Monday, December 27, 2021

Vintage Photograph Album from the Calais, Maine Area


Reprinted, with permission, from the Heirlooms Reunited blog

Vintage photograph album with text on the cover: Photographs, Souvenir of Calais, Maine

The album contains 23 photographs of people, places, gardens and an antique automobile, then presumably a contemporary one, which might help date the album.


Sadly, the photographs are glued to the pages, so it's unknown if any identifications are includes on the reverse.

The album presumably belonged to the couple shown in two of the photographs below, as one or both of them appear in several of the other photographs.  If you recognize this couple, please leave a comment so that this blog post can be amended.


Two photographs, below, that show scenes a reader might recognize:
  • top left photo of the near page below appears to be a walking trail along the water
  • right photo in the bottom page shows a woman with a house in the background, perhaps downstream past the mouth of the St. Croix River into Passamaquoddy Bay.



Two pages that show multiple people, perhaps relatives of the primary couple:



If you recognize a person and/or a place, please leave a comment for the benefit of other researchers.

All pages in order: click on any image to enlarge it.














 

Friday, December 24, 2021

1861 Letter from Lewis W. Campbell, Student at Washington Academy in East Machias, Maine, to Friend James in Company C, 6th Maine Infantry

Reprinted, with permission, from the Heirlooms Reunited blog.

June 2, 1861 letter from Lewis W. Campbell (1841-1926), a student at Washington Academy in East Machias, Maine, to his friend James, serving with the 6th Maine Infantry in the Civil War.  

Like untold other Mainers, Lewis would move to Minneapolis and become an influential citizen there.

The letter mentions:
  • James, the recipient of the letter - there were several men named James in the area who enlisted in Company C, 6th Maine Infantry
  • Machias, the next town over, where I believe Lewis W. Campbell's family lived
  • Isaac - is he married yet or not - could not find a record; perhaps Isaac is a middle name or he married later on
  • the Captain of the 6th, looking for more men
  • Washington Academy in East Machias, Maine
  • Eastport, Maine - perhaps the recruits shipped out of there
  • Henry Leighton - also presumably serving with the 6th - perhaps Henry Hudson Leighton (1840-1916), who enlisted into Company C, 6th Maine Infantry
  • a young lady who sends her regards
  • Clark Hughs - perhaps Clark Perry Hughes (1839-1862), who enlisted on 15 July 1861 into Company C, 6th Maine Infantry. He was discharged for disease in September of 1861 and died in January 1862. 
  • Mr. Coffin, sick with the measles
  • Mr. Sanborn preached - perhaps New Hampshire native John L. Sanborn (1813-1895), Baptist clergyman, who was living in East Machias, Maine, at the time of the enumeration of the 1860 Federal Census.
A transcription appears at the end of this post.


Lewis himself would enlist, on 11 August 1862, into Company B, 11th Regiment, Infantry, as a private and was eventually promoted to sergeant. He was wounded in 1864 at Deep Bottom Run in Virginia, but he survived the war, rising to the rank of 2nd Lieutenant at Appomatox.

See a CDV of Lewis W. Campbell, in uniform, taken about 1864 - on the Maine Memory Network.  Read a letter Campbell wrote in 1864.

Lewis W. Campbell moved to Minneapolis and became a miller and a citizen of note, such that his biography is included on page 267 in A Half Century of Minneapolis, published by Horace Bushnell Hudson in 1908.

From this biography, which includes an engraving of Campbell, we learn that he was born in Harrington, Maine, the son of Dennison Campbell. Lewis' grandfather was a signer to the Constitution of Maine, and his great grandfather a colonel in the 6th Massachusetts during the American Revolution.  Lewis' mother was (Martha Wakefield) Campbell, according to his Minnesota death record.




Lewis married New Hampshire native Sarah G. Fisk in Minnesota in 1871. They had at least two children, both daughters.

Transcription

East Machias, June 2d, 61
Friend James
I receive your letter of May the 29 last Wednesday & I was glad to hear from you to hear that you were well & in good spirites. I should have written before but I wanted to go to Machias first to see what was going on over there. I was over yesterday. I am well and hope that these few lines will find you the same. I think judging from your letter that you are truly Patriotic and I hope that you will ever feel so until the glorious Flag of our Union shall wave again over ever nook and corner of the 34 states. You do not know how bad I feel to think I am not with you but you know the reason that I did not go and so all I can do is to bid you success. Bear in mind that you are engaged in a good cause - engaged in a cause which every true Son of America should be engage in and is it not expected that you will prevail over your foes. Of course you will for I believe that the right will always prevail. I told you I was over to Machias yesterday but I do not know of any news there. Now probably you here of all that is transpiring there before I do because there are so many writing there so often. Whether Isaac is married yet or not I do not know. I heard last week that he was & then I heard that he was to be married tonight. It appears to me as if he is in a ____ but then he might as well enjoy himself while he can. I did not see anyone to inquire how the Division is a getting along. Bye the way do you have a chance to go out evenings & do you go to the Division there. I hope that you all do who belong to this Division. I saw your Capt. here the other day. I heard that he was after more men. I am getting along quite well with my studies and have quite a good time. I am not so lonesome since I got acquainted with some of the folks. The School went to walk last Thursday afternoon about 25 or so with our Preceptor to lead us. We we went about 6 miles & back & had a good time as our Precepter approved of that and so does the scholars. I can not think of any more news to write you this time although I am assured by what I have heard the people here say that your company ____ there. Best wishes & your company got some good compliment the day that you past through here on our way to Eastport.  Give my best respects to all of the boys. I can not mention any in particular for it would take me to long to name them all. Tell Henry Leighton that I should be glad to here from him as soon as he can find time to write. & also all of the rest of the boys. There is a young ladie here in town that that I told I was writing to you today & she sends you her love & best wishes for your success. Chark Hughs told me to send you & all the rest of the boys his best respects & wanted me to tell you & them to write as soon as they could. By the way, I forgot to tell you that Mr. Coffin has been sick with the measels. He has got better so he has been out 2 or 3 days. I have been to Church all day. Mr. Sanborn preached over here today. I do not think of any thing more at present. You must excuse bad writing & spelling for I have been in an awful hurry for I did not have much time.
Write to me as often as you can & tell me all about the boys & what your prospects are. I must close by saying good bye.
Yours truly
From your friend
Lewis W. Campbell
Washington Academy
East Machias
Maine

If you have corrections and/or information to share on any of the people mentioned, please leave a comment for the benefit of other researchers.

Thursday, December 23, 2021

1881 Letter from Fox & Kellogg of San Francisco, California, to Freeman Hale Todd in Calais, Maine


Reprinted, permission, from the Heirlooms Reunited blog

1881 letter from the law firm of Fox & Kellogg in San Francisco, California, to merchant and lumberman Freeman Hale Todd in Calais, Maine.


Transcription

March 18th 1881
F. H. Todd, Esq.
Dear Sir:
Your favor of March 4th did not reach us until the afternoon of the 15th - owing to a delay of overland trains. Mr. Pike having previously written that you expected to be present at the Omaha meeting, we have waited to hear from Mr. Fox, who was then on the way. If you came, Understanding his telegram that you are at Omaha he has probably answered your inquiries fully - as he had the accounts ___ the matters you speak of. By the Feb. account you will notice the need of the balance in January acct referred to in your letter. The account of debts existing prior to January 8th, when F. W. Pike turned over the affairs, has been much greater than supposed from  inquiry and examination at the time.
We are anxious to and shall transmit every dollar as fast as proceeds permit.
Hoping you have learned from Mr. Fox the information desired. 
___ [Yours & ?] Fox & Kellogg

From brief online research, hopefully correct - corrections and additions requested:

F. H. Todd was presumably Freeman Hale Todd (1809-1885), son of William Todd and Hannah (Worthley) Todd, and husband of Hasadiah U. (Grant) Todd and Adeline (Boardman) Todd.

F. W. Pike - there are many references to a Fred A. Pike but I didn't find a F. W. Pike in Calais, Maine, or St. Stephen, New Brunswick, not that there wasn't one. Perhaps F. W. Pike lived out of the area.

Law firm of Charles Nelson Fox (1829-1904) & Marmaduke Burnell Kellogg (1847-1907) in San Francisco, California.

If you have corrections and/or information to share, please leave a comment for the benefit of other researchers.

Wednesday, December 22, 2021

1876 Invoice from The Princeton Woolen Mills in Princeton, Maine, to Messrs S. W. Pope of "Machias"

Reprinted, with permission, from the Heirlooms Reunited blog.

Invoice dated 19 September 1876 from the Princeton Woolen Mills in Princeton, Maine, to Messrs S. W. Pope in "Machias", Maine.

The reverse features the name Leonard Peabody (1821-1886), a New Hampshire native, who built The Princeton Woolen Mills in 1863. 

Leonard's parents, Stephen Peabody, Jr., (1773-1851) and Nancy Leonard (Smith) Peabody (1785-1856) had moved to Bucksport, Maine by 1810; moved briefly to New Hampshire, where Leonard was born; and then moved permanently to Bucksport.

In 1852, Leonard Peabody married Mary Hill Todd, daughter of the influential William Todd, Jr. (1803-1873) and Clarissa (Hill) Todd (1806-1861).
S. W. Pope was a lumbering firm that had started out as William Pope & Sons, founded by William Pope (1787-1864); then became S. W. Pope, presumably for Samuel Warren Pope (1815-1862); and, finally, J. O. Pope & Company, presumably for James Otis Pope (1822-1893).  Samuel Warren Pope married Betsey Jones Talbot, from another influential lumbering family in the area.

Read about the Pope family in A History of the Dorchester Pope Family, 1634-1888, With Sketches of Other Popes in England and America, and Notes Upon Several Intermarrying Families, published in 1888 by Charles Henry Pope. 

If you have corrections and/or information to share, please leave a comment for the benefit of fellow researchers.

Multi-Leaf Religious Mailer/Easter Card Sent from Calais, Maine, to Mrs. John Emery in Eastport, Maine

Reprinted, with permission, from the Heirlooms Reunited blog.

Multi-leaf religious mailer sent to Mrs. John Emery, RR, Eastport, Maine, by someone in Calais, Maine.  The year of the cancellation is obscured by a design.

Because the mailer was sent in March, it was likely in connection with Easter.







If you have a theory as to the identity of Mrs. John Emery, please leave a comment for the benefit of fellow researchers.

Wednesday, December 15, 2021

1891 Invoice from the Department of Maine GAR at Rockland, Maine, to Meade Post #40 at Eastport, Maine


Reprinted, with permission, from the Heirlooms Reunited blog

December 25, 1891 invoice from the Department of Maine, Grand Army of the Republic, at Rockland, Maine, to Meade Post #40 at Eastport, Maine, which was requesting:

  • applications
  • buttonhole badges
  • membership badges
  • badge ribbons for officers
  • badge ribbons for comrades

 Sadly, the document does not list any names of GAR members.

The second floor of the GAR Meade Post 40 hall in Eastport, currently undergoing restoration, is decorated with many murals, at least some of which were reportedly painted by a Harrington.  It's said that Joshua Chamberlain, on a tour of GAR posts in Maine, was considerably impressed.


 If you have information to share on Meade Post 40 of the GAR at Eastport, Maine, Maine, please leave a comment for the benefit of other researchers.

Tuesday, December 14, 2021

Charles Dudley Warner's 1874 Perspective on the Difficulty of Sailing Past Campobello into Eastport, Maine - But a War?


Reprinted, with permission, from the Heirlooms Reunited blog.

An interesting perspective by Charles Dudley Warner (1829-1900) on the problem that Campobello Island in New Brunswick, Canada, and the extreme tides in Passamaquoddy Bay have always posed for mariners headed to Eastport, Maine.  

Included in Warner's Baddeck and That Sort of Thing, published in 1874.  A later printing can be read on Archive.org.

Warner's published sentiments apparently predate 1874, perhaps by seven years or more, as he mentions the British several times, and England once, but not the Dominion of Canada, formed in 1867. In addition, by the time of the publication of Warner's book, the "flag and cannon", indicating Eastport's Fort Sullivan, had been decommissioned the year before.



The possession by the British of the island of Campobello is an insufferable menace and impertinence. I write with a full knowledge of what war is. We ought to instantly dislodge the British from Campobello. It entirely shuts up and commands our harbor, - one of our chief Eastern harbors and war stations, where we keep a flag and cannon and some soldiers and where the customs officers look out for smuggling. There is no way to get into our own harbor, except in favorable circumstances of the tide, without begging the courtesy of a passage through British waters. Why is England permitted to stretch along down our coast in this straggling and inquisitive manner?  She might almost as well own Long Island. It was impossible to prevent our cheeks mantling with shame as we thought of this, and saw ourselves, free American citizens, landlocked by alien soil in our own harbor.  We ought to have war, if war is necessary to possess Campobello and Deer Islands, or else we ought to give the British Eastport. I am not sure but the latter would be the better course."

Taking the other course into Eastport, along Deer Island, would have put Mr. Warner through the Old Sow, the world's second largest whirlpool, which, depending on the tide, would have put on a real show.

