History of Concord, New Hampshire, from the original grant in seventeen hundred and twenty-five to the opening of the twentieth century; . of the Eagle have been: William Richardson, 1828-29 ; John P. Gass, 1829-34; Zebina Lincoln, 1834-35 ; HiramLocke, 1835; William Walker, 1836-49; John Gibson, 1849-56;Charles H. Norton and S. H. Dumas, 1857—58; S. andE. Sawyer, 1859-61; John Lindsay, 1861-66 ; H. (). Cram, 1867 ;T. A. Ambrose, 1868-71; Nathaniel White, 1872-73; John , 1873-89 ; Oliver J. Pelren, manager for the Eagle and Phe-nix Hotel company, 1889-1903. Mr. John P. Gass, who


History of Concord, New Hampshire, from the original grant in seventeen hundred and twenty-five to the opening of the twentieth century; . of the Eagle have been: William Richardson, 1828-29 ; John P. Gass, 1829-34; Zebina Lincoln, 1834-35 ; HiramLocke, 1835; William Walker, 1836-49; John Gibson, 1849-56;Charles H. Norton and S. H. Dumas, 1857—58; S. andE. Sawyer, 1859-61; John Lindsay, 1861-66 ; H. (). Cram, 1867 ;T. A. Ambrose, 1868-71; Nathaniel White, 1872-73; John , 1873-89 ; Oliver J. Pelren, manager for the Eagle and Phe-nix Hotel company, 1889-1903. Mr. John P. Gass, who left theColumbian in 1826, came to the Eagle in 1829, having been mean-while landlord of the Broadway House, New York. In 1831-32 hemanaged both the Eagle and the Columbian. In May, 1832, an enlargement was made to the Eagle, and itslandlord declared the living is so good that I have already got thegout, and as for the bar, that is well enough. In the followingJune he applied to himself the words of Falstaff, A good portlyman, i faith, and a corpulent, of a cheerful look, a pleasing eye, and CANALS, STAGE LINES, AND TAVERNS. 801.


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