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Title
A name given to the resource
River Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
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Title
A name given to the resource
7 River Street, Salem, Massachusetts 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built by John Chandler, housewright by 1788
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1788, 1978
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Joyce King
Language
A language of the resource
English
1788
7
7 River
Chandler
Housewright
John
John Chandler
River
-
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5bdb3756812a68a0c93033bf860902d2
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Title
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Lynde Street
Historic Salem, Inc. House History
A resource made available by Historic Salem, Inc. detailing the history of Salem's houses.
Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
14 Lynde Street, Salem, Massachusetts 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House history
Description
An account of the resource
Built for Ebenezer Beckford, merchant, by 1788
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Inc.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Historic Salem, Inc. house histories
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem, Inc., Salem Historical Society
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1788, 1980
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Joyce King
Language
A language of the resource
English
14
1788
1980
Ebenezer Beckford
History
House
Joyce King
Lynde Street
Massachusetts
Salem
-
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PDF Text
Text
History of occupants & owners
92 Federal Street, Salem
According to available evidence, this house was built by James Gould,
housewright, in 1788. It was his residence from 1794 until his death in
1810. It was later (1830-1861) the home of Caleb Warner, a prominent
silversmith and jeweler.
James Gould bought the land hereabouts in May, 1767, from Mrs. Mary
Toppan: it fronted 7 poles I link (115') on "a new town way" (Federal Street)
and butted on the broad North River (ED 128:28). On the westerly part of the
lot (evidently), he built a house in 1770 which he and his family occupied as
their residence, probably with the easterly part used as a garden. In 1788 he
built a second house on the easterly part of the lot. 1
In September, 1794, Mr. Gould sold the westerly house and its land,
fronting 65.5' on Federal Street, to grocer Samuel Archer (ED 157:235).
Thereafter he resided in this house (#92).
James Gould was born in Danvers about 1735. Like most boys of his place
and time, James was apprenticed to learn a trade when he was twelve or
thirteen. His master was a housewright, and James spent eight years learning
that trade. His younger brother Josiah followed him into that trade, and may
have worked with him. James was a journeyman as of 1757, and, as a good
and dependable worker, probably received a good deal of patronage. In 1758
he married Mehitable Townsend, who came from Lynn, as had his own
mother. No children were listed as born to the couple, but the records are not
complete. In August, 1758, at about the time of his marriage, James Gould
purchased a piece ofland on Cambridge Street, and built a house thereon as
his residence (see ED 96:220, 122:250).
At this time, Salem was a prosperous seaport, with a thriving fishery as
well as an extensive merchant shipping business to the Caribbean and Europe.
Salem's main export was salt cod, which was caught far offshore, and then
"cured" until it was hard and dry and could be shipped long distances. This
was a staple food in Catholic Europe (Spain and Portugal especially) and also
in the Caribbean, where it was fed to slaves. To Europe went the
"merchantable" cod (highgrade), and to the Caribbean went the "refuse" cod
(low quality). Either sort, put into a pot of boiling water, would tum into
1 It is not possible to be certain which house was built first, now-#94 or now-#92. Both were built on
the same parcel that Gould acquired in 1767; and #94 has already been assigned the earlier date.
�nutritious food. Lumber, horses, and foodstuffs were also sent to the
Caribbean, whence came sugar, molasses, cotton, and mahogany. The
molasses was turned into rum in Salem's distilleries, and sold locally and
regionally, and some overseas. From Europe came finished goods, wine, fruit,
feathers, and leather. There was also some trade between Salem and the
Chesapeake Bay area, which provided com, wheat, and tobacco, while South
Carolina provided rice. Most merchant vessels were small, under 60 tons. Toe
salt water came in along Derby and New Derby Streets all the way to the
present Post Office; and in this secure inner harbor, known as the South River,
were most of the wharves and warehouses, although some wharves were built
along the North River too.
