. The Hovey book, describing the English ancestry and American descendants of Daniel Hovey of Ipswich, Massachusetts. an Introductory Chapter by the President. The Glory of Children are their Fathers. haverhill. mass.: Press of Lewis R. Hovev 1913 Copyright 1914. Lewis R. Hovey, Secretary, Daniel Hovey Association. Haverhill, Mass. 1149445 OFFICERS OF THE DANIEL HOVEY ASSOCIATION President, Horace Carter Hovey, Newburyport, , Henry Emerson Hovey, Portsmouth, ;* Henry Russell Hovey, Hartford, Conn.; Edmund Otis Hovey, New York City; Henry S. Dewey, Boston, Mass.; John C.
. The Hovey book, describing the English ancestry and American descendants of Daniel Hovey of Ipswich, Massachusetts. an Introductory Chapter by the President. The Glory of Children are their Fathers. haverhill. mass.: Press of Lewis R. Hovev 1913 Copyright 1914. Lewis R. Hovey, Secretary, Daniel Hovey Association. Haverhill, Mass. 1149445 OFFICERS OF THE DANIEL HOVEY ASSOCIATION President, Horace Carter Hovey, Newburyport, , Henry Emerson Hovey, Portsmouth, ;* Henry Russell Hovey, Hartford, Conn.; Edmund Otis Hovey, New York City; Henry S. Dewey, Boston, Mass.; John C. Chase, Deny, N. H.; Charles J. Hovey, Mount Vernon, , I^ewis R. Hovey, Haverhill, , William Hovey Ricker, Cambridge, , Grenville Hovey, Lowell, and Genealogist, Sidney Perley, Salem, Mass. PUBLISHING COMMITTEE Horace Carter Hovey, Henry Emerson Hovey, Lewis R. Hovey, Nelson Hovey Seelye, Grenville Hovey, William Hovey Ricker, Mrs. Hamblin L. Hovey, Horatio N. Hovey,Mrs. Elizabeth A. Northrop, John C. Chase, Edmund Otis Hovey, Charles J. Hovey.•Deceased. :Vo S4^„.,^.. ^{^y,/ /fy:M,m/uo,. /rm INTRODUCTION. The HOVEY BOOK owes its existence to the wishes andcombined efforts of many individuals. The materials have beendrawn from all parts of New England, and even from distant re-gions of the Continent and from foreign lands. Here and therehave lived men and women of today who longed to know morefacts than were in their possession concerning their ransacked attics for ancient relics and old family frequented bookstores, and old curiosity shops. They triedto build up family traditions and records into consistent genealo-gies. They made scrap-books filled with clippings, often dis-connected and less authentic than could be desired. They did notdisdain any scrap of information that might come to hand con-cerning anybody by the name of Hovey. Meanwhile the scattered branches of the family did
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