The Journals of Ashley Bowen (1728–1813) of Marblehead

Chapter XII

1773

THE year 1773 was by no means the first time the ravages of smallpox had manifested themselves in Marblehead, nor would it be the last, yet nine years had passed since the last epidemic of significance. In 1773, however, the infection not only carried off its numerous victims but also opened another running sore within the town’s social and political hierarchy. The smallpox only triggered the dissention which developed during the course of the “Smallpox War”; the major bone of contention became how best to deal with it. The result was a splintering of the town into virulent factions. It was to reach its climax during the early months of the following year.

From the start it was obvious that daily surveillance of the inhabitants by the Selectmen or by a Committee of Inspection could not effectually stop the spread of the disease. Infected areas might be fenced off or persons suspected of having contracted it could be removed to pesthouses well away from the populous sections, but adequate safeguards were difficult to administer. At best, such efforts simply prevented a blaze from developing into a holocaust.

If a fire gets out of hand in a forest, an effective means of dealing with it is to kindle a controlled firebreak to leeward. Inoculation, argued some of Marblehead’s more forward-thinking citizens, appeared to be the only solution to their present dilemma. To many others, inoculation loomed as a greater evil than the smallpox itself. The prejudices against it were deep. Jenner had yet to make his discovery that a vaccine from a cow could provide immunization; inoculation up to that time made use of cultures derived from human smallpox cases, and it was not unknown for other diseases to be transmitted at the same time.

In early August, a Town Meeting was called to consider a proposal to erect an inoculation hospital, at the public expense, on one of the islands in Salem Bay. It was rejected. Somewhat reluctantly, perhaps, the majority nonetheless agreed that should private persons wish to bear the expense the town would sanction the effort provided leave was obtained from the Town of Salem (under the jurisdiction of which the islands fell) and that the Marblehead Selectmen be given the authority to regulate the hospital for the maximum safety of the town.

The subject lay fallow for several weeks without gaining obvious support. Salem, when asked for an opinion, bucked the responsibility to the Provincial Government. On 27 August, a petition, representing the desirability of a hospital and signed by 373 inhabitants of the surrounding communities, including 167 Marblehead signatures, was sent to the Governor. Hutchinson’s reaction was favorable, but he believed the matter hinged on Salem’s approval. Salem therefore agreed, and on 2 September four Marblehead “Proprietors,” Azor Orne, Jonathan Glover, John Glover, and Elbridge Gerry purchased the body of Cat Island, located one mile outside the entrance to Marblehead Harbor, for £133.6.8, each paying an equal share.

The proprietors immediately ran into a wave of fear, apprehension, and jealousy. Their opponents impuned their motives and demanded another Town Meeting to reconsider the matter. There the town’s tenuous approval might have been rescinded had not one adjournment after another stalled the objections until the hospital had already been built.

Two principal buildings were raised on Cat Island, a small one on the northwest extremity and a three-story hospital on the southeastern half. The small, one-story structure contained two rooms, separated by a wall but connected by a door. The room facing the boat landing was the “clean room” where a fresh change of clothing (supplied by each patient upon admission to the island) was kept for use at the time of the owner’s discharge. The other was styled the “shifting room.” Here a patient leaving the hospital came to strip and be washed and fumigated; that being accomplished he or she entered the “clean room” to don the uncontaminated clothing to be worn ashore.

The hospital itself contained ten rooms in addition to a kitchen and accommodations for a steward, the physicians, nurses, and their attendants. Each of the ten rooms was furnished with four beds and other necessaries for the reception of eight patients. Dr. Hall Jackson of Portsmouth, New Hampshire, and Dr. Ananias Randall of Long Island were engaged by the proprietors as resident physicians.

The rules for the regulation of the hospital were strict. No boat other than the hospital vessels were permitted to approach the island. The boatman was to visit it each day to bring off supplies from the mainland, but he was not to pass a fence erected near the landing. Similarly, the persons on the island were not to approach either the landing or the “clean room.” No one was to be permitted on the island without a permit from the proprietors and only then in the hospital boat. The guards stationed on the island were not to allow anyone to land without the permit while no one was to be permitted to depart the island without a health clearance from the resident physicians and the usual shifting, washing, and cleansing. No person coming ashore at Marblehead from the hospital boat could disembark without the permission of the Selectmen.

Despite these sensible and stringent precautions there continued to be unfounded fears in Marblehead that the undertaking was unsafe, dangerous, unnatural, and that shipping coming in from sea would give Marblehead Harbor a very wide berth.

Patients, all volunteers, subscribed their names in a Hospital Book for admission in classes according to the order in which their names were signed. Residence in Marblehead was not a qualification. The cost to each for inoculation, board, lodging, and nursing care was the not-inconsiderable sum of £5.15, one indigent patient being accepted without fees for every ten who paid.

On 19 October the first class of volunteers were set on Cat Island and were immediately inoculated. As there was no danger of contagion for more than ten days thereafter, close relatives were allowed visits on the island until that time, after which no one was to be admitted. The second class was received at the hospital on 15 November, and it was ready to receive the third one month later.

Ashley Bowen’s comments are the only known source of information about the daily comings and goings from Cat Island. It is obvious from his caustic remarks that he was not the staunchest supporter of either inoculation or of the hospital, yet, unaccountably, he had been one of the signers of the petition sent to Governor Hutchinson in August. To him, apparently, many of his townsmen seemed to be playing at a military game like children with broomstick muskets.

The seeds of discord were sown in Marblehead during 1773. In 1774, with the destruction of the hospital boat, mob violence, and the burning of the hospital itself, the sore became an open wound.

[January 1773]

1 This day I attended Court. This day we of the first jury had a case, Captain Lombard and Brown, Brown plaintiff, Lombard defendant. We gave Brown thirty Pounds for his damage. This evening I came home.

2 This day I went to Salem again. Discharged before dinner and have £1.3.5 to pay.

3 This day some rain. I attended Church all day.

Monday, 4 This day employed on Colonel Lee, schooner Adventure, shrouds. Delivered some blocks to Captain Tarday. Raw cold. Employed Dennin half day.

5 This day employed on schooner Adventure main shrouds. Deliver 3 blocks to Mr. Hooper, Captain Tarday. Sailed Captain J. Northey [in the schooner Charming Sally for Lisbon] and Captain S[amuel] Gale [in the schooner Polly for the West Indies] and Captain J[oseph] Hibbert [in the schooner Yarmouth for the West Indies]. Employed Dennin a day. The whole of blocks for Mr. Hooper are 14.

6 This day employed on schooner Adventure shrouds. Employed Dennin a day. Sailed sloop Don Carlos, [William Tucker,] for West Indies.

7 This day much rain. Came back the Don Carlos. Finished all the schooner Adventure main shrouds and coiled them away. Employed Dennin a day.

8 This day employ a-tarring Captain Foster’s blocks. Employed Dennin ½ day.

9 This day do nothing at rigging. Settled with Mr. Dennin. Due to him £3.8.10 for the year 1772.

10 This [day] so poorly do not attend Church. I took a puke the last evening.

Monday, 11 This day delivered a suit of rigging for a schooner to Captain Joseph Skillings.

12 This day employed on schooner Adventure fore shrouds. Received a coil of spun yarn and a coil of wormline from the ropewalk for schooner Adventure. Dennin 2 hour.

13 This day smart cold. Do nothing at loft. Ordination of [at] the New Meeting House, Salem.1 This evening departed this life the wife of Captain Sam Hooper.

14 This day smart cold. Employed in loft the forenoon. Employed Dennin 3 hours. Came to see us our cousin Ichabod Bowen and Mr. Cales [Charles?] Farns. Wind northward. Much snow.

15 This day attended on my friends. Much snow on the ground. Do nothing at loft.

16 This day smart cold. All hand dined at Brother Martin’s. Fine times &c.

17 This day self attended Church. Our kinfolk attended Church this afternoon and wife half day. Sailed Captain Tarday for West Indies and A[lexander] Ross [in the schooner Betsey] for Philadelphia. Smart cold.

Monday, 18 This day smart cold. Do nothing at loft. Engaged a suit of rigging for Captain Russell and Hooper. The wife of Captain Samuel Hooper was buried and a sermon preached.

19 This day I arrived to my forty and five years of my age in a poor state of health. Smart cold. No rigging in hand. My son Ashley sick of the measles.

