Cemetery Inscriptions, Wolfeboro, New Hampshire


Book Description

This work is arranged by cemetery and plot, and includes information on Lakeview, Pine Hill, Hersey, Wolfeboro Center, North Wolfeboro and South Wolfeboro Cemeteries. It includes an every-name index, and an appendix with maps. In addition to the cemeteries listed above, family graveyards have also been researched. Some of the names included are: Tibbetts, Perkins, Cotton, Rust, Jenness, Nute, Avery, Brown, Smith, Young, Haines, Dudley, and more. The maps of the cemeteries are very detailed and have plot locations marked out. The entries include plot number, row number, and/or section number.




The Vital Records of Hudson, New Hampshire, 1734-1985


Book Description

Original settlers in the area that would later be known as Hudson arrived around 1672; the town was formally named Hudson in 1830. The records in this text, listed alphabetically, were obtained solely from three local sources: Annual Legers of the Town Clerk, Annual Town Reports and Kimball Webster's private records. The birth records list: child's name, sex, date of birth, and, when known, child's birth position in family and the parents' names. Hudson marriage records include male and maiden female names, and bride's and groom's parents' names. Death records contain: deceased's name, and when known, the age at death, date of death, and parents' names.




History of Hudson, N.H.


Book Description
















Colonial Gravestone Inscriptions in the State of New Hampshire


Book Description

Mrs. Goss has assembled a list of about 12,500 names found on New Hampshire headstones prior to 1770. Arranged alphabetically by village or town, then, under cemetery, alphabetically by family name, her transcriptions are as complete a record of Colonial New Hampshire gravestone inscriptions as we are ever likely to have.




Fulton Genealogy, 1751-1986


Book Description

Robert Fulton (d. 1797) emigrated during or before 1751 from Ireland to Boston, Massachusetts, and married twice (once in Ireland). He was a surveyor, and later moved to Londonderry, New Hampshire. He was also a Tory, as were two of his sons, and in 1796 they immigrated to Sophiasburg, Upper Canada (near what is Picton, Ontario). His oldest son and other children remained in New England; their descendants and relatives lived in New England, New York, Florida and elsewhere. Most descendants and relatives of those two sons who immigrated with their father to Sophiasburg lived in Ontario, Quebec, Manitoba and elsewhere. Some of these immigrated to Massachusetts, New York, Pennsylvania and elsewhere.