In 1761, a group of Salem and Boston merchants sued to prevent the
use of search warrants ("writs of assistance") by the Customs officials who
were trying to inspect their vessels and warehouses. In the courtroom, attorney
James Otis Jr. electrified the audience with his argument for American rights
and liberties-an event that John Adams later identified as the birth of''the
child independence." Later in the decade, Salemites protested against the
Stamp Act, and applied tar and feathers to a couple of men who disagreed. In
Boston, the opposition was even larger and more determined, as mobs
attacked the royal officials' houses and beat up their flunkies. The British
authorities were surprised at the Americans' resistance to their policies, and
feared an insurrection. In 1768, they sent over a small army of occupation and
installed it in Boston. Now the Americans were forced to see themselves as
misbehaving colonials, and to realize that they were not free. They did not like
this picture, and the result was bitter public opposition and more street
violence in Boston.
The Boston Massacre, in which townsmen were gunned down by the
soldiers, took place in March, 1770; and then all of Massachusetts turned
openly against the British, and the clouds of war gathered on the horizon.
James Gould was able to make a good living in the early 1760s for, despite the
political problems, Salem remained pretty prosperous, and contracts were
always being given for construction of new houses, additions, wharves, stores,
warehouses, barns, distilleries, and other buildings. Mr. Gould was a member
of the First Church. His faith was tested by the early death of his wife
Mehitable, who died, probably, in 1762 or 1763. Eventually, he began to
socialize again, and in April, 1764 he married Lydia Sherman of Lynn. Later
that year, his brother Josiah Gould married Sarah Sherman of Lynn, perhaps
Sarah's sister. It may be that James and Josiah Gould were partners in the
construction business. In March, 1767, James Gould sold to James Punchard,
fisherman, a new house that he had built on a small lot on North Street (ED
124:248). As has been noted, he bought the lot here on "New Street" in 1767;
and he mortgaged it to the seller for about 39 li (ED 121 :54). In 1770, Mr.
2
�Gould had the house (#94) built. Its plan was unusual for Salem, in that it
fronted on the street with four window bay, with raised-field paneled
throughout, showing the taste and quality of Mr. Gould's work as a carpenter.
James Gould was a devout person. In 1770 the First Church minister,
Rev. Thomas Barnard, had a stroke and needed a young colleague minister.
The congregation could not agree on an assistant, and so a large minority
withdrew amicably and formed the North Church with Mr. Barnard Jr. as its
minister. James Gould was one of this group. The new North Church was built
in the spring of 1772, at the comer of North and Lynde Streets. No doubt Mr.
Gould was involved in the construction of the edifice. The new society had
some of the richest families in town, including the Brownes and others who
would prove to be loyalists at the time of the break with England. The ruling
elder of the First Church, John Nutting, became the ruling elder of the North
Church (with Joshua Ward), and James Gould and Samuel Holman were
elected its first deacons. 2
In 1771, Mr. Gould's father, a Danvers farmer, died. In 1772 and 1773
James and his brother Josiah for 50 Ii purchased the interest of their brothers
Benjamin and Amos in the 60-acre farm and a two-acre piece in Lynn (ED
130:230). In November, 1772, Mr. Gould sold his former home, on
Cambridge Street, for 120 Ii to Rev. Thomas Barnard (ED 122:250). And in
April, 1774, for 156. 12.8 James and Josiah Gould sold their father's property,
at a good profit, to Elizabeth Foster, wife of Joshua Foster, a Marblehead
tailor (ED 137 :2).
Pre-revolutionary Salem had more than its share of Tories; but the
Sons of Liberty were in the majority. Wealthy scions of families like the
Curwens, Pickmans, and Brownes, stayed loyal to the King, as did many
others who had married into the merchant families. In 1774, military rule was
imposed from England as Gen. Thomas Gage became governor of
Massachusetts and the port of Boston was shut down in punishment for the
Tea Party of December, 1773. On June 2, 1774, Salem became the new capital
of Massachusetts, as a reward for its supposed loyalty. Governor Gage and his
officials relocated to the North Shore, and the Customs operation was
conducted from Marblehead, while Salem became the major seaport of New
England, handling virtually all of the commercial business that Boston had
done. Hundreds of new people moved to Salem, and the legislature met in
Salem's Court House. In short order, that legislature, led by Sam Adams,
turned into a rebel body, and voted to ignore British laws and to send
delegates to a continental congress. Gage tried to shut it down, but it was too
late: he had lost control of Massachusetts to the rebel assembly gathered in
Salem. The town still had a powerful and outspoken group ofloyalists, led by
2
p. 547 H.F. Worthley, Inventory of Records, Harvard Theological Studies XXV, 1970
3
�Peter Frye, a prominent merchant and magistrate whose wife was a Pickman.
