i1MERRICK RICHARDSON AT THE AGE OF SEVENTY-FIVE.LOOKING BACKAN AUTOBIOGRAPHYByMerrick Abner RichardsonAUTHOR OF"JIM HALL AND THE RICHARDSONS", "EIGHT DAYS OUT", "MINA FAUST","ROSE LIND", "PERSONALITY OF THE SOUL", "CHICAGO'SBLACK SHEEP", "TWILIGHT REFLECTIONS."Privately PrintedCHICAGO: MCMXVIICopyright 1917ByMerrick Abner RichardsonPREFACEMy spare time, only, is occupied in literary efforts. I never allow them to interfere with either my business or social life.In composing, in a mysterious way, I comprehend the companionship of my imaginary friends as vividly as I do the material associates of life. To me imagination is the counterpart or result of inspiration, while inspiration is light thrown upon the unrevealed. The image may be the result of known or unknown cause, but the mystery does not blot out the actual existence of the image. The material image we call sight, the retained memory, and the unknown revelation, but all are comprehensive images.I see a bird, its form created a picture on my eye, the image of which mysteriously remained after the object had disappeared. Now what or who cognizes the primitive object, the formed picture or the retained image?The materialist assumes he has solved the mystery when he says; The appearance of the object formed an impression on your brain; omitting the important part of who comprehends the impression.These material and spiritual views are not the two extremes, there is no midway, one is right and the other is wrong. Either man is a spiritual, responsible being or he is just temporary mud.Therefore imagination, to me is incomprehensible realization, while materialism is the symbol of passingevents. This explains how my imaginary friends become so dear to me.The ideas presented in my story of Mary Magdalene I gained through descriptions conveyed to me by Jona while traveling across the Syrian desert. He always began in the middle of his story and worked out both ways, which made it difficult to take notes, besides at the best it was but a legend, dim and indistinct.In this work I have carefully avoided Oriental style, language or customs for two reasons: First, there is not an Oriental scholar now, who could do them justice, Second, one is perfectly safe in bringing any people of any age right down to our times. For, the culture of one tribe or race does not influence incoming souls for the next generation. The human family enter life on about the same plane. A child from the low tribes of the jungles or from the desert wild, if brought up by a Chicago mother, might become as great as one of the royal family. The feelings, aspirations, sorrows and love of Mary Magdalene and Peter were similar to what ours would have been under the same conditions. Therefore I bring the story of Magdalene right down to yesterday.I first constructed the story of Magdalene while in Jerusalem, then I revised it in Egypt, and have been revising it at intervals ever since. From Jona's continued reiteration regarding her prepossessing gifts, spiritual and unwavering qualities, especially her firmness before Caiaphas, I formed her personality in my mind and associated her with bright women of today, then I let Magdalene talk for herself.To me she was no exception from the women I associated with in Chicago. There are not wanting women in Oak Park who under the same circumstances wouldhave followed Jesus to Jerusalem, disdained to deny him and would have pleaded before the sanhedrim at the dead of night to have saved their associate from the misguided servants of the devil.The reminiscenses of the pioneer Richardsons, Jim and Winnie, Sunshine days around Wabbaquassett, John Brown, roving escapades of the Richardson Brothers, my athletic exploits, my travels and other scenes of my life are primitive truths copied from memory and set forth in my original form of expression.My attack on materialists or infidelic instructors stands on its own feet and opposes a tendency that will create degeneracy if continued.TABLE OF CONTENTSPAGEMy Ancestors9Woburn10Traditions12Records15Old Homestead17Jim Hall19Love Spats20Jim's Story31The Arrest35The Martyrs37The Escape38Stubbs' Store40Susan Beaver45Revenge49Alone in the Wilderness51Hunting for Baby54Muldoon57Our Wabbaquassett Mountain Home61Woodchuck in the Wall64Sunday Morning69Husking Bee76Prayer Meeting at Uncle Sam's78Golden Days81The Wild Sexton Steer83School Days87Country Boys in Town89As a Yankee Tin Peddler94The Thompson Family97John Brown99The Dead Appear106Vida's Daring Exploit108Owen Brown's Story110After the Mist Had Cleared Away115Yankee Horsemen Go West117My Relation121Horse Jockies123Landed in Chicago126Dr. Thomas128Early Chicago131Horse Racing in Chicago134Hopeful and Rarus137Chicago Piety141Public Conveyance143My Athletic Exploits146My First Hundred Mile Run148Arthur's and Walton's Long Run151The First Century Race157Dead Glacier160Miraculous Escape From a Bear168My Education173Hawaiian Islands176South Sea Islands and Australia180New Guinea183Cochin China190Mesopotamia192Rud Hurner193Off for Babylon198On the Euphrates200On the Shat-el-chebar201Koofa, Arabia203The Sheik of Koofa205Wild, Yet Beautiful209Nazzip211The Man I Had Seen Before212Real Bedouins After Us214Suspicion Aroused217The Rechabites221Sleeping Beauty of the Desert225The Abandoned Castle227Mary Magdalene229Dina of Endor231The Home of Magdalene235John and Magdalene237Ruth240Darkness Over Galilee242Surprise for the Pharisees248Council of the Disciples251Turn of the Tide253Magdalene's Heroic Plea255Jesus Speaks261The Exodus262Waiting By the Jordan265In Council at Jericho267Arrival at Jerusalem270Adultery272Magdalene Pleading With Jesus278At the Home of Mary and Martha280A Naughty Maid282Lazarus Restored285Conspiracy to Murder Jesus287The Mob Fall Upon Jesus292Magdalene Before Caiaphas295Jesus Before Pilate300The Crucifixion302Alone on Olivet304Magdalene Herself Again307Ruth Comes to Meet Magdalene311Joseph's Last Interview312Magdalene's Last Night With John315Last Good-Bye321The Prickett Home324Ourselves326William James, of Harvard328Gladstone335Evening of My Life Day340Fifty-four Miles' Hike342Back Home348LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONSFacingPageMerrick A. RichardsoniCamp of the Stafford Pioneers14Ancient Cemetery of the Stafford Pioneers16Winnie Richardson21Good Morning, Miss Richardson23Jim in the Woods52Our Mountain Home61Chasing for a Kiss76Prayer Meeting at Uncle Sam's80When the Folks Were Away84The Aborn Home86Wabbaquassett Girls88Charming Old Wabbaquassett90Album of Sunny Days94Mary Jane Hoyt96John Brown, 185099Vida Thompson's Midnight Ride109Near John Brown's Adirondack Home115Yankee Horsemen117Horse Sales123Dr. Thomas128Early Chicago142G. M. Richardson and Family144Saddle Horse Days148Cycling Run to South Park150North Shore, Loon Lake, Winona Grove152The Fox River Bicycle Race158Arthur Richardson and Friends164Easter Island181New Guinea187Mesopotamia Servants193Desert Life Among the Arabs209Ruins of Tadmor227Mary Magdalene231Prickett Home324Arthur Richardson and His Twins336Our Oak Park Home338Fannie Peterson342Vida344Barbara Beaver346My Children349LOOKING BACKMY ANCESTORSEzekiel Richardson, with his wife Susanna, joined the Protestant Church in the Village of Charlestown, Mass.