. Old Boston taverns and tavern clubs . fit out an expedition to the West 1665 he commanded that huge ship, the Old James,and in the great victorious sea fight of June 3 with theDutch was slain, with Rear Admiral Sansum, LordsPortland, Muskerry, and others. coles inn. 75 He died without issue and the title went to his uncle,in whom the title became extinct, to be revived later inthe more celebrated Duke, of the Churchill family. It was shortly after the Earls departure that Colewas disarmed for his sympathy for his neighbor on thesouth, Mrs. Ann Hutchinson, and he was also fined atth
. Old Boston taverns and tavern clubs . fit out an expedition to the West 1665 he commanded that huge ship, the Old James,and in the great victorious sea fight of June 3 with theDutch was slain, with Rear Admiral Sansum, LordsPortland, Muskerry, and others. coles inn. 75 He died without issue and the title went to his uncle,in whom the title became extinct, to be revived later inthe more celebrated Duke, of the Churchill family. It was shortly after the Earls departure that Colewas disarmed for his sympathy for his neighbor on thesouth, Mrs. Ann Hutchinson, and he was also fined atthe same time for disorders at his house. In the fol-lowing spring he was given permission to sell his house,to which he had just built an addition, and he disposedof it to Capt. Robert Sedgwick in February, 1638. Cole then removed to a house erroneously noted bysome as the first inn, situated next his son-in-law, Ed-mund Grosse, near the shore on North Street. Thishe sold in 1645 to George Halsall and bought otherland of Valentine THE BAKERS ARMS f^ VII. THE BAKERS ARMS. Predecessor of the Green Dragon. Thomas Hawkins, biscuit baker, and a brother ofJames Hawkins, bricklayer, was born in England in1608. He was a proprietor in Boston in 1636; his wifeHannah was admitted to the church there in 1641, andthat year his son Abraham, born in 1637, was home lot was on the west side of WashingtonStreet, the second north of Court Street. He also hadone quarter of an acre near the Mill Cove, and a housebought in 1645 from John Trotman. In 1662 James Johnson, glover, sold three quartersof an acre of marsh and upland, bounded on the northand east by the Mill Cove, to Hawkins. The latterwas living by the Mill Cove by this time in a housebuilt in 1649, and beside keeping his bake house hekept a cook shop, and also entertained with refresh-ments his customers by serving beer. A mortgage ofthe property, in 1663, to Simon Lynde discloses, besidesthe dwelling and bake house, a
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectbostonmasssociallife