History of the town of Richmond, Cheshire County, New Hampshire, from its first settlement, to 1882 . .Then they return to God the Just,Where there is neither sin nor grief,Nor faith, nor hope, nor unbelief. Man hopes for that he has not got;Has faith in that which he sees not;In what he sees there is no can he hope for that he hath. Our spirits soar from whence they not in guilt and sin and shame ;Nothing unclean can ever bearAdmittance or an entrance there. When the Redeemers blood was spilt,His blood atoned for every guilt,In whom we all presented areBefore the Father, cl


History of the town of Richmond, Cheshire County, New Hampshire, from its first settlement, to 1882 . .Then they return to God the Just,Where there is neither sin nor grief,Nor faith, nor hope, nor unbelief. Man hopes for that he has not got;Has faith in that which he sees not;In what he sees there is no can he hope for that he hath. Our spirits soar from whence they not in guilt and sin and shame ;Nothing unclean can ever bearAdmittance or an entrance there. When the Redeemers blood was spilt,His blood atoned for every guilt,In whom we all presented areBefore the Father, clean and fair. Ozial Ballou—James — m. Dec. 7, 1790, HannahRobinson, of Cumberland. He lived on the oldplace with his father, and after his wifes death heand his son Esek continued on the same place, andhad no housekeeper during the remainder of each oftheir lives. He d. June 23, 1838 ; she d. Oct. 6,1818. Had five children, viz. : Ozial, b. June 6,1794, d. 1818; Ebenezer, b. Aug. 20, 1796; Tamma,b. April 19, 1799, m. Joseph Davis; Esek, b. , 1808, who lived on the old place, and was un-. (?• i V 4, X. James Ballou, House. See page GARFIELDS EARLY HOME. TOWN OF RICHMOND. 289 married, and d. there April 29, 1858; James, 30, 1810, d. about 1830 ; was a school-teacher,and a young man of much promise. yaiiics Ballon, jr.—James — m. Mehitable, dr. ofHenry Ingalls, Esq., Nov. 5, 1786. His residenceat first was on the east side of the road, south of hisfathers. An excavation, observable in passing alongthe road, marks the spot where it stood. In one partof his house he occasionally kept a school, thescholars belonging to the families in the neighbor-hood. He remained here until about 1803, when heremoved to the place now occupied by Roscoe Weeks,where he kept a public house and store until hisdeath, Oct. 15, 1808. His family, after his decease,removed to Worcester, in the state of New York,whither had gone Henry Ingalls, Esq., Mrs. Ballousfather. Th


Size: 2221px × 1125px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookidhistoryoftow, bookyear1884