"New" at CHS - Amos Bardwell Collection

 After recent discussion about some furniture belonging to Amos Bardwell, Sarah decided to scan the 29 documents...

Amos Bardwell Collection  CHS # 656

An interesting archive of original deeds, poems, copies of 18th century state petitions and ephemera. The 29 documents we have show activities of Amos, his father Elias, and others.

Elias, Daniel Workman & Samuel Browning were on a committee that purchased land in 1815 “for the purpose of burying the dead”, a lot “South of the Brick Schoolhouse”.


 In 1811, as a 19-year-old, Amos Bardwell (1792-1875) penned a book “The Scholars Arithmetic”  (xx page booklet) . (Based on internet research, I believe he may have copied some (or all) of the text from a publication of the same name published in Keene, NH in 1807.)


 

Amos was appointed a Justice of the Peace for Franklin County in 1843, 1850 and 1857. 

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 He was granted permission in 1860 from Lorenzo Langstroth to build his own movable bee hives based on Langstroth’s patent design. Item 656-11 is signed by Langstroth.


 

Sister Martha Bardwell (1809-1869) was a teacher who was paid $42.00 for 12 weeks of teaching school in 1856. (Perhaps in the “Bardwell” school  at the junction of East Colrain and Van Nuys Roads, now only a foundation. Also across  the road from where I used to catch the school bus in the late 1950’s -1960’s)


 

The whole family had an interest in the annexing of part of Bernardston to Colrain in 1780, as shown in this copy of a General Court document. 


 

Many more interesting documents. This card created by “K.E.B.” in 1902 is appropriate for this season of the year. Who was K.E. B(ardwell?)


 

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