Wednesday, June 17, 2026

A Bi-Plane for Weathervane Wednesday

 Today's weathervane was photographed in Fall River, Massachusetts.




We spotted this little bi-plane over the cupola on the Bay Coast Bank in Fall River, Massachusetts, at 310 Airport Road.  There is no longer an airport in Fall River, since the municipal airport closed in 1996.  There was a very big landfill next to the airport, and the FAA closed the airport due to the large number of seagulls in the flight path!

This three dimensional bi-plane weathervane is very appropriate for the location.  It is a very intricate metal figure, with easy to read cardinal points. The plane features a propeller which turns in the wind, struts on the wings, and the tail has a rudder.  The bank and this weathervane are visible from nearby highways 79 and 24, and is located right on the corner near the exit ramp.  

For the truly curious:

Bay Coast Bank:    https://baycoast.bank/en/  

Click here to read over 550 Weathervane Wednesday posts:   https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/search/label/Weathervane%20Wednesday   

Several other aviation weathervanes I have posted:






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To cite/link to this blog post:  Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "A Bi-Plane for Weathervane Wednesday", Nutfield Genealogy, posted June 17, 2026, ( https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2026/06/a-bi-plane-for-weathervane-wednesday.html: accessed [access date]). 

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

John McConihe (d. 1760), Nutfield Settler

A guest sketch by James H. McConihe, a direct descendant

The reason this sketch did not get written sooner is that John McConihe is hard to find in the records — not because he wasn't there, but because the early Londonderry clerks could not agree on how to spell his name.




The name twelve clerks could not agree on

Across the Early Records of the Town of Londonderry, Windham and Derry, N.H., 1719–1745, edited by George Waldo Browne (Manchester Historic Association, Vol. I 1908, Vol. II 1911), the early town clerks took roughly nine separate runs at John's surname and produced roughly nine separate spellings: Conoghy, Conehey, Conechy, Conochey, Conachey, Conahie, Mckonoihy, McConihe, and — when he signed the Provincial Oaths of Allegiance with his X mark — simply Conihe. The Willey map of Nutfield adds a tenth, "McConoghy," and a 1729 laying-out throws in "MacConechy" for good measure. Even Rev. Edward L. Parker himself, recording the official Schedule of Proprietors of the Royal Charter at p. 326 of his History of Londonderry (1851), contributed a twelfth: "John McConoeighy." One suspects John, signing with his mark, had given up trying to correct anyone.

What the records show

Parker preserves John McConihe's legal standing as a chartered proprietor. The Schedule of Proprietors attached to the Royal Charter granted by Governor Samuel Shute on 21 June 1722 lists "John McConoeighy" with one share among the 124½ shares of the Town of Londonderry (Parker, p. 326).
The 1720 grant of his sixty-acre home lot survives in full in Early Records Vol. II, recorded by Town Clerk John Goffe on 25 February 1722/3:
"Nutfield 1720. Laid out to John M°Conoghy a lot of land in said town Containing sixty acres... beginning at a stake at the north end of the common field... together with an intrest in ye Common land equal to other lots in said Town."
Subsequent entries show him as an active proprietor for another two decades: forty acres additionally laid out in 1722 (Vol. II, p. 80); a further grant confirmed "to John MacConechy and his heirs & assigns for Ever in fee" at town meeting on 5 March 1729/30 (Vol. II, p. 224); and repeated appearances as a bounding abutter through the 1730s (Vol. II, pp. 256, 364).
Browne's Vol. I index, two centuries later, gathers most of the variants under one heading — "McConihe, John, 42, 53, 109, 171, 258, 383, 388" — with a small stray entry filed back under C, "Conihe, John, 384," for the oath-book version. Vol. II is more cooperative: "McConihe, John, lot, 80, 224, 256, 364." Together those eleven page references and Parker's Charter Schedule cover roughly two decades of an active proprietor's life — once you know to look for him under all his names.

