. The New England historical and genealogical register . hese pictures were evidently those of Samueland his wife Elizabeth (Bronsdon). The others may have been hisparents, Nathaniel and Alary (Allen) Greenwood, or his son anddaughter-in-law, Capt. Samuel, Jr., and Mary (Fitch) t1)e sale of the estate in 1747 these pictures were dispersed, thoughperhaps retained in the family of a younger brother, Joseph G., ofVVoburn and Boston, who died in 1787, a3. 78. The portrait of Sam-uel Greenwood, Sen., turned up in the spring of 1810, and was thentemporarily in the possession of Mrs. Mar


. The New England historical and genealogical register . hese pictures were evidently those of Samueland his wife Elizabeth (Bronsdon). The others may have been hisparents, Nathaniel and Alary (Allen) Greenwood, or his son anddaughter-in-law, Capt. Samuel, Jr., and Mary (Fitch) t1)e sale of the estate in 1747 these pictures were dispersed, thoughperhaps retained in the family of a younger brother, Joseph G., ofVVoburn and Boston, who died in 1787, a3. 78. The portrait of Sam-uel Greenwood, Sen., turned up in the spring of 1810, and was thentemporarily in the possession of Mrs. Mary (Greenwood) Gay, ofDedham, but further trace of it is lost. Prof. Isaac Greenwood, ofHarvard College, at his decease in South Carolina. 1745, left a largecollection of manuscripts, which passed probably into the hands ofhis administrator, Gideon Norton, as they are not retained by hisdescendants. Any information as to the pictures or manuscripts, if extant, willbe thankfully received by the subscriber. I. J. Greenwood, Jr., 142 W. 14th st., New


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1840, bookidnewenglandhi, bookyear1847