As for Warner's option of giving Eastport to the British: deja vu - the British had taken Eastport in 1814 during the War of 1812 and were persuaded to return it to the United States in 1818 only after lengthy post-war negotiations.  

During the British occupation, Fort Sullivan, which was constructed in 1808, was renamed Fort Sherbrooke, in honor of Sir John Coape Sherbrooke, then military commander of the Provinces of Nova-Scotia, New-Brunswick, and their Dependencies, including the Islands of Newfoundland, Cape Breton, Prince Edward and Bermuda. He later became Governor General of British North America.

In 1818, with the British evacuation, the fort was once again Fort Sullivan.  Still standing are the remains of a powder house built by the British in 1814, shortly after their occupation, and a building constructed in the early 1820s, the North Officers' Quarters, known locally today as "The Barracks".

Monday, December 13, 2021

Two 19th Century Stereoviews of Eastport, Maine, in Winter

Two stereoviews of winter scenes in Eastport, Maine.  

Reprinted, with permission, from the Heirlooms Reunited blog.

We're accustomed to photographs of seagulls perched on rooftops, but the stereoview above takes the cake!

Both of the views are from the Loring Rooms' series "Views of Eastport and Vicinity".
The reverse of the stereoview below notes that it was taken in the late 1860s outside Tuttle's Hotel in Eastport.
If you have information to share, please leave a comment for the benefit of fellow researchers of history and genealogy.

Resolve of the 55th Maine Legislature, 1876, Regarding Disbursements to the Passamaquoddy Tribe


Reprinted, with permission, from the HeirloomsReunited blog

1876 Legislative Resolve in favor of the Passamaquoddy Tribe in Washington County, Maine.

Note: Be aware the State was using the tribe's own monies, under State control, for the disbursements listed below. The funds came from stumpage on tribal lands and land sales and leases by the State of Passamaquoddy land, which violated treaty.

State of Maine
In House of Representatives
January 27, 1876

Reported from the Committee on Indian Affairs, by Mr. SAWYER of South Thomaston, and ordered printed under Joint Rule.
ORAMANDAL SMITH, Clerk

 RESOLVE in favor of the Passamaquoddy Indians

Resolved, That there be paid from the state treasury, to be expended under the direction of the governor and council, to the agent of the Passamaquoddy tribe of indians, for the benefit of said tribe, as follows: 

  • for May dividend, four hundred dollars
  • for November dividend, three hundred dollars
  • for distressed poor, twelve hundred dollars
  • for agricultural purposes, five hundred dollars
  • for bounty on crops for the year one thousand eight hundred and seventy-six, three hundred dollars
  • for ploughing, one hundred and fifty dollars
  • for salary of governors, fifty dollars each
  • for salary of lieutenant governor, twenty dollars
  • for wood, to be distributed as follows: one hundred dollars for those at Pleasant Point; thirty dollars for those at Pembroke; twenty-five dollars for those at Calais; and forty-five dollars for those at Peter Dana's Point
  • for educational purposes, three hundred dollars
  • for salary of priest, one hundred dollars
  • for dressing for land, one hundred dollars
  • for continent fund, two hundred dollars
  • for salary of agent, three hundred dollars
  • for repairs of priest's house and purchasing stove for chapel at Pleasant Point, two hundred dollars
  • for repairs of chapel and purchasing stove for same at Peter Dana's Point, fifty dollars
  • for plastering hall at Pleasant Point, fifty dollars
  • also, fifty dollars on road at Pleasant Point.




Pleasant Point - Sipayik
Peter Dana Point - Motahkomikuk

Tuesday, October 12, 2021

19th Century Photograph of, presumably, the Home of George E. Perkins on the Shore Road in Perry, Maine


Reprinted, with permission, from the Heirlooms Reunited blog.

This is what appears to be a 19th century photograph of a house, described on the reverse, in the handwriting of amateur historian Virginia (Golding) Pottle, as possibly the Perkins house on the Shore Road in Perry, Maine.  The man in the rocking chair is tentatively identified as George Perkins or his father.


See another post that features a photograph of George E. Perkins and wife Harriet Aylward Perkins of Perry, Maine.

From brief online research, hopefully correct:  corrections and additions requested:

George Edward Perkins was born April 13, 1855 at Perry, Maine, the son of James Perkins and his second wife, Mehitable (Pottle) Perkins.  Harriet (Aylward) Perkins, "Hattie", was born at Pembroke, Maine, or Perry, Maine, on February 8, 1867, the daughter of Lowell C. Aylward and Harriet E. (Leach) Aylward.

Read about the military service of Lowell C. Aylward here.

George and Hattie married in March of 1886 and settled at Perry, Maine; I didn't find a record of any children for them.  Hattie died in 1905 at Calais, Maine, shortly after her 38th birthday.  George was still alive at the time of the 1930 Census of Perry, Maine.

If you have corrections and/or information to share, please leave a comment for the benefit of other researchers.

Saturday, October 2, 2021

1858-1861 Autograph Album of Emily C. White of Londonderry, New Hampshire; future wife of Samuel Dean Leavitt of Eastport, Maine


Reprinted, with permission, from the Heirlooms Reunited blog

1858-1861 autograph album of Emily C. White of Londonderry, New Hampshire, given to her by her brother Henry Harrison White.  Emily Colby White Leavitt (1835-1921)


On August 7, 1860, Emily would marry inscriber Samuel Dean Leavitt, a fellow student at Franklin Academy, and move to Samuel's hometown of Eastport, Maine, where at least one of the autographs was acquired.

The album measures approximately 8-1/4" by 7" and contains the sentiments of 27 of Emily's relatives, friends and schoolmates.  An alphabetical surname list and an alphabetical list of the inscribers, together with any personal information they offered, appear at the end of this post.

The album, published by Leavitt & Allen of New York City, also contains five full page engravings, in addition to that on the title page.


Below, a cabinet photograph of Emily in middle age, taken by the Loring studio of Eastport, Maine.


From brief online research, hopefully correct - corrections requested:

Emily Colby White Leavitt (1835-1921) was born at Londonderry, New Hampshire, the daughter of Reuben and Rachel (Corning) White.  Judging from several of the inscriptions, Emily apparently attended Franklin Academy in New Hampshire, which her future husband, Samuel Dean Leavitt, also shown as Samuel Deane Leavitt, also attended.  

Samuel left an inscription in Emily's album in May 1860, three months before their marriage.


Samuel Dean(e) Leavitt was born August 12, 1838 at Exeter, New Hampshire, son of Benjamin Brackett Leavitt and Harriet (Lamprey) Brackett.  Emily and Samuel had, I believe, six children, but it appears that several, if not five of them, died young.  Their youngest, Amy White Leavitt, who married Henry Chapman Waters, is shown below as a child.


Samuel Dean Leavitt was an influential citizen at Eastport, Maine.  Read more about him here in Maine: A History, Volume 4, by Louis Clinton Hatch, published in 1919.  Included in the biography is a photograph of Samuel Dean Leavitt.


Below, a cabinet photograph of Samuel Dean Leavitt's father, Benjamin Brackett Leavitt, another influential Eastport, Maine, citizen:


If you have corrections and/or information to share, please leave a comment for the benefit of other researchers.

Surnames in the Album

? [4]CC ?DDaniell [2]MMillerTThompson
B ?Clark [2]EEmery [2]Moore [2]WWhite [2]
BaldwinCorning ?GGarvinNNesmith
Boyce [2]CorningLLaddPPaine
Leavitt [2]Poor

Inscribers in the Album - given names within a specific surname might not be in alphabetical order.
  • Franc, inscribed at Manchester, New Hampshire, on January 21, 1859.   Possibly a nickname for Frances
  • Eldora, inscribed at Londonderry, New Hampshire, on February 28, 1860.  Possibly Eldora Garvin, daughter of Benjamin F. Garvin and Nancy M. (Spinney) Garvin of Londonderry, New Hampshire
  • Sarah, inscribed at Franklin, New Hampshire, in March 1860
  • Maggie, inscribed on June 8, 1861
  • C. B.
  • F. Esther Baldwin, inscribed at Manchester, New Hampshire, on November 11, 1858.  Presumably Frances Esther Baldwin (1837-1860), adopted daughter of Cyrus and Susan Baldwin and future wife of John D. Green.
  • Nute Boyce, inscribed at Londonderry, New Hampshire, on July 9, 1860.  Presumably Newell Boyce, husband of inscriber Celinda C. (Flanders) Boyce.
  • Celinda C. Boyce, inscribed at Londonderry, New Hampshire, on July 8, 1860; Celinda C. (Flanders) Boyce, wife of inscriber Nute Boyce, known formally as Newell Boyce
  • Lucy W. C., inscribed at Franklin, New Hampshire in March 1860.  Presumably Lucy W. Clark, a schoolmate of Emily C. White at Franklin Academy.  She may have been the daughter of Charles and Mary Clark.
  • Lucy I. Clark, or Lucy J. Clark, inscribed at Franklin, New Hampshire, on March 30, 1860.  She may have been Lucy Jane (White) Clark (1814-1864), wife of Joseph Clark and mother of James Adams Clark, a schoolmate of Emily C. White at Franklin Academy
  • Lucy W. C., inscribed at Franklin, New Hampshire in March 1860.  Presumably Lucy W. Clark, a schoolmate of Emily C. White at Franklin Academy.  She may have been the daughter of Charles and Mary Clark.
  • ? Corning, inscribed at Concord, New Hampshire, on April 18, 1860.  Not sure of initial(s) or surname.  Perhaps Rt. Corning, for Robert Corning; or R. N. Corning.  The surname could also be Comins or ?  If R. N. Corning, he might have been Robert N. Corning, a railway conductor at Concord, New Hampshire.
  • Regina A. Corning, inscribed at Londonderry, New Hampshire, on July 8, 1860
  • Mary E. Daniell, inscribed at Franklin, New Hampshire in March 1860.  Presumably Mary Eastman Daniell (1840-1910), daughter of Jeremiah Fisher Daniell and Annette (Eastman) Daniell
  • Warren F. Daniell, inscribed at Franklin, New Hampshire, on March 20, 1860
  • S. F. Emery, inscribed on August 5, 1860.  She may have been Sarah Frances Emery (1826-1898).  Inscriber E. G. Emery may have been Elbridge Gerry Emery, her brother.
  • E. G. Emery, inscribed in May 1860; inscribed to "Dear Madam", so presumably a male.  Perhaps Elbridge Gerry Emery (1818-1877).  Inscriber S. F. Emery may have been his sister Sarah Frances Emery.
  • Eldora, inscribed at Londonderry, New Hampshire, on February 28, 1860.  Possibly Eldora Garvin, daughter of Benjamin F. Garvin and Nancy M. (Spinney) Garvin of Londonderry, New Hampshire
  • Harriett L. Ladd, inscribed at Franklin, New Hampshire, in March 1860.  Presumably the Harriette Louisa Ladd born November 11, 1840, the daughter of Dudley and Amanda (Palmer) Ladd.  She was a teacher at Franklin, New Hampshire.
  • M. M. Leavitt, inscribed at Franklin Academy in March 1860; Mary M. Leavitt, according to a Franklin Academy catalog of 1857.   Emily would marry Samuel Deane Leavitt; perhaps a relative of Mary
  • S. D. Leavitt, inscribed in May 1860.  He was Samuel Deane Leavitt, Emily's schoolmate at Franklin Academy and her future husband 
  • Angie D. Miller, inscribed at Lawrence, Massachusetts, on June 23, 1860
  • Lo P. Moore, inscribed at Manchester, New Hampshire, on June 4, 1860.  Perhaps a nickname for Louisa or Lovina, or perhaps Loring P. Moore (1839-1894)
  • Sarah A. Moore, inscribed at Manchester, New Hampshire, on June 19, 1860
  • Annie Nesmith, inscribed at Franklin, New Hampshire, in March 1860.  Schoolmate of Emily C. White at Franklin Academy.  Possibly the Annie Nesmith born July 24, 1841, daughter of George and Mary (Brooks) Nesmith 
  • Fanny H. Paine, inscribed at Eastport, Maine, on September 2, 1861; presumably after Emily's marriage to Samuel Deane Leavitt and move to Eastport from New Hampshire
  • C. M. Poor, inscribed at Londonderry, New Hampshire, on May 15, 1860.  Possibly Caroline M. (Chipman) Poor, wife of Perry Poor
  • Dora Thompson, inscribed at Franklin Academy, on April 2, 1860; presumably Aldorah J. Thompson, shown in the 1850 Census of Franklin, New Hampshire, as the daughter of Joseph and Sarah Thompson
  • Emily C. White of Londonderry, New Hampshire; album owner.  She was presented the album by her brother Henry Harrison White.
  • C. G. White, or C. C. White, or ?, inscribed at Londonderry, New Hampshire, on June 24, 1860.  Inscribed to "Sister Em".  Not sure if the inscriber was a sibling, a sibling-in-law, or if "Sister" was an honorific.