—now Boston—in 1630. The following year Thomas and Samuel Richardson joined the same church; the records of the will of Ezekiel prove them to have been his brothers.When they came to New England, or where from, is unknown, but as about thirty ships of British emigrants came into Boston Harbor about that time, it is safe to assume that they came on one of these vessels, but possibly they may have come on one of the boats which followed the Mayflower nearly ten years previous.It appears that there arose dissensions in the church and those good Pilgrim Fathers and Mothers strove among themselves until 1634, when the three Richardsons, with several other families, withdrew and decided to start a colony and a church of their own, where they could worship God in peace.WOBURNThrough a swamp on the west, called Cat Bird Glen, ran a trout brook to the meadows below. Beyond this woodland glen lay an upland plain, held by the Indians as a camping ground, which the Richardsons concluded they might, through the persuasion of powder and bullets, be able to occupy and leave the parent church at Charlestown to mourn their departure.Accordingly about twenty families, including the Richardsons, took possession of the site, dug their cellars, and built primitive homes together with a log church and named the town Woburn.Joy mingled with pride encouraged the men to subdue the soil, hunt, snare and trap the game and fish, while the buxom dames hummed their spinning wheels as they cooed their frolicsome babies beneath the shadows of the great forest monarchs who seemed loath to give way to the encroaching steps of the white man.Contrary to the general rule, that rats and ministers advance hand in hand with civilization, in this case the ministers failed to appear for the reason that the home church of England refused to recognize the seceders as children of God by turning down their supplication for a regular ordained preacher.Here the true spirit and determination which seems to tinge the veins of the Richardsons made its first appearance. Ezekiel, by the grace of God, took upon himself the leadership in all the praying and singing ofthe independent church for about ten years. He officiated at all weddings and funerals, besides established the whipping post for those who did not appear in church, with clean shirts on, three Sundays each month to hear him preach two long sermons, when it is said he often preached so loud that he could be distinctly heard in the Charlestown church two miles away, to the annoyance of his old-time associates.After Ezekiel's thrifty swarm had become greater than the parent hive at Charlestown and the hand of time began pressing heavily upon his shoulders, a regularly ordained preacher was sent in, which the parishioners did not like as well as they did Ezekiel, for he could not clothe and feed himself as Ezekiel had done, but he stayed until he died, and here is a sample of primitive piety in our grandfather's days:"The Reverend Mr. Carter of the Woburn Episcopal Church died, and being a good man, our forefathers decided to turn out in mass, give him a Christian burial and charge the expenses to the town. Of the itemized bill—coffin, shroud, grave-digging, and stimulants,—the latter, the liquor bill, exceeded all the other expenses."See Woburn Town Records, Volume 3, page 68.Thus while we find traces of weakness in our ancestors, a principle seems to have been involved which made New England a hot-bed for vags and tramps. No wonder we sigh for the good old days when respectable citizens did not have to lock their doors on Sunday, for all the thieves were in church.TRADITIONSThrough the first appearance of the Richardsons in Charlestown we have an unbroken line of nine generations through Ezekiel of Woburn 1630 to Marvin of Chicago 1917.Ezekiel of Woburn.Theopolis of Woburn.John of Stafford Street.Uriah of Stafford Street.John of Devil's Hop Yard.Warren of Wabbaquassett Lake.Merrick of Chicago.Arthur of Chicago.Marvin of Chicago.Of course, my brothers and cousins perpetuate this name, the same as I do. Collins and Gordon, my brothers, with Orino, the son of my Uncle Orson, alone have raised about twenty boys.The living male descendants of Ezekiel, Samuel and Thomas, who carry our name, must now be more than one hundred thousand Richardsons, and I presume few of them trace back their relation more than three generations, but they could if they would.MY GRANDMOTHER'S STORYMy grandmother, Judith Burroughs Richardson, who died in 1859, age 94, seemed in the evening of her life-dayto think, dream and commune with her ancestors and friends, who long since entered Paradise, and now seemed to be throwing back kisses to loved ones approaching that land of delight.From her experience and traditional reminiscences I here give a condensed sketch of her apparent and vivid memories:James Burroughs, her grandfather, was the son of the minister, George Burroughs, her great-grandfather, who was hanged at Salem, Mass., August 19, 1692, for being in league with the devil.James was arrested soon after, but escaped from Salem jail and, under the name of Jim Hall, lived in Connecticut for several years. Later, under his right name, he married Winnie Richardson, a Stafford Street girl, and they settled near Brattleborough, Vermont, where grandmother's father, Amos Burroughs, was born.After James died, her grandmother Winnie came to West Stafford to live with them. She died before