One night in October, Judge Frye learned just how far the rebels were willing
to go: his fine house on Essex Street was burned down and his family barely
escaped with their lives as half a block of houses and stores and a church all
burned down.Next day, the rebel assembly met again and voted to move their
proceedings to Concord; and Gage and his officials moved to Boston, and
many of the loyalists followed.
Outside of Boston, all of Massachusetts was under the control of the
rebels. By January, 1775, loyalists had been purged from the Salem militia
regiment, and Col. William Browne was replaced by the rebel Col. Timothy
Pickering, who was writing a book on military drill. One Sunday in February,
1775, the Revolutionary War almost began in Salem. When everyone was in
church, Col. Leslie's redcoats marched overland from Marblehead and arrived
in downtown Salem, hoping to seize cannon and munitions in North Salem.
They came down North Street, in sight of this house, and suddenly halted at
the North Bridge the Salem men, alerted by a Marblehead rider, had pulled up
the draw of the bridge. Presumably James Gould, who lived so near the
bridge, was present on that day, and perhaps even involved. His pastor, Rev.
Thomas Barhard Jr. of the North Church, engaged Col. Leslie in discussion;
and his folio~ congregant, Capt. John Felt, warned Leslie that blood would
flow ifhe did not turn back. Negotiations followed, and agreement was
reached: theidraw went down, Leslie's men advanced a short distance into
North Salem, faced about, and marched back through Salem's South Fields
and Marblehead, whose own regiment, led by Col. Jeremiah Lee, could have
slaughtered them. Instead, the Marbleheaders fell in behind them, marching in
mockery of Leslie's Retreat as the British made their way back to the beach
and boarded their whaleboats to return to the transport vessel. With the battle
at Lexington & Concord, April 19th, 1775, the die was cast. Of course no one
knew how the war would end, and there was little to indicate that the colonials
could actually defeat the King's army and navy, but virtually every ablebodied Salem man and boy gave himself over to the cause.
Salem's regiment participated in the siege of Boston, as George
Washington took command of the army in Cambridge. The British left in
March, 1776, never to return. Washington's army was pushed southward from
Long Island in a series of defeats, during which Salem's Col. Timothy
Pickering became one of the General's most trusted officers, and
Quartermaster General of the army. Washington's first victory was the Battle
of Trenton, on Christmas Day, 1776, made possible by the Marblehead
regiment of Gen. John Glover. Eventually most of the Salem men came home
and sailed in privateers for the duration of the war, which went on for years.
The land war ended in 1781 at Yorktown, but the war continued at sea and
Salem men continued to risk and lose their lives until 1783.
4
�In some places, the post-war loss of the former colonial connections
and trade routes was devastating, for Americans were prohibited from trading
with most British possessions; but in Salem, the merchants and mariners were
ready to push their ships and cargoes into all parts of the known world. They
did so with astonishing success. For a period of about 25 years, Salem was a
famous center of commercial enterprise: by virtue of competing fiercely,
pioneering new routes, and opening and dominating foreign markets, Salem
won a high place in the world. Hasket Derby, William Gray, Eben Beckford,
and Joseph Peabody were the town's commercial leaders. In 1784, Derby
began trade with Russia; and in 1784 and 1785 he dispatched trading vessels
to Africa and China, respectively. Voyages to India soon followed, and to the
Spice Islands and Pepper Islands (Sumatra, Java, Malaya, etc.). Once again,
Salem was a boom-town, fueling much new construction. James and Josiah
Gould partook of their share of the new business, and did well. James and
Lydia had no children, but Josiah and Sarah had sons Josiah and James, born
in 1766 and 1768. Deacon James Gould left the North Church to join the
Tabernacle Church, and became deacon of the congregation there by 1783
(see Worthley, pp. 542-544).
The Tabernacle's minister, Rev. Joshua Spalding, was aggressively
orthodox in a town whose other congregations were embracing Unitarianism.
