The Bay State Monthly — Volume 2, No. 2, November, 1884 by Various
page 34 of 114 (29%)
page 34 of 114 (29%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
was made is not known, further than that he must have been some one
who had rendered military or other services to the State. That he was the Prescott who commanded at Bunker Hill is, indeed, possible; but, as the grant was probably made before the Revolutionary War, that supposition seems hardly tenable. (Page 15.) By an act of the General Court, passed February 25, 1793, a large section of territory was taken from Groton and annexed to Dunstable. This change produced a very irregular boundary between the two towns, and made, according to Butler's History of Groton (page 66), more than eighty angles in the line, causing much inconvenience. The following copy from the "Laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts" gives the names of the families thus transferred:-- An Act to set off _Caleb Woods_, and others, from _Groton_, and to annex them to _Dunstable_. BE _it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives, in General Court assembled, and by the authority of the same_, That _Caleb Woods, Silas Blood, Amaziah Swallow, Nathaniel Cummings, Ebenezer Procter, Silas Blood_, jun. _Silas Marshall, Levi Parker, Amos Woods, Isaac Lawrence, Peter Blood, Caleb Blood_, jun. _Henry Blood, Caleb Woods_, jun. and _Silas Marshall_, jun., together with their families and estates, and also the estates of Doctor _Jonas Marshall_, the heirs of Captain _Solomon Woods_, deceased, and _Joseph Parkhurst_, which they now own in said _Groton_, be, and they are hereby set off from the town of _Groton_, in the county of _Middlesex_, and annexed to _Dunstable_, in said county, and shall hereafter be considered a part of the same, there to do duty and receive privileges, as the other inhabitants of said _Dunstable. |
|