The Commemoration of the Two Hundred And Fiftieth Anniversary of the First Churc
The Commemoration of the Two Hundred And Fiftieth Anniversary of the First Churc
Mass First Church From Old Catalog Chalestown
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" 25 In the presence of your fathers and your heroes, renew your vows and move on. Son of a noble line, — " Take heed to thy- self and keep thy soul diligently, lest thou forget the things which thine eyes have seen, and lest they depart from thy heart all the days of thy life ; but teach them thy sons and thy sons' sous. " EVENING. A SKETCH OF THE HISTORY OF THE FIRST CHITRCH, CHARLESTOWN. I By JAMES FROTHINGHAM HUNNEWELL. IN July, 1630, several hundred English — men, women, and chil- dren — w...ere trying to live in huts and tents on or around the Town Hill in Charlestown. They had recently escaped discomforts on the sea for privations on shore. Seven small vessels, that had brought them from kindred and former homes, lay in the river. Forests and wild lands, where there were men as wild, spread inland. There were no mines or great extents of fertile land, and there were few to welcome or to help them. Nearly all of the inhabitants were Indians, so called. Along the coasts of what we name New England there were only scanty groups of countrymen : in Maine perhaps five hundred persons ; in Rhode Island and Con- necticut were none ; in Massachusetts were a few, but little more than those at Salem, Beverly, and Lynn, at Dorchester and Plymouth ; there was one man on the neighboring peninsula of Boston, and on Noddle's Island, Samuel Maverick.
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