20 This day Brother Bowen and self set off with our kinsmen as far as Johnson’s at Lynn. Received three cords of wood from Colonel Lee, two for Dennin and one for self.

21 This day much snow. Arrived R[ichard] Stacey [in the schooner Rockingham] from Philadelphia and Sam Green [in the schooner Hitty] from the Mole [St. Nicholas] &c. Do nothing at loft. This evening departed this life Desire, the wife of Mr. H[enry] Sanders, innholder in this town. Self quite poorly. Son Ashley on the mend. The last night arrived [Amos] Granday in brig Wolfe from Europe [Cadiz].

22 This day fair weather, smart cold. Employed on Colonel Lee, schooner Adventure’s, shrouds. Employed Dennin 8 hours. Ashley much better; [he] sat up.

23 This day wife poorly. Employed at loft with Colonel Lee’s schooner Adventure shrouds. Employed Dennin 8 hours. This evening Mrs. Sanders was buried. This morning departed this life Rach[el] Proctor.

24 Wife quite ill, do not attend Church. Molly Ingalls came as nurse.

Monday, 25 This day employed in loft. Finished all schooner Adventure’s shrouds. Smart cold. Wife somewhat better. Ashley somewhat better. Dennin 8 hours.

26 This day do nothing at loft. Wife quite ill. Governor Proctor buried. No Dennin. Assisted Colonel Lee in slinging a pair of scales at his house.

27 This day employed on schooner Adventure’s b[owsprit] shrouds and ties &c. Received from the ropewalk a coil of shrouding, a jibstay and 5 coils of spun yarn, a coil of wormline for Captain John Russell and Robert Hooper Junior. This evening I attended Captain Jem Proctor wife Rachel’s funeral. Had a sermon, viz. St. John 7 chapter, 6 verse. Wife somewhat better. Employed Dennin 8 hour.

28 This day much snow and rain. Do nothing at loft. Wife quite ill. Our son Nathan sick of the measles. No Dennin. Wind SE.

29 This day smart cold. Wind westerly. Employed on schooner Adventure straps, and Hannah taken with the measles. Employ Dennin 8 hours.

30 This day smart cold. Do nothing at loft. Received half a cord of bark from Colonel Lee.

31 This day smart cold. Attended Church all day. Wife somewhat better.

[February 1773]

Monday, 1 This day received two coils of shrouding from Mr. Thomas Gerry and four coils of spun yarn and 1 of wormline and 39 yards of old canvas. Employed Dennin 6 hours. Son Nathan got up of the measles. Hannah quite ill. Wife somewhat better.

2 This day smart cold. Do nothing at loft. Wife somewhat better. Hannah quite ill. No Dennin.

3 This day smart cold. Do but little at loft. Employ William Mathews, Ambrose James’s [...] 3 hours.

4 This day employed on Mr. Thomas Gerry shrouds. Some rain. Employed Dennin and Will Mathews 8 hours each. My Hannah very poorly.

5 This day employed on Mr. Thomas Gerry shrouds. Employed Mr. Dennin and W. Mathews 10 hours each. Arrived brig Pitt Packet, [Nathaniel] Leech, from [St. Ubes].

6 This day employed on Mr. Gerry shrouds. Finished all the served shroud and coiled them away. Fixed 7 block for Colonel Lee, schooner Tryal, at 8d a block. Employ Dennin 8 hour. Employed Mathews 10 hours. Arrived John Hooper [in the schooner] Lynn [from Falmouth].

7 This day wind westerly. I attended Church all day. This morning departed this life P[rudence], Whitwell’s wife.

Monday, 8 This day smart cold. Employed on Mr. Thomas Gerry shrouds. Employed Dennin 3 hours, Will Mathews 7 hours, J. Franks 7 hours.

9 This day employed on T. Gerry shrouds. Completed all of them and coiled them away. Received 4 pair of shrouds from Mr. T. Pedrick. Employed Dennin, Mathews, and Franks 8 hours each.

10 This day employed on Captain Thomas Pedrick shrouds. Completed the fore pair. Delivered two pair to Richard Dixey. Employed Dennin and Mathews and Franks 10 hours each. Fixed a tie block for schooner Han[nah?]. Arrived Captain Richard Dolliber [in the schooner Molly from Mole St. Nicholas].

11 This day smart cold. Received 9 yards of canvas from Mr. Thomas Gerry schooner and 50 yards of parceling from Captain Russell and Hooper. Received some straps from Mr. Swett’s for a burton for brig Amherst. Employ Mathews 3 hours and Franks 4. No Dennin.

12 This day employed on Captain Russell shrouds. Fixed two pair of them. Employed Mathews, Dennin, and Franks 8 hours each. Received a pattern of an ensign and burgee from Colonel Lee, schooner Tryal. Received all the remainder of schooner Adventure blocks.

13 This day employed on Captain Russell’s shrouds. Strapped 3 blocks for brig Amherst, Bartlett. Served two ties and spans, one for schooner Hawk and one for Success with blocks for jeer falls. Employed Dennin and Franks 9 hours each. Delivered an ensign and burgee to schooner Tryal, Small Ropes.

Monday, 15 This day delivered a fore tie to schooner Seaflower and jibstay to schooner Abigail. Received a pattern of two pair shrouds from Colonel Lee’s for schooner Polly. Condemned two pair of old shrouds for Polly. Received an old pair to refit. Employed Jo Franks 9 hour and Dennin 4. Received ¾ hogshead sugar from Robert Hooper, Junior. Received some tar from Robert Hooper Esq. At 11 o’clock died James Prince.

16 This day employed on schooner Polly shroud. Completed three pair of main shroud, 2 new 1 old. Employed Dennin and Franks 10 hours each. Received a p[attern] of an ensign for Captain Joseph Skillings [...].

17 This day fixed a pair of shroud for Colonel Lee, schooner Betsey. Delivered 3 pair of shroud to Colonel Lee, schooner Polly, and two ties to schooner Joseph and two strap for mainsheets and 1 for foresheet for Joseph. Employ Dennin and Jo Franks 10 hours each. This evening I attend Mr. John Prince son Jamie funeral.

18 This day received 42 yards of white bunting and 18 of red and 15½ blue for schooner Adventure. Delivered a pair of shrouds to schooner Betsey and a strap. Received and fixed a pair of bowsprit shroud for Polly. Received a jibstay from Mr. John Griste. Received a pattern of an ensign for schooner Joseph and burgee. Employed Dennin and Franks 8 hours each. Sailed Small Ropes.

19 This day smart [cold]. Do but little at [loft]. Received some cordage from Colonel Lee, Hawk and Success. Employ Dennin 4 hour. Franks a-moving. Cold.

20 This day smart cold. Sailed many of our fishermen. Employed on schooner Hawk’s topsail gear and schooner Success topsail gear. Received a pattern of two pair of shrouds and jibstay from Colonel Lee for Captain John Pearce. Employed Dennin and Frank 8 hours.

21 Smart cold. Arrived Will Blackler [in the schooner Neptune from Barbados and] from St. Martins.

Monday, 22 This day so cold could not work. Delivered an ensign and burgee to Colonel Lee, schooner Joseph.

23 This day so cold could not work. The harbor froze over as low as the fort.

24 This day smart cold.2 Do some at loft. Finished all the topsail gear for Colonel Lee’s two schooners, viz. Hawk and Success. Finished a jibstay for Mr. John Griste. Employed Dennin 4 hours, Franks five hours.

25 This day somewhat warmer. Fixed two single shrouds and one pair of shrouds for Captain John Pearce and boom pennant for Colonel Lee, schooner Vulcan, which was charge to schooner Betsey. Employ Dennin and Franks 8 hours each. This evening I saw Nancy Laws marry to Timothy Courtis.

26 This day fine and pleasant. Received a coil of four-inch cordage from Mr. Thomas Gerry and the smaller cordage for straps. Delivered a jibstay to Mr. Griste’s people and boom pendent to Colonel Lee, schooner Vulcan. Employed Dennin 9 hour and Franks 10. Received 5 large thimble from E. Graves for Russell and Hooper.

27 This day employed on Mr. Thomas Gerry’s straps. Note: I took a coil of Captain Russell two-yarn spun yarn for Mr. Gerry £0.2.2. Employed Dennin and Franks 10 hours each. Much rain. This evening was drowned John Moore and George Robertson.

28 This day fine and warm day.

[March 1773]

Monday, 1 This day some snow. Fixed a jibstay for Captain Russell