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XI. Eighteenth Century Migrations
Concord, NH
Conway, NH
Plymouth, NH
Warren, NH
Corinth, VT
Kennebunkport, ME
Topsham, ME
Falmouth, ME
North Yarmouth, ME
New Gloucester, ME
Lewiston, ME
Buxton, ME
Greene, ME
Fryeburg, ME
Brownfield, ME
Andover, ME
A Merrill Memorial
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Samuel
Merrill, 1928, reprint 1983
Some
Eighteenth Century Migrations - Chapter XI,
pp125-152
Buxton,
ME
The Narraganset War was a brief episode of the war against
King Philip, chief of the Wampanoags, and it was fought
in 1675. The Massachusetts soldiers who took part in the
campaign were promised, in the event of success, grants
of land in addition to their usual service pay, but for
many years the terms of the promise were not complied
with. At last, in 1734, a grant of land on the east side
of the Saco River in Maine, some ten miles above its mouth,
was made to 120 proprietors, the proprietors being soldiers
of the Narraganset War, or their representatives. The
township was given the name Narraganset No. 1, (*)
and by this name it was known until, at its incorporation
in 1772, it received the name Buxton.
Settlement
was begun in 1742, but little progress in this direction
had been made when, in 1744, war between England and France
broke out, and the few settlers were forced to abandon
their farms and take refuge in the more easily defended
towns along the coast. In 1750, the war having ended,
some of the settlers returned, and thereafter nothing
happened to cause them to desert their homes.
Capt. Thomas Bradbury of Biddeford was
one of the proprietors of Narraganset No. 1. He was a
native of Salisbury, Mass., and married Sarah4
Merrill (Moses3, Daniel2). (See
page 197.) His daughter Elizabeth married Samuel5
Merrill of Salisbury, a great-grandson of Daniel2
Merrill through John3 and Thomas4.
(See page 359.) Capt. Bradbury was
noted as an Indian fighter, and in 1748 and 1749 had command
of a block-house on Saco River, opposite the southern
extremity of the present town of Buxton. But Capt. Bradbury
did not become a resident of Narraganset No. 1 until about
1763.
Samuel5 Merrill had been
a soldier at the block-house, under his father-in-law's
command, in 1748. He was living in Narraganset No. 1 on
the 17th of May, 1751, for on that day he was one of the
signers of a petition for a meeting of the proprietors
of the Plantation. Capt. Bradbury had purchased two lots
of land in the Narraganset township, paying for them £600,
old tenor. One was described as Lot 1, Range D, 1st Division,
and the deed recites that a dwelling house stood upon
it. This "was probably the first dwelling house in
the town worthy of the name."(**)
Capt. Bradbury gave a deed of this farm to his son-in-law,
under date of 22 Nov. 1753, and here Samuel5 Merrill spent
the remainder of his long life, dying in 1822 at the age
of ninety-three years. The homestead was near Salmon Falls,
and in 1872 a portion of the farm was in possession of
Ansel9 Merrill, greatgreat-grandson of Samuel5 Merrill.
In
1754 Samuel Merrill was a second time a petitioner for
a proprietors' meeting, this time the fear of attack by
the Indians impelling the proprietors to provide for the
erection of a fort, the structure "to be forty feet
square bilt with Pillasaders or Stockades three feet &
one half in the ground & ten feet above the Ground
& Said Stockades to be Sett Double & a Good flanker
or watch box at two opposite Corners of Said fort."
By good fortune no attack was made by the Indians in the
course of the seven years' war, from 1754 to 1761. Once
Indians were seen in the vicinity, and all the inhabitants
hastened to the garrison, "who were aided and assisted
on this occasion by the coolness and decision of Lieut.
Samuel Merrill." (***)
Samuel5 Merrill was a man
of prominence in the community. In 1761 at a meeting of
the proprietors it was "Voted that the proprietors
give to Samuel Merrill the old meeting house for said
props meeting in Said merrills dwelling house on Lords
days heretofore." He was repeatedly chosen surveyor
of roads, and after the incorporation of the town he was
frequently elected selectman. His military service continued
as late as the Revolution, and he served as a lieutenant
at the battle of Bunker Hill, in the company commanded
by Capt. Jeremiah Hill. (****)
Ten of his children lived to grow up; and they left many
descendants in Buxton. His name was handed down in the
successive generations, Rev. Samuel-Hill Merrill, the
genealogist (see pages 1-4), and
Governor Merrill of Iowa (see page 534),
among others, receiving the name Samuel as part of their
inheritance.
*
There were seven "Narraganset" townships. No.
2 is now Westminster, Mass.; No. 3, Amherst, N.H.; No.
4, Goffstown, N.H.; No. 5, Bedford, N.H.; No. 6, Templeton,
Mass.; No. 7, Gorham, Me.
**"Buxton Centennial," (Portland,
1874), p. 236.
***"Buxton
Centennial," p. 53.
****"Buxton Centennial,"
pp. 163, 272. His son Samuel6 was a member of the same
company
Greene,
ME
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you have further information on the book, "A Merrill
Memorial" and would like to share it with others,
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me.
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