Deaths, 1889-1920
Our Lady of Victories (Boston) Marriages, 1899-1911
Our Lady of Victories (Boston) Various, 1880-1920

St. Cecilia (Boston) Baptisms, 1889-1919
St. Cecilia (Boston) Marriages, 1888-1911

St. Francis de Sales (Charlestown) Baptisms, 1893-1908
St. Francis de Sales (Charlestown) Marriages, 1862-1908

Please note: This database is available to all NEHGS members.  Learn more about becoming a NEHGS guest member (free).

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Archdiocese of Boston: new browsable records from Our Lady of Pompeii (Boston)

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Detail of an 1893 “Map showing the [railroad] terminal facilities of Boston”, zoomed in to the New York Streets area of the South End (Geo. H. Walker & Co. [Public domain])

Today we’ve added six new volumes to Massachusetts: (Image-Only) Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston Records, 1789-1920 from Our Lady of Pompeii in Boston’s South End. This update adds over 1,800 new pages to browse.

Boston College’s Global Boston project describes Our Lady of Pompeii: “Moving out from the North End, many immigrants from southern Italy lived in the New York Streets and worshipped at Our Lady of Pompeii on Florence Street, founded in 1902.” The New York Streets were one of Boston’s first areas targeted for urban “renewal”–most of the neighborhood was razed in the 1950s.

We’d like to thank volunteers Eileen McCarthy, Katie McNally, Angela Napolitano, Ross Weaver and Bill Wolfendale for their help making this update possible.

If you need help navigating this collection, please consult our how-to video.  The new volumes are listed below:

Our Lady of Pompeii (Boston) Baptisms, 1903-1911
Our Lady of Pompeii (Boston) Baptisms, 1912-1914
Our Lady of Pompeii (Boston) Baptisms, 1914-1918
Our Lady of Pompeii (Boston) Baptisms, 1918-1920
Our Lady of Pompeii (Boston) Confirmations, 1909-1920
Our Lady of Pompeii (Boston) Marriages, 1903-1920

Please note: This database is available to all NEHGS members.  Learn more about becoming a NEHGS guest member (free).

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Archdiocese of Boston: new searchable records from Lynn and Watertown

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Detail from 1889 map, Ten Miles Around Lynn (http://maps.bpl.org [CC BY (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)])

Today we’ve added ten new volumes to Massachusetts: Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston Records, 1789-1920 from Sacred Heart in Watertown, Sacred Heart in Lynn and St. Jean Baptiste in Lynn. This update adds over 17,900 records and over 72,900 names to search.

Sacred Heart in Watertown was established to serve the Catholics of eastern Watertown, set off from an area that formerly belonged to St. Patrick’s.

Sacred Heart in West Lynn was established in 1894, from an area that used to belong to St. Mary’s parish. See James S. Sullivan’s 100 Years of Progress for a description of the original boundaries.

Page B of St. Jean Baptiste (Lynn) Baptisms, 1886-1892 contains a brief history of the church, “Historique de la Congrégation Canadienne de Lynn, Mass.” Here is a brief translation:

French Canadians first assembled to organize a parish in Lynn the 14th September 1886. The first priest charged to serve the Canadians of Lynn was the P___ (not sure of word) Joseph O. Gadoury of Salem who was nominated by His Grace the Archbishop Williams of Boston the 18th September 1886. The first Mass was sung the 19th September 1886 in Mr. James Buffum’s chapel on Oxford Street in Lynn. Rev. Mr. Parent arrived in Lynn and Salem the 17th May 1887. The dedication of the S.J.B. Church on Franklin Street took place the 4th December 1887 by Mgr. J.J. Williams, Archbishop of Boston. Rev. J.B. Dumontier(?), pastor in Marlboro sung the Mass. Rev. J.A. Biron of Worcester gave the sermon. Rev. J.B. Parent was named pastor the 9th December 1887 and took charge of the parish the 18th December 1887.

We’d like to thank volunteer Debbie Lansing for her help indexing St. Jean Baptiste in Lynn and Sam Sturgis for his help making the Sacred Heart parishes available online.

The new volumes are listed below:

Sacred Heart (Lynn) Baptisms, 1894-1900
Sacred Heart (Lynn) Baptisms, 1900-1917
Sacred Heart (Lynn) Marriages, 1894-1918

Sacred Heart (Watertown) Baptisms, 1896-1913
Sacred Heart (Watertown) Confirmations, 1898-1916
Sacred Heart (Watertown) Confirmations, 1898-1920
Sacred Heart (Watertown) Marriages, 1896-1920

St. Jean Baptiste (Lynn) Baptisms, 1886-1892
St. Jean Baptiste (Lynn) Baptisms, 1893-1903
St. Jean Baptiste (Lynn) Marriages, 1886-1907

Please note: This database is available to Individual-level and above NEHGS members only. Consider membership.

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New sketches: Early New England Families, 1641-1700

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Henry Bond’s A map of the original allotments of land and the ancient topography of Watertown (proper) which includes parcels of land owned by William Parry

Today we’ve updated Early New England Families, 1641-1700, adding two new sketches, profiling Richard Hassell (m. 1643) and William Parry (m.1641).

Richard Hassell lived with his wife Joan in Cambridge, Billerica, and Dunstable. They had three children. William Parry lived in Watertown with his wife Anne. They had six children.

Early New England Families, 1641-1700 is written by Alicia Crane Williams. This study project highlights heads of families mentioned in Torrey’s New England Marriages to 1700. Learn more about this project, through one of Alicia Crane Williams’ most recent Vita Brevis posts on the subject.

We’d like to thank Sam Sturgis for his help adding these sketches to our database.

Please note: This database is available to Individual-level and above NEHGS members only. Consider membership.

Read more »