grandma was born and was buried in the family lot near their house. Her gravestone was still standing when my father was old enough to go with his grandfather Amos Burroughs and see them.The homestead where Winnie died and grandmother was born and married can be found by following the south road out of West Stafford and turning the first road to the right, across the brook and up the hill to the first farm scene.Winnie's father, Theopolis, son of Ezekiel, and several other men with their families, came West when she was a little girl and took possession, or squat, on the northern rise of a highland plain, where a grand view ofthe far-away Western mountains can be seen. They called their camp Stafford.John, Winnie's brother, who was conducting an Indian trading post at Medford came on later, with his two brothers, Gershom and Paul, and opened up the famous Stafford Street, which was laid out twenty rods wide and about two miles long, the southern terminus being about one mile northeast of Stafford Springs.John Richardson took up the first farm at the north entrance on the west side and Silas Dean took the first on the left, or east, side from the old campus on the hill at the north end of the street.All between the walls, which was later changed to sixteen rods, was commons. The church in the center was used for spiritual devotion, recorder office and court of justice.i18ARRIVAL OF THE WOBURN PIONEERS AT STAFFORD STREET WHEN WINNIE RICHARDSON WAS TEN YEARS OF AGE. RECENT VIEW OF THE WESTERN HILLS FROM THE ORIGINAL CAMP.RECORDSThe records of those New England pioneers are dim, as the Puritans considered church members only, as persons.Boston records (Woburn), as we have seen, seem to extol Ezekiel.Theopolis according to his will, must have been a financial success.The Stafford Street records, I was informed by Mrs. Larned, who now lives on the old homestead, were kept in their family from the beginning until lately, when they became such a source of annoyance from ancestor seekers, like myself, that they sent them to the recorder's office at Stafford Springs.At the recorder's office at Stafford Springs I found that John Richardson from Medford came to Stafford Street in 1726, this, though meager, acts as the official connecting link between Woburn and Stafford.Another scrap I found was that Paul Richardson had taken land adjoining his brother, John Richardson, this identifies both John and Paul.Regarding Gershom, the other one of the three brothers, I found this:"Gershom Richardson, son of Gershom and Abigail, born in 1761."This would make the elder Gershom Richardson contemporary with John and Paul.E. Y. Fisk, an early settler, told me that a part of the early church records have been burned.In the old graveyard just south of the brook which crosses Stafford Street still remains the headstone of Lot Dean, who died in 1818.Lot would be of the next generation from Silas Dean, who took the farm opposite John Richardson.Near the grave of Lot are the headstones of Uriah Richardson and his wife Miriam, who died October 18, 1785, at the age of 75. Uriah must have been all right, for Miriam, who died twenty years later, had had inscribed on his headstone:"The memory of the just is blessed."Grandmother remembered Uriah, the son of John and the father of John, her husband.Now while the traditions, records and gravestones may prove each in themselves to be weak evidence, together they form an unbroken chain from Ezekiel down to our times.i22ANCIENT CEMETERY OF THE STAFFORD STREET PIONEERS WHERE MOST OF THE GRAVE STONES ARE FOUND BROKEN AND IN THE WALL WHICH IS BUILT AROUND THE LOT.LEFT TO RIGHT. M. A. RICHARDSON. WALTER SKINNER. LUCIUS ABORN.OLD HOMESTEADWith my interesting nieces, Joe and Lina Newell, one bright summer day, I visited the ancient homes of the Stafford Street, Conn., Richardsons.E. Y. Fisk and his son now possess the historical property. The son from Springfield, who was haying there at the time, invited us and all the other Richardson tribe to come and camp on the homestead grounds, sit on the old walls, gaze over the western mountains and even coquet with the star Venus evenings, all of which look now the same as when our ancestors saw them 200 years ago.That day, July 19, 1916, with those girls, viewing the scenes and taking pictures of the surroundings, imprinted on my mind an oasis of beauty ever awaiting recall as I journey over the trackless sands of time.The present seemed to pass away as the past unfolded its charms while we were reminded of the long ago.Sacredly we listened to the voice of Mother Mary calling Winnie from the kitchen door, saw the men in homespun shirts and trousers coming up from the meadow below. Heard the careless boy whistling while unyoking the lazy oxen. Saw old dog Towser sleeping in the shade. And in the pasture far away we seemed to hear the faint tinkling of the cow bell on the brindle steer.Day dreams, says one.Imagination, says another.May it not be that when death removes this earthly garment, we will again realize that the past, present, and future are one.If the image of the face before me now is the retention of the face I saw yesterday, may not all fiction, invention and imagination be retention of occurences we can only recall in parts?The power of recall is mysterious. If we dream of the dead as living when we know that they are dead, but we cannot recall that which we know, may we not know of pre-existence but lack the power to recall?Thus Lina, Joe and myself spent a happy summer day on the New England hills, which we will pleasantly recall when the cold winds of winter rattle the doors and windows and we are hugging the radiators.
i1MERRICK RICHARDSON AT THE AGE OF SEVENTY-FIVE.LOOKING BACKAN AUTOBIOGRAPHYByMerrick Abner RichardsonAUTHOR OF"JIM HALL AND THE RICHARDSONS", "EIGHT DAYS OUT", "MINA FAUST","ROSE LIND", "PERSONALITY OF THE SOUL", "CHICAGO'SBLACK SHEEP", "TWILIGHT REFLECTIONS."Privately PrintedCHICAGO: MCMXVIICopyright 1917ByMerrick Abner Richardson
i1
MERRICK RICHARDSON AT THE AGE OF SEVENTY-FIVE.
MERRICK RICHARDSON AT THE AGE OF SEVENTY-FIVE.
MERRICK RICHARDSON AT THE AGE OF SEVENTY-FIVE.
AN AUTOBIOGRAPHY
By
Merrick Abner Richardson
AUTHOR OF
"JIM HALL AND THE RICHARDSONS", "EIGHT DAYS OUT", "MINA FAUST","ROSE LIND", "PERSONALITY OF THE SOUL", "CHICAGO'SBLACK SHEEP", "TWILIGHT REFLECTIONS."
Privately Printed
CHICAGO: MCMXVII
Copyright 1917ByMerrick Abner Richardson
PREFACEMy spare time, only, is occupied in literary efforts. I never allow them to interfere with either my business or social life.In composing, in a mysterious way, I comprehend the companionship of my imaginary friends as vividly as I do the material associates of life. To me imagination is the counterpart or result of inspiration, while inspiration is light thrown upon the unrevealed. The image may be the result of known or unknown cause, but the mystery does not blot out the actual existence of the image. The material image we call sight, the retained memory, and the unknown revelation, but all are comprehensive images.I see a bird, its form created a picture on my eye, the image of which mysteriously remained after the object had disappeared. Now what or who cognizes the primitive object, the formed picture or the retained image?The materialist assumes he has solved the mystery when he says; The appearance of the object formed an impression on your brain; omitting the important part of who comprehends the impression.These material and spiritual views are not the two extremes, there is no midway, one is right and the other is wrong. Either man is a spiritual, responsible being or he is just temporary mud.Therefore imagination, to me is incomprehensible realization, while materialism is the symbol of passingevents. This explains how my imaginary friends become so dear to me.The ideas presented in my story of Mary Magdalene I gained through descriptions conveyed to me by Jona while traveling across the Syrian desert. He always began in the middle of his story and worked out both ways, which made it difficult to take notes, besides at the best it was but a legend, dim and indistinct.In this work I have carefully avoided Oriental style, language or customs for two reasons: First, there is not an Oriental scholar now, who could do them justice, Second, one is perfectly safe in bringing any people of any age right down to our times. For, the culture of one tribe or race does not influence incoming souls for the next generation. The human family enter life on about the same plane. A child from the low tribes of the jungles or from the desert wild, if brought up by a Chicago mother, might become as great as one of the royal family. The feelings, aspirations, sorrows and love of Mary Magdalene and Peter were similar to what ours would have been under the same conditions. Therefore I bring the story of Magdalene right down to yesterday.I first constructed the story of Magdalene while in Jerusalem, then I revised it in Egypt, and have been revising it at intervals ever since. From Jona's continued reiteration regarding her prepossessing gifts, spiritual and unwavering qualities, especially her firmness before Caiaphas, I formed her personality in my mind and associated her with bright women of today, then I let Magdalene talk for herself.To me she was no exception from the women I associated with in Chicago. There are not wanting women in Oak Park who under the same circumstances wouldhave followed Jesus to Jerusalem, disdained to deny him and would have pleaded before the sanhedrim at the dead of night to have saved their associate from the misguided servants of the devil.The reminiscenses of the pioneer Richardsons, Jim and Winnie, Sunshine days around Wabbaquassett, John Brown, roving escapades of the Richardson Brothers, my athletic exploits, my travels and other scenes of my life are primitive truths copied from memory and set forth in my original form of expression.My attack on materialists or infidelic instructors stands on its own feet and opposes a tendency that will create degeneracy if continued.
My spare time, only, is occupied in literary efforts. I never allow them to interfere with either my business or social life.
In composing, in a mysterious way, I comprehend the companionship of my imaginary friends as vividly as I do the material associates of life. To me imagination is the counterpart or result of inspiration, while inspiration is light thrown upon the unrevealed. The image may be the result of known or unknown cause, but the mystery does not blot out the actual existence of the image. The material image we call sight, the retained memory, and the unknown revelation, but all are comprehensive images.
I see a bird, its form created a picture on my eye, the image of which mysteriously remained after the object had disappeared. Now what or who cognizes the primitive object, the formed picture or the retained image?
The materialist assumes he has solved the mystery when he says; The appearance of the object formed an impression on your brain; omitting the important part of who comprehends the impression.
These material and spiritual views are not the two extremes, there is no midway, one is right and the other is wrong. Either man is a spiritual, responsible being or he is just temporary mud.
Therefore imagination, to me is incomprehensible realization, while materialism is the symbol of passingevents. This explains how my imaginary friends become so dear to me.
The ideas presented in my story of Mary Magdalene I gained through descriptions conveyed to me by Jona while traveling across the Syrian desert. He always began in the middle of his story and worked out both ways, which made it difficult to take notes, besides at the best it was but a legend, dim and indistinct.
In this work I have carefully avoided Oriental style, language or customs for two reasons: First, there is not an Oriental scholar now, who could do them justice, Second, one is perfectly safe in bringing any people of any age right down to our times. For, the culture of one tribe or race does not influence incoming souls for the next generation. The human family enter life on about the same plane. A child from the low tribes of the jungles or from the desert wild, if brought up by a Chicago mother, might become as great as one of the royal family. The feelings, aspirations, sorrows and love of Mary Magdalene and Peter were similar to what ours would have been under the same conditions. Therefore I bring the story of Magdalene right down to yesterday.
I first constructed the story of Magdalene while in Jerusalem, then I revised it in Egypt, and have been revising it at intervals ever since. From Jona's continued reiteration regarding her prepossessing gifts, spiritual and unwavering qualities, especially her firmness before Caiaphas, I formed her personality in my mind and associated her with bright women of today, then I let Magdalene talk for herself.
To me she was no exception from the women I associated with in Chicago. There are not wanting women in Oak Park who under the same circumstances wouldhave followed Jesus to Jerusalem, disdained to deny him and would have pleaded before the sanhedrim at the dead of night to have saved their associate from the misguided servants of the devil.
The reminiscenses of the pioneer Richardsons, Jim and Winnie, Sunshine days around Wabbaquassett, John Brown, roving escapades of the Richardson Brothers, my athletic exploits, my travels and other scenes of my life are primitive truths copied from memory and set forth in my original form of expression.
My attack on materialists or infidelic instructors stands on its own feet and opposes a tendency that will create degeneracy if continued.
TABLE OF CONTENTSPAGEMy Ancestors9Woburn10Traditions12Records15Old Homestead17Jim Hall19Love Spats20Jim's Story31The Arrest35The Martyrs37The Escape38Stubbs' Store40Susan Beaver45Revenge49Alone in the Wilderness51Hunting for Baby54Muldoon57Our Wabbaquassett Mountain Home61Woodchuck in the Wall64Sunday Morning69Husking Bee76Prayer Meeting at Uncle Sam's78Golden Days81The Wild Sexton Steer83School Days87Country Boys in Town89As a Yankee Tin Peddler94The Thompson Family97John Brown99The Dead Appear106Vida's Daring Exploit108Owen Brown's Story110After the Mist Had Cleared Away115Yankee Horsemen Go West117My Relation121Horse Jockies123Landed in Chicago126Dr. Thomas128Early Chicago131Horse Racing in Chicago134Hopeful and Rarus137Chicago Piety141Public Conveyance143My Athletic Exploits146My First Hundred Mile Run148Arthur's and Walton's Long Run151The First Century Race157Dead Glacier160Miraculous Escape From a Bear168My Education173Hawaiian Islands176South Sea Islands and Australia180New Guinea183Cochin China190Mesopotamia192Rud Hurner193Off for Babylon198On the Euphrates200On the Shat-el-chebar201Koofa, Arabia203The Sheik of Koofa205Wild, Yet Beautiful209Nazzip211The Man I Had Seen Before212Real Bedouins After Us214Suspicion Aroused217The Rechabites221Sleeping Beauty of the Desert225The Abandoned Castle227Mary Magdalene229Dina of Endor231The Home of Magdalene235John and Magdalene237Ruth240Darkness Over Galilee242Surprise for the Pharisees248Council of the Disciples251Turn of the Tide253Magdalene's Heroic Plea255Jesus Speaks261The Exodus262Waiting By the Jordan265In Council at Jericho267Arrival at Jerusalem270Adultery272Magdalene Pleading With Jesus278At the Home of Mary and Martha280A Naughty Maid282Lazarus Restored285Conspiracy to Murder Jesus287The Mob Fall Upon Jesus292Magdalene Before Caiaphas295Jesus Before Pilate300The Crucifixion302Alone on Olivet304Magdalene Herself Again307Ruth Comes to Meet Magdalene311Joseph's Last Interview312Magdalene's Last Night With John315Last Good-Bye321The Prickett Home324Ourselves326William James, of Harvard328Gladstone335Evening of My Life Day340Fifty-four Miles' Hike342Back Home348
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONSFacingPageMerrick A. RichardsoniCamp of the Stafford Pioneers14Ancient Cemetery of the Stafford Pioneers16Winnie Richardson21Good Morning, Miss Richardson23Jim in the Woods52Our Mountain Home61Chasing for a Kiss76Prayer Meeting at Uncle Sam's80When the Folks Were Away84The Aborn Home86Wabbaquassett Girls88Charming Old Wabbaquassett90Album of Sunny Days94Mary Jane Hoyt96John Brown, 185099Vida Thompson's Midnight Ride109Near John Brown's Adirondack Home115Yankee Horsemen117Horse Sales123Dr. Thomas128Early Chicago142G. M. Richardson and Family144Saddle Horse Days148Cycling Run to South Park150North Shore, Loon Lake, Winona Grove152The Fox River Bicycle Race158Arthur Richardson and Friends164Easter Island181New Guinea187Mesopotamia Servants193Desert Life Among the Arabs209Ruins of Tadmor227Mary Magdalene231Prickett Home324Arthur Richardson and His Twins336Our Oak Park Home338Fannie Peterson342Vida344Barbara Beaver346My Children349
LOOKING BACKMY ANCESTORSEzekiel Richardson, with his wife Susanna, joined the Protestant Church in the Village of Charlestown, Mass.—now Boston—in 1630. The following year Thomas and Samuel Richardson joined the same church; the records of the will of Ezekiel prove them to have been his brothers.When they came to New England, or where from, is unknown, but as about thirty ships of British emigrants came into Boston Harbor about that time, it is safe to assume that they came on one of these vessels, but possibly they may have come on one of the boats which followed the Mayflower nearly ten years previous.It appears that there arose dissensions in the church and those good Pilgrim Fathers and Mothers strove among themselves until 1634, when the three Richardsons, with several other families, withdrew and decided to start a colony and a church of their own, where they could worship God in peace.
LOOKING BACK
Ezekiel Richardson, with his wife Susanna, joined the Protestant Church in the Village of Charlestown, Mass.—now Boston—in 1630. The following year Thomas and Samuel Richardson joined the same church; the records of the will of Ezekiel prove them to have been his brothers.
When they came to New England, or where from, is unknown, but as about thirty ships of British emigrants came into Boston Harbor about that time, it is safe to assume that they came on one of these vessels, but possibly they may have come on one of the boats which followed the Mayflower nearly ten years previous.
It appears that there arose dissensions in the church and those good Pilgrim Fathers and Mothers strove among themselves until 1634, when the three Richardsons, with several other families, withdrew and decided to start a colony and a church of their own, where they could worship God in peace.
WOBURNThrough a swamp on the west, called Cat Bird Glen, ran a trout brook to the meadows below. Beyond this woodland glen lay an upland plain, held by the Indians as a camping ground, which the Richardsons concluded they might, through the persuasion of powder and bullets, be able to occupy and leave the parent church at Charlestown to mourn their departure.Accordingly about twenty families, including the Richardsons, took possession of the site, dug their cellars, and built primitive homes together with a log church and named the town Woburn.Joy mingled with pride encouraged the men to subdue the soil, hunt, snare and trap the game and fish, while the buxom dames hummed their spinning wheels as they cooed their frolicsome babies beneath the shadows of the great forest monarchs who seemed loath to give way to the encroaching steps of the white man.Contrary to the general rule, that rats and ministers advance hand in hand with civilization, in this case the ministers failed to appear for the reason that the home church of England refused to recognize the seceders as children of God by turning down their supplication for a regular ordained preacher.Here the true spirit and determination which seems to tinge the veins of the Richardsons made its first appearance. Ezekiel, by the grace of God, took upon himself the leadership in all the praying and singing ofthe independent church for about ten years. He officiated at all weddings and funerals, besides established the whipping post for those who did not appear in church, with clean shirts on, three Sundays each month to hear him preach two long sermons, when it is said he often preached so loud that he could be distinctly heard in the Charlestown church two miles away, to the annoyance of his old-time associates.After Ezekiel's thrifty swarm had become greater than the parent hive at Charlestown and the hand of time began pressing heavily upon his shoulders, a regularly ordained preacher was sent in, which the parishioners did not like as well as they did Ezekiel, for he could not clothe and feed himself as Ezekiel had done, but he stayed until he died, and here is a sample of primitive piety in our grandfather's days:"The Reverend Mr. Carter of the Woburn Episcopal Church died, and being a good man, our forefathers decided to turn out in mass, give him a Christian burial and charge the expenses to the town. Of the itemized bill—coffin, shroud, grave-digging, and stimulants,—the latter, the liquor bill, exceeded all the other expenses."See Woburn Town Records, Volume 3, page 68.Thus while we find traces of weakness in our ancestors, a principle seems to have been involved which made New England a hot-bed for vags and tramps. No wonder we sigh for the good old days when respectable citizens did not have to lock their doors on Sunday, for all the thieves were in church.
Through a swamp on the west, called Cat Bird Glen, ran a trout brook to the meadows below. Beyond this woodland glen lay an upland plain, held by the Indians as a camping ground, which the Richardsons concluded they might, through the persuasion of powder and bullets, be able to occupy and leave the parent church at Charlestown to mourn their departure.
Accordingly about twenty families, including the Richardsons, took possession of the site, dug their cellars, and built primitive homes together with a log church and named the town Woburn.
Joy mingled with pride encouraged the men to subdue the soil, hunt, snare and trap the game and fish, while the buxom dames hummed their spinning wheels as they cooed their frolicsome babies beneath the shadows of the great forest monarchs who seemed loath to give way to the encroaching steps of the white man.
Contrary to the general rule, that rats and ministers advance hand in hand with civilization, in this case the ministers failed to appear for the reason that the home church of England refused to recognize the seceders as children of God by turning down their supplication for a regular ordained preacher.
Here the true spirit and determination which seems to tinge the veins of the Richardsons made its first appearance. Ezekiel, by the grace of God, took upon himself the leadership in all the praying and singing ofthe independent church for about ten years. He officiated at all weddings and funerals, besides established the whipping post for those who did not appear in church, with clean shirts on, three Sundays each month to hear him preach two long sermons, when it is said he often preached so loud that he could be distinctly heard in the Charlestown church two miles away, to the annoyance of his old-time associates.
After Ezekiel's thrifty swarm had become greater than the parent hive at Charlestown and the hand of time began pressing heavily upon his shoulders, a regularly ordained preacher was sent in, which the parishioners did not like as well as they did Ezekiel, for he could not clothe and feed himself as Ezekiel had done, but he stayed until he died, and here is a sample of primitive piety in our grandfather's days:
"The Reverend Mr. Carter of the Woburn Episcopal Church died, and being a good man, our forefathers decided to turn out in mass, give him a Christian burial and charge the expenses to the town. Of the itemized bill—coffin, shroud, grave-digging, and stimulants,—the latter, the liquor bill, exceeded all the other expenses."
See Woburn Town Records, Volume 3, page 68.
Thus while we find traces of weakness in our ancestors, a principle seems to have been involved which made New England a hot-bed for vags and tramps. No wonder we sigh for the good old days when respectable citizens did not have to lock their doors on Sunday, for all the thieves were in church.
TRADITIONSThrough the first appearance of the Richardsons in Charlestown we have an unbroken line of nine generations through Ezekiel of Woburn 1630 to Marvin of Chicago 1917.Ezekiel of Woburn.Theopolis of Woburn.John of Stafford Street.Uriah of Stafford Street.John of Devil's Hop Yard.Warren of Wabbaquassett Lake.Merrick of Chicago.Arthur of Chicago.Marvin of Chicago.Of course, my brothers and cousins perpetuate this name, the same as I do. Collins and Gordon, my brothers, with Orino, the son of my Uncle Orson, alone have raised about twenty boys.The living male descendants of Ezekiel, Samuel and Thomas, who carry our name, must now be more than one hundred thousand Richardsons, and I presume few of them trace back their relation more than three generations, but they could if they would.MY GRANDMOTHER'S STORYMy grandmother, Judith Burroughs Richardson, who died in 1859, age 94, seemed in the evening of her life-dayto think, dream and commune with her ancestors and friends, who long since entered Paradise, and now seemed to be throwing back kisses to loved ones approaching that land of delight.From her experience and traditional reminiscences I here give a condensed sketch of her apparent and vivid memories:James Burroughs, her grandfather, was the son of the minister, George Burroughs, her great-grandfather, who was hanged at Salem, Mass., August 19, 1692, for being in league with the devil.James was arrested soon after, but escaped from Salem jail and, under the name of Jim Hall, lived in Connecticut for several years. Later, under his right name, he married Winnie Richardson, a Stafford Street girl, and they settled near Brattleborough, Vermont, where grandmother's father, Amos Burroughs, was born.After James died, her grandmother Winnie came to West Stafford to live with them. She died before grandma was born and was buried in the family lot near their house. Her gravestone was still standing when my father was old enough to go with his grandfather Amos Burroughs and see them.The homestead where Winnie died and grandmother was born and married can be found by following the south road out of West Stafford and turning the first road to the right, across the brook and up the hill to the first farm scene.Winnie's father, Theopolis, son of Ezekiel, and several other men with their families, came West when she was a little girl and took possession, or squat, on the northern rise of a highland plain, where a grand view ofthe far-away Western mountains can be seen. They called their camp Stafford.John, Winnie's brother, who was conducting an Indian trading post at Medford came on later, with his two brothers, Gershom and Paul, and opened up the famous Stafford Street, which was laid out twenty rods wide and about two miles long, the southern terminus being about one mile northeast of Stafford Springs.John Richardson took up the first farm at the north entrance on the west side and Silas Dean took the first on the left, or east, side from the old campus on the hill at the north end of the street.All between the walls, which was later changed to sixteen rods, was commons. The church in the center was used for spiritual devotion, recorder office and court of justice.i18ARRIVAL OF THE WOBURN PIONEERS AT STAFFORD STREET WHEN WINNIE RICHARDSON WAS TEN YEARS OF AGE. RECENT VIEW OF THE WESTERN HILLS FROM THE ORIGINAL CAMP.
Through the first appearance of the Richardsons in Charlestown we have an unbroken line of nine generations through Ezekiel of Woburn 1630 to Marvin of Chicago 1917.
Ezekiel of Woburn.Theopolis of Woburn.John of Stafford Street.Uriah of Stafford Street.John of Devil's Hop Yard.Warren of Wabbaquassett Lake.Merrick of Chicago.Arthur of Chicago.Marvin of Chicago.
Of course, my brothers and cousins perpetuate this name, the same as I do. Collins and Gordon, my brothers, with Orino, the son of my Uncle Orson, alone have raised about twenty boys.
The living male descendants of Ezekiel, Samuel and Thomas, who carry our name, must now be more than one hundred thousand Richardsons, and I presume few of them trace back their relation more than three generations, but they could if they would.
My grandmother, Judith Burroughs Richardson, who died in 1859, age 94, seemed in the evening of her life-dayto think, dream and commune with her ancestors and friends, who long since entered Paradise, and now seemed to be throwing back kisses to loved ones approaching that land of delight.
From her experience and traditional reminiscences I here give a condensed sketch of her apparent and vivid memories:
James Burroughs, her grandfather, was the son of the minister, George Burroughs, her great-grandfather, who was hanged at Salem, Mass., August 19, 1692, for being in league with the devil.
James was arrested soon after, but escaped from Salem jail and, under the name of Jim Hall, lived in Connecticut for several years. Later, under his right name, he married Winnie Richardson, a Stafford Street girl, and they settled near Brattleborough, Vermont, where grandmother's father, Amos Burroughs, was born.
After James died, her grandmother Winnie came to West Stafford to live with them. She died before grandma was born and was buried in the family lot near their house. Her gravestone was still standing when my father was old enough to go with his grandfather Amos Burroughs and see them.
The homestead where Winnie died and grandmother was born and married can be found by following the south road out of West Stafford and turning the first road to the right, across the brook and up the hill to the first farm scene.
Winnie's father, Theopolis, son of Ezekiel, and several other men with their families, came West when she was a little girl and took possession, or squat, on the northern rise of a highland plain, where a grand view ofthe far-away Western mountains can be seen. They called their camp Stafford.
John, Winnie's brother, who was conducting an Indian trading post at Medford came on later, with his two brothers, Gershom and Paul, and opened up the famous Stafford Street, which was laid out twenty rods wide and about two miles long, the southern terminus being about one mile northeast of Stafford Springs.
John Richardson took up the first farm at the north entrance on the west side and Silas Dean took the first on the left, or east, side from the old campus on the hill at the north end of the street.
All between the walls, which was later changed to sixteen rods, was commons. The church in the center was used for spiritual devotion, recorder office and court of justice.
i18
ARRIVAL OF THE WOBURN PIONEERS AT STAFFORD STREET WHEN WINNIE RICHARDSON WAS TEN YEARS OF AGE. RECENT VIEW OF THE WESTERN HILLS FROM THE ORIGINAL CAMP.
ARRIVAL OF THE WOBURN PIONEERS AT STAFFORD STREET WHEN WINNIE RICHARDSON WAS TEN YEARS OF AGE. RECENT VIEW OF THE WESTERN HILLS FROM THE ORIGINAL CAMP.
ARRIVAL OF THE WOBURN PIONEERS AT STAFFORD STREET WHEN WINNIE RICHARDSON WAS TEN YEARS OF AGE. RECENT VIEW OF THE WESTERN HILLS FROM THE ORIGINAL CAMP.
RECORDSThe records of those New England pioneers are dim, as the Puritans considered church members only, as persons.Boston records (Woburn), as we have seen, seem to extol Ezekiel.Theopolis according to his will, must have been a financial success.The Stafford Street records, I was informed by Mrs. Larned, who now lives on the old homestead, were kept in their family from the beginning until lately, when they became such a source of annoyance from ancestor seekers, like myself, that they sent them to the recorder's office at Stafford Springs.At the recorder's office at Stafford Springs I found that John Richardson from Medford came to Stafford Street in 1726, this, though meager, acts as the official connecting link between Woburn and Stafford.Another scrap I found was that Paul Richardson had taken land adjoining his brother, John Richardson, this identifies both John and Paul.Regarding Gershom, the other one of the three brothers, I found this:"Gershom Richardson, son of Gershom and Abigail, born in 1761."This would make the elder Gershom Richardson contemporary with John and Paul.E. Y. Fisk, an early settler, told me that a part of the early church records have been burned.In the old graveyard just south of the brook which crosses Stafford Street still remains the headstone of Lot Dean, who died in 1818.Lot would be of the next generation from Silas Dean, who took the farm opposite John Richardson.Near the grave of Lot are the headstones of Uriah Richardson and his wife Miriam, who died October 18, 1785, at the age of 75. Uriah must have been all right, for Miriam, who died twenty years later, had had inscribed on his headstone:"The memory of the just is blessed."Grandmother remembered Uriah, the son of John and the father of John, her husband.Now while the traditions, records and gravestones may prove each in themselves to be weak evidence, together they form an unbroken chain from Ezekiel down to our times.i22ANCIENT CEMETERY OF THE STAFFORD STREET PIONEERS WHERE MOST OF THE GRAVE STONES ARE FOUND BROKEN AND IN THE WALL WHICH IS BUILT AROUND THE LOT.LEFT TO RIGHT. M. A. RICHARDSON. WALTER SKINNER. LUCIUS ABORN.