Bedford

John removed from Londonderry to Bedford, New Hampshire in 1751 — joining the broader Scotch-Irish migration north over the Merrimack that Parker dates to the late 1730s and 1740s — and died there at the end of October 1760. He was buried beside his wife Mary in the old burying ground; the memorial is catalogued at Find A Grave (#67906800, Bedford Center Cemetery). He and Mary had two sons, John and Samuel, and three daughters. The New Hampshire line persisted through four generations before branches moved west to Illinois in the 1830s and 1840s.

Sources

Rev. Edward L. Parker, The History of Londonderry, Comprising the Towns of Derry and Londonderry, N.H. (Boston: Perkins and Whipple, 1851), p. 326

Early Records of the Town of Londonderry, Windham and Derry, N.H., 1719–1745, ed. George Waldo Browne, 2 vols. (Manchester Historic Association, 1908 and 1911)

George F. Willey, Willey's Book of Nutfield (1895), map facing p. 8 — archive.org/details/willeysbookofnut00will

Find A Grave memorial #67906800, Bedford Center Cemetery, New Hampshire

Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "Transcription of an Early Nutfield Map," Nutfield Genealogy, 25 July 2016


James H. McConihe is a direct descendant of John McConihe through the Bedford, New Hampshire line. He welcomes contact from McConihe cousins and fellow researchers at jm2672@pacbell.net


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To cite/link to this blog post: James H. McConihe and Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "John McConihe (d. 1760), Nutfield Settler", Nutfield Genealogy, posted June 9, 2026, ( https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2026/06/john-mcconihe-d-1760-nutfield-settler.html: accessed [access date]). 

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

My Revolutionary War Patriots - Robert Wilson of Danvers, Massachusetts

 

At the Wilson Family Burial Ground, Peabody, Massachusetts
ROBERT WILSON
Died
Jan. 4, 1797
Aged 51
[epitaph illegible]

This is Patriot #10 I have written about for this series on my Revolutionary War ancestors.  

Robert Wilson is my 5th great grandfather.  He was born in Salem Village (after 1775 it was known as the town of Danvers), Massachusetts around 1746, the son of Robert Wilson (1724 - 1782) and Elizabeth Southwick of Danvers.  

Robert Wilson's father was a potter, and so was his grandfather, Isaac Wilson, and so were his sons.  According to the book Early New England Potters and Their Wares, by Lura Woodside Watkins, pages 65 - 66 "The Wilsons also were a prominent family of artisans.  Their homestead included the land near 141 Andover Street and eastward where Route 128 now crosses it.  The first two potting Wilsons were sons of Robert, a farmer.  They were Robert, known as Robert Jr., who remained in Danvers, and Joseph, who went to Dedham and thence to Providence, Rhode Island.  When Robert, Jr. died in 1782, he left property worth 627 pounds, including six lots of land, his house, barn, potter's shop, and corn house, a riding chair, and a large personal estate.  He seems to have done well in his trade.  His son Robert, known as Robert 3d, and a younger son Job were potters.  By an order of the court, Robert 3d, as administrator of his father's estate, was obliged to sell a large part of the elder Robert's property to pay certain debts.  This was not done until April 9, 1793, when two-thirds of the land and buildings, and an interest in the business was aquired by Isaac Wilson 3d.  He, too, was a craftsman in clay.  The threee Wilsons ran the shop together for a time, but Robert 3d. and Job both passed away before 1800, while Robert's son Robert, who had worked but a short time as a potter, died three years later at the age of twenty-seven.  Upon Isaac's decease in 1809, this early pottery must have come to an end."

Robert Wilson married Sarah Felton on 23 March 1775 in Danvers. She was the daughter of Malachi Felton and Abigail Jacobs (the great granddaughter of the George Jacobs hanged as a witch during the 1692 witch hysteria). She was probably the first child born in the Nathaniel Felton, Jr. house, which is still standing in the town of Peabody, Massachusetts.  Robert and Sarah had nine children, of whom seven grew up to adulthood and married.  I descend from the eldest child, Robert Wilson (1776 - 1803), mentioned above, who married Mary Southwick, his second cousin. This Robert died at age 27, leaving his widow with two babies.  She never remarried. 

The Wilsons produced an unsual kind of black pottery, which had an almost black glaze. There was a large clay deposit near Andover Street (now Route 114).  Some of this black pottery is on display inside the Nathaniel Felton houses (one is mentioned above) which are still standing on Felton Hill, owned by the Peabody Historical Society.  The Wilsons and their relatives lived on what is now the Danvers/Peabody line, near Route 114 and the Northshore Mall. Nearby is Wilson Square.  Several Wilsons were buried under the parking lot near Macy's at the Mall, but their graves were relocated. Across from the Mall, behind the Kappy's liquor store, there is a Wilson Family Burial Ground. 

At the start of the Revolutionary War there were over 50 small potteries in Danvers, all in the same neighborhood near the clay deposit.  The Wilsons lived and worked at the pottery business, along with other local families such as the Osborns, Paiges, Porters, and Southwicks. The last pottery in Peabody (which broke off from Danvers in 1855) closed due to a fire in the 1950s.  At one time some of these families also produced bricks. 

Robert Wilson served in the Revolutionary War as a Private in Captain Samuel Epe's Company under Colonel Pickering's Regiment of Danvers.  He marched on the alarm of 19 April 1775 for two days of service and is listed in the DAR Patriot's Index. There were six Wilsons from the area of Danvers and Peabody who marched on the Lexington Alarm.  

Robert Wilson died on 4 June 1797 in Danvers, and his son, my 4th great grandfather, Robert Wilson, was the administrator of his father's estate in 1782.  His will (Essex County Probate #30142) mentions his widow Sarah and all the children except for Mercy and Samuel in 1796. He was buried in the Wilson Family Burial Ground, and when Sarah died on 20 November 1836 she was buried nearby in the Felton Family Burial Ground. I cannot find a record of her applying for a widow's pension, and she never remarried. 

I'm curious to find out if the black and redware pottery produced in Danvers and Peabody contained a lead glaze. Both Robert Wilsons mentioned above (the Revolutionary War veteran and his son) died very young.  Perhaps it was lead poisoning? Perhaps we will never know? 


For the truly curious:

Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors of the Revolution

Essex County, Massachusetts Probate

Early New England Potters and Their Wares,  by Lura Woodside Watkins,  Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1950, pages 65-66. 

Sophia Richter, "Peabody: Pottery City, 1730 - 1940", Peabody Historical Society and Museum, posted 1 August 2025, ( https://peabodyhistorical.org/2025/08/peabody-pottery-city-1730-1940/: accessed 22 March 2026). 

#1 in this series,  Colonel Joshua Burnham of Milford, New Hampshire:    https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2026/02/my-revolutionary-war-patriots-colonel.html  

#2 in this series,  Andrew Munroe of Lexington, Massachusetts:   https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2026/03/my-revolutionary-war-patriots-major.html  

#3 Jonathan Flint of Reading, Massachusetts:    https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2026/03/my-revolutionary-war-patriots-jonathan.html   

#4 Daniel Glover of Marblehead, Massachusetts:    https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2026/04/my-revolutionary-war-patriots-daniel.html  

#5 Levi Younger of Gloucester, Massachusetts:    https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2026/04/my-revolutionary-war-patriots-levi.html  

#6 Nathaniel Treadwell of Ipswich, Massachusetts:    https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2026/04/my-revolutionary-war-patriots-nathaniel.html 

#7 Captain Westley Burnham of Essex, Massachusetts:   https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2026/04/my-revolutionary-war-patriots-captain.html  

#8 Abner Poland, Sr. of Essex, Massachusetts:    https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2026/05/my-revolutionary-war-patriots-abner_02014071889.html   

#9 Abner Poland, Jr. Of Essex, Massachusetts and Enfield, New Hampshire:    https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2026/05/my-revolutionary-war-patriots-abner_02014071889.html  

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To cite/link to this blog post: Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "My Revolutionary War Patriots - Robert Wilson of Danvers, Massachusetts", Nutfield Genealogy, posted June 2, 2026, ( https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2026/06/my-revolutionary-war-patriots-robert.html: accessed [access date]).