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Wessagusset and Weymouth

Chapter 5: FOOTNOTES:
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About This Book

A set of historical addresses and papers recounts the town’s early settlement as a 17th-century coastal community, describing the arrival of an expedition organized by a London merchant, the reception and assistance of nearby colonists, early hardships, and contacts with Indigenous people; it then surveys municipal development across the first twenty years, including land distribution, governance, and economy, and offers a later retrospective on demographic, civic, and local changes thirty years hence, placing local events within broader early-modern Atlantic and English contexts.

FOOTNOTES:

[99] The Old North Church of Weymouth was organized Jan. 30, 1638/9. The diary of the Rev. Peter Hobart, the minister at Hingham, Mass., from 1635 to 1679, reads: “Jan. 30, 1639, [N. S.] A church gathered at Weymouth.” (From a paper on “The Organization of the Old North Church of Weymouth,” read before the Weymouth Historical Society, Feb. 24, 1904, by George W. Chamberlain, and published in the Weymouth Gazette, March 18, following.)