The records of those New England pioneers are dim, as the Puritans considered church members only, as persons.
Boston records (Woburn), as we have seen, seem to extol Ezekiel.
Theopolis according to his will, must have been a financial success.
The Stafford Street records, I was informed by Mrs. Larned, who now lives on the old homestead, were kept in their family from the beginning until lately, when they became such a source of annoyance from ancestor seekers, like myself, that they sent them to the recorder's office at Stafford Springs.
At the recorder's office at Stafford Springs I found that John Richardson from Medford came to Stafford Street in 1726, this, though meager, acts as the official connecting link between Woburn and Stafford.
Another scrap I found was that Paul Richardson had taken land adjoining his brother, John Richardson, this identifies both John and Paul.
Regarding Gershom, the other one of the three brothers, I found this:
"Gershom Richardson, son of Gershom and Abigail, born in 1761."
This would make the elder Gershom Richardson contemporary with John and Paul.
E. Y. Fisk, an early settler, told me that a part of the early church records have been burned.
In the old graveyard just south of the brook which crosses Stafford Street still remains the headstone of Lot Dean, who died in 1818.
Lot would be of the next generation from Silas Dean, who took the farm opposite John Richardson.
Near the grave of Lot are the headstones of Uriah Richardson and his wife Miriam, who died October 18, 1785, at the age of 75. Uriah must have been all right, for Miriam, who died twenty years later, had had inscribed on his headstone:
"The memory of the just is blessed."
Grandmother remembered Uriah, the son of John and the father of John, her husband.
Now while the traditions, records and gravestones may prove each in themselves to be weak evidence, together they form an unbroken chain from Ezekiel down to our times.
i22
ANCIENT CEMETERY OF THE STAFFORD STREET PIONEERS WHERE MOST OF THE GRAVE STONES ARE FOUND BROKEN AND IN THE WALL WHICH IS BUILT AROUND THE LOT.LEFT TO RIGHT. M. A. RICHARDSON. WALTER SKINNER. LUCIUS ABORN.
ANCIENT CEMETERY OF THE STAFFORD STREET PIONEERS WHERE MOST OF THE GRAVE STONES ARE FOUND BROKEN AND IN THE WALL WHICH IS BUILT AROUND THE LOT.LEFT TO RIGHT. M. A. RICHARDSON. WALTER SKINNER. LUCIUS ABORN.
ANCIENT CEMETERY OF THE STAFFORD STREET PIONEERS WHERE MOST OF THE GRAVE STONES ARE FOUND BROKEN AND IN THE WALL WHICH IS BUILT AROUND THE LOT.LEFT TO RIGHT. M. A. RICHARDSON. WALTER SKINNER. LUCIUS ABORN.
OLD HOMESTEADWith my interesting nieces, Joe and Lina Newell, one bright summer day, I visited the ancient homes of the Stafford Street, Conn., Richardsons.E. Y. Fisk and his son now possess the historical property. The son from Springfield, who was haying there at the time, invited us and all the other Richardson tribe to come and camp on the homestead grounds, sit on the old walls, gaze over the western mountains and even coquet with the star Venus evenings, all of which look now the same as when our ancestors saw them 200 years ago.That day, July 19, 1916, with those girls, viewing the scenes and taking pictures of the surroundings, imprinted on my mind an oasis of beauty ever awaiting recall as I journey over the trackless sands of time.The present seemed to pass away as the past unfolded its charms while we were reminded of the long ago.Sacredly we listened to the voice of Mother Mary calling Winnie from the kitchen door, saw the men in homespun shirts and trousers coming up from the meadow below. Heard the careless boy whistling while unyoking the lazy oxen. Saw old dog Towser sleeping in the shade. And in the pasture far away we seemed to hear the faint tinkling of the cow bell on the brindle steer.Day dreams, says one.Imagination, says another.May it not be that when death removes this earthly garment, we will again realize that the past, present, and future are one.If the image of the face before me now is the retention of the face I saw yesterday, may not all fiction, invention and imagination be retention of occurences we can only recall in parts?The power of recall is mysterious. If we dream of the dead as living when we know that they are dead, but we cannot recall that which we know, may we not know of pre-existence but lack the power to recall?Thus Lina, Joe and myself spent a happy summer day on the New England hills, which we will pleasantly recall when the cold winds of winter rattle the doors and windows and we are hugging the radiators.
With my interesting nieces, Joe and Lina Newell, one bright summer day, I visited the ancient homes of the Stafford Street, Conn., Richardsons.
E. Y. Fisk and his son now possess the historical property. The son from Springfield, who was haying there at the time, invited us and all the other Richardson tribe to come and camp on the homestead grounds, sit on the old walls, gaze over the western mountains and even coquet with the star Venus evenings, all of which look now the same as when our ancestors saw them 200 years ago.
That day, July 19, 1916, with those girls, viewing the scenes and taking pictures of the surroundings, imprinted on my mind an oasis of beauty ever awaiting recall as I journey over the trackless sands of time.
The present seemed to pass away as the past unfolded its charms while we were reminded of the long ago.
Sacredly we listened to the voice of Mother Mary calling Winnie from the kitchen door, saw the men in homespun shirts and trousers coming up from the meadow below. Heard the careless boy whistling while unyoking the lazy oxen. Saw old dog Towser sleeping in the shade. And in the pasture far away we seemed to hear the faint tinkling of the cow bell on the brindle steer.
Day dreams, says one.
Imagination, says another.
May it not be that when death removes this earthly garment, we will again realize that the past, present, and future are one.
If the image of the face before me now is the retention of the face I saw yesterday, may not all fiction, invention and imagination be retention of occurences we can only recall in parts?
The power of recall is mysterious. If we dream of the dead as living when we know that they are dead, but we cannot recall that which we know, may we not know of pre-existence but lack the power to recall?
Thus Lina, Joe and myself spent a happy summer day on the New England hills, which we will pleasantly recall when the cold winds of winter rattle the doors and windows and we are hugging the radiators.