Genealogy of the Corser family in America : embracing many of the descendants of the early settlers of the name in Massachusetts and New Hampshire with some reminiscences of their trans-Atlantic cousins . ^ ^biS^^ ^™ ^^^^ ^^^^ *^the north and west, which, has been much admired and oftendescribed by t uW^tYs^^q^^- ^^m^^^Ff*^ ^-^fiS^^ahcre, At the oi;. of a icw ixivc:^, <?:: ih*: extreme right,extends the forest-clad, picturesque ridge of Ragged Mt.,rightly named (2,000 feet high), situated in Andover. Nextin order, southward, rising to the hight of nearly 3,000 feet,towers the noble Kea


Genealogy of the Corser family in America : embracing many of the descendants of the early settlers of the name in Massachusetts and New Hampshire with some reminiscences of their trans-Atlantic cousins . ^ ^biS^^ ^™ ^^^^ ^^^^ *^the north and west, which, has been much admired and oftendescribed by t uW^tYs^^q^^- ^^m^^^Ff*^ ^-^fiS^^ahcre, At the oi;. of a icw ixivc:^, <?:: ih*: extreme right,extends the forest-clad, picturesque ridge of Ragged Mt.,rightly named (2,000 feet high), situated in Andover. Nextin order, southward, rising to the hight of nearly 3,000 feet,towers the noble Kearsarge, from which the famous war-vessel that sunk the Alabama took its name,— In outline of the landscape, peerless suiioug im.^ Farther to the left, overlooking the cosy viliai^e of Warner,the graceful forms of the Mink Hills bound the prospect. Inthe remoter distance, nearly due west, may be seen the beaut iful globe-shaped peak of Losewells mountain, in Wton. Near at hand, across the valley, are the humbk _l tions of Little Hill, Downers Hill, Pond Hill, with LongPond and White Plain nestling out of sight at the feet of the. SUPPLEMENTARY. lO/ last, and farther southward, in Bashan, Rattlesnake Hill;while below us winds the placid Blackwater, lending enchant-ment to the scene, and making the valley lively with themusic of its waters and the whirr of its busy prospect in mid-summer, when the hills stand drest inliving green, and the valleys are covered over with corn,or in late autumn, when the landscape is attired in its parti-colored robes, is pleasing in the extreme. 244. FAMILY AND SETTLEMENT OF CHILDREN. The first wife of John^ was Jane Nichols, married in New-bury, and the mother of his children ; nativity were Nicholses in Boston, Maiden, Hingham, andReading, at an early date ; later also — how early we do notknow — at Kingston ; but it does not appear that any of thename resided in Newbury prior to 1700. In the lat


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookidgenealogyofc, bookyear1902