Spalding made many enemies, including Rev. William Bentley, who, in his
diary, has much to say about the Tabernacle and its minister. Bentley seems to
have respected James Gould (many years later, on November 8, 1801, Bentley
noted in his diary, after being irked by Mr. Spalding, "honest Deacon Gould
says, when I work I use the sharpest tools I can find. Mr. Spaulding differs
from his neighbors, as he prefers the dullest. Well said, Deacon."). In 1784
through 1787 James Gould was taxed on a house and shop (worth 300 Ii in
1784) and on stock & faculty (worth 250 Ii in 1784). In 1787, with currency
changes, the house was valued at 175 Ii and Mr. Gould (a second adult male
lived in the house) had personalty valued at 120 Ii. In 1788, he was also taxed
on a "new house," valued at 50 Ii. It was probably brand-new and not yet
occupied. The new house (#92) probably had interior trim (later most ofit was
removed) similar to that still intact at #94.
From a January 11, 1789, entry in the diary of William Pynchon,
Salem lawyer, we learn that Deacon James Gould was noted for wearing his
hair plain at a time when most men wore wigs. As Mr. Pynchon came to
church that day, evidently not wearing his wig, the parson said "I took you for
Deacon Gould," to which a friend joked, "You certainly have on the deacon's
wig." By 1790 Mr. Gould was taxed on one house & shop again (200 Ii; 150 Ii
for personalty), evidently because this house (#92) was taxed to the tenants
who resided here.
In 1790, his namesake nephew died at the age of 22.
5
�By the 1790s, the new foreign-trade markets-and the coffee trade,
which would be opened in 1798 with Mocha, Arabia-brought great riches to
the Salem merchants, and raised the level of wealth throughout the town: new
ships were bought and built, more crews were formed with more shipmasters,
new shops and stores opened, new partnerships were formed, and new people
moved to town. In 1792 Salem's first bank, the Essex Bank, was founded,
although it "existed in experiment a long time before it was incorporated," per
Rev. William Bentley. From a population of7921 in 1790, the town would
grow by 1500 persons in a decade. At the same time, thanks to the economic
policies of Alexander Hamilton, Salem vessels were able to transport foreign
cargoes tax free and essentially to serve as the neutral carrying fleet for both
Britain and France, which were at war with each other.
By the early 1790s, Deacon James Gould was in his fifties, and he
probably was slowing down. Rev. Mr. Bentley, in his diary, noted that on 23
Oct. 1794 the draws of the North Bridge collapsed as 20 oxen were crossing
over. He notes that "the builder of the bridge, one Gould, was totally ignorant
of mechanics." He also notes that the bridge was repaired five years before. It
is not clear that the builder of the draws was James Gould, or that the problem
arose from the repairs of 1789 or from the original construction of the bridge,
much earlier.
On 3 Sept. 1794, having subdivided the property here, James Gould
sold off the western part of the lot, with the house (#94) thereon, for 300 Ii to
Samuel Archer Jr., Salem shopkeeper (ED 157:235,235). Mr. Gould would
live on for another 16 years, residing in this house (#92) and eventually
becoming a lumber dealer. He died in July, 1810, aged 76 years. In the
inventory of his property, made on Dec. 19, 1810, the "house and lot ofland
in Federal Street" were valued at $2000. He also owned half a house in South
Street, and a pew in Mr. Worcester's meeting house. The furnishings of the
house included three beds, four quilts, walnut desk and table, mahogany and
maple tables, a musket, the usual fireplace equipment, apparel including three
linen shirts and one camb!et cloak, and one lot of books and a silver watch
(see inventory appended).
In May, 1812, for $ 1061, the house and land here were sold to Josiah Gould,
Beverly gentleman; the land fronted 60' on Federal Street and butted 55' on
the North River (ED 197:21). In 1820 the house was occupied (per census, p.
I 04) by tenants John Grant and Joseph Pettingell and their families. In 1822,
Josiah Gould, Beverly gentleman, died. In August, 1829, for the Josiah Gould
heirs sold the premises to one of their number, Sarah Gould of Salem,
singlewoman (ED 253 :279). She had been born in Boxford in 1780, the
daughter of Daniel Gould and Sarah Bradstreet. In January, 1830, she married
Caleb Warner, a Salem jeweler, and they resided here. The 1830 census (p.
