. The town and people; a chronological compilation of contributed writings from present and past residents of the town of Woodbury, Connecticut;. ction with the Parker House, then owned byFrederick S. Parker. Hundreds have gone out from these schools,but as no records are availal)le it is difficult to find out who were thepupils. There were, however, the following: Rev. Eugene Atwoodof Hartford, Daniel King of Chicago, Dr. Edward Louis of Brook-lyn. Dr. Solomon C. Minor of New York, Mr. Castle, who settledin the Sandwich Islands, and has been one of the commissioners oneducation, and Henry Can


. The town and people; a chronological compilation of contributed writings from present and past residents of the town of Woodbury, Connecticut;. ction with the Parker House, then owned byFrederick S. Parker. Hundreds have gone out from these schools,but as no records are availal)le it is difficult to find out who were thepupils. There were, however, the following: Rev. Eugene Atwoodof Hartford, Daniel King of Chicago, Dr. Edward Louis of Brook-lyn. Dr. Solomon C. Minor of New York, Mr. Castle, who settledin the Sandwich Islands, and has been one of the commissioners oneducation, and Henry Canfield of South Britain. Of those who livein town many of the leading were H. D. Curtis, N. M. Strong,Homer Tomlinson, G. F. Morris, G. F. Crane, A. D. Warner andL. P. Eastman. Some of the later ones are State Senator A. , L. E. Dawson, George and Stephen Crane, George Stoneand George Ford, also of Woodbury; Coroner Higgins of Winsted,Lawyer Bernard Higgins of Torrington, C. A. Curtis, H. and S. C. Tomlinson of Woodbury.—Published in Hart-ford Co 11 rant. WooDiuKY, Coxx. George H. Fkekm.\x. WdoDiain-, CoXXlXTRL T 173. JULY. July 4, 1859.—There is a set of men whose memory and moralworth should be embalmed in the heart and practiced in the life ofeach member of the old honored Pioneer church. Men that enteredinto covenant with God and one another and took their lives in theirhands left Egypt and came up into this once wide howling wilder-ness to plant a church. Here, in this pleasant valley and mountainfastness they commended themselves and their cause to God;they came here under the guide and direction of the Divine handin possession of the promise, Lo I am with you always even untothe end. A little one has under the blessing of God almost be-come a nation. These ecclesiastical societies, these orthodoxchurches and the fruits which the old Pioneer has borne, the secondCongregational Church in this town, are but the other half of our-selves. The Episcopa


Size: 1147px × 2177px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookidtownpeoplech, bookyear1901