6
�3 71) lists them as residing here with two teenaged girls, a girl 5-10, a boy 510, a boy 10-15, and a boy 15-20----probably all of these are the offspring of
Caleb Warner by his first two marriages.
Caleb Warner (1784-1861) came from Ipswich (the son of William
and Susannah Gould). He was evidently apprenticed to a Salem silversmith
(perhaps Jabez Baldwin) and from 1801 to 1820 worked as a silversmith and
jeweler, with a shop on Essex Street and then on Essex Place, perhaps
specializing in clocks and watches. In January, 1812, he, jeweler, and Timothy
Brooks, merchant, together bought a house and land on Bridge Street, west of
the comer lot of Winter Street (ED 196:114). Evidently they occupied that
house as a double family residence. In September, 1815, Caleb,jeweler, for
$1325 bought out Mr. Brooks's half-interest in the Bridge Street homestead
(ED 208:135). Caleb was twice a widower: in 1809 he had married Mary
Pearson (died 1817); and in 1819 he had married Mrs. Mary Porter (died
1825, aged 40, of consumption, soon after the birth of son William). Both left
children, baptized at the Second Church. Caleb partnered with John Warner
from 1820 to 1822, and then went to Portland in 1825 and partnered with
Charles Lord as silversmiths and jewelers. He returned to Salem and partnered
here in 1830 with Thomas Lord and later with J.F. Fellows. 3
In September, 1835, Caleb Warner, Salem jeweler, for $600
mortgaged to Elizabeth G. Warner, Salem widow, his house and land on
Bridge Street (ED 284:201). In the 1842 directory we find Caleb Warner,
jeweller at 201 Essex Street, with residence at 22 Federal Street (this house
had a low number before Marlborough Street, which lay east of North Street,
was absorbed into Federal Street).
In September, 1848, Sally G. and Caleb Warner sold for $112 to the
Essex Railroad Company a parcel of flats on the North River, adjoining the
railroad tracks, it being the northernmost part of the homestead land (ED
402;105).
In the 1851 directory we find Mr. Warner listed as selling "spectacles,
179 Essex Street, house 22 Federal". Spectacles were by then evidently his
main product line, although he was chiefly noted (as at the time of his death)
as a watchmaker. It is reductive, given his 50-year career as silversmith and
jeweler, to reduce him to association with one product.
Per the 1860 census (house 2113), Caleb Warner, 76, "jeweller",
resided here with wife Sally, 77, and Margaret J. Gould, 20, probably a grandniece of Sally. On April 18, 1861, Caleb Warner, "watchmaker", died of
3
See the appended biographical sketch from "American Silversmiths" for more
notes on his career as a distinguished silversmith and jeweler, including time spent
in Portland, Maine.
7
�cancer, in his 77th year. Four years later, on April 12, 1865, Sarah Gould
Warner, widow, 85, died of"old age".
In April, 1871, the heirs of Mrs. Sarah (Gould) Warner sold the house
and land for $3650 to Benjamin Shreve, of Salem, who was, like Caleb
Warner, ajeweler (ED 823:146). Mr. Shreve (b. 1808) in 1865 had resided
nearby with his wife Charlotte (1865 census, house 314). He was a well-to-do
partner in the Boston jewelry firm which later became Shreve, Crump & Low.
Sometime in the 1870s, evidently, Mr. Shreve converted the house to a
duplex, in the process of which (evidently) he took down the original central
chimney, walled off the two units through the center of the house, added a
second front entry (evidence in cellar with introduction of milled joists under
the floor of the easterly entry), added a door hood to the enlarged double front
entry (original hood recently removed), and remodeled the interiors with new
moldings except (evidently) for the front rooms, where original paneled
interior shutters were left intact.
-Robert
Booth, 15 Sept. 2017.
8
�Glossary & Sources
A figure like (ED 123:45) refers to book 123, page 45, Essex South registry of
Deeds, Federal Street, Salem.
A figure like (#12345) refers to Essex Probate case 12345, on file at the Essex
Probate Court, Federal Street, Salem, or on microfilm at Mass. Archives, Boston,
or at the Peabody Essex Museum's Phillips Library, Salem.
MSSRW refers to the multi-volume compendium, Mass. Soldiers & Sailors in the
Revolutionary War, available at the Salem Public Library among other places.
MSSCRW refers to the multi-volume compendium, Mass. Soldiers, Sailors, &
Marines in the Civil War, available at the Salem Public Library among other
places.
EIHC refers to the Essex Institute Historical Collections (discontinued), a multivolume set (first volume published in 1859) of data and articles about Essex
County. The indices of the EIHC have been consulted regarding many of the
people associated with this house.
The six-volume published Salem Vital records (marriages, births, and deaths
through 1849) have been consulted, as have the Salem Directory and later
Naumkeag Directory, which have information about residents and their addresses,
etc.
Sidney Perley' s three-volume History of Salem, 1626-1716 has been consulted, as
has the four-volume William Bentley's Diary, J. Duncan Phillips' books, some
newspaper obituaries, and other sources.
Salem real estate valuations, and, where applicable, Salem Street Books, have
also been consulted, as have genealogies.
There is much more material available about Salem and its history; and the reader
is encouraged to make his or her own discoveries.
--Robert Booth
22
��9/14/2017
Caleb Warner, born 5 Jun 1784, died 20 Apr 1861
Search billions of records on Ancestry.com
!First Name
I !Last Name
Search
American Silversmiths
William Warner
(1756-)
Susanna Palmer
(1754-1841)
Caleb Warner
(1784-1861)
Caleb Warner
•
•
•
•
•
Born: 5 Jun 1784, Ipswich MA
Marriage (1 ): Mary Pearson on 8 Aug 1807 in Ipswich MA
Marriage (2): Mary Goodale on 4 Jul 1819 in Salem MA
Marriage (3): Sarah Gould on 28 Jan 1830 in Salem MA
Died: 20 Apr 1861, Salem MA
family Links
Spouses/Children:
1. Mary Pearson
2. Mary Goodale
3. Sarah Gould
General notes:
Silversmith and jeweler
Events in his life were:
·e;;.'.\•TJl.R'N
ER
• Alternate Mark
-
'
• Alternate Mark
• He worked from circa 180 I to 1820 as a silversmith and jeweler in Salem MA
He first worked from a shop in Essex Street, later moving to Essex Place. J.
• He was a partner from 1820 to 1822 with John Warner in Salem
MA as C & J WARNER~
• He was a partner from 1825 to 1828 with Charles Lord in Portland ME as CHARLES
LORD & Co. at No. 2 Kinsman's Building in Portland. Firm was dissolved according to
1/2
http'.//freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/-silversmiths/makers/silversmiths/138.htm
---------
�Caleb Warner, born 5 Jun 1784, died 20 Apr 1861
9/14/2017
Gazette of Maine (June 17, 1828) by mutual consent and Charles Lord continued the
business.±
• He was a partner from 1830 to 1837 with Thomas Lord in Salem
MA as WARNER & LORD±
• He was a partner from 1837 to 1842 with John Foster Fellows in Salem MA as WARNER
&FELLOWS.±
• He appeared on the 1850 census taken at Salem MA, listed as a jeweler.
Caleb married Mary Pearson on 8 Aug 1807 in Ipswich MA. (Mary Pearson was born on 9 Jul
1784 in Ipswich MA and died on 5 Oct 1817.)
Caleb next married Mary Goodale on 4 Jul 1819 in Salem MA. (Mary Goodale was born in
1784 in Salem MA and was christened on 20 Dec 1784 in Salem MA.)
Caleb next married Sarah Gould on 28 Jan 1830 in Salem MA. (Sarah Gould was born on 25
Aug 1780 in Topsfield MA.)
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© Wm ErikVoss 2005
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http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/-silversmiths/makers/silversmiths/138.htm
I Finding
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Federal Street
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
92 Federal Street, Salem, MA 01970
Subject
The topic of the resource
House History
Description
An account of the resource
Built by James Gould, housewright 1788
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Historic Salem, Robert Booth
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
House History
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Historic Salem
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1788, 2017
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Robert Booth
1788
92
Caleb
Federal
Gould
Housewright
James
jeweler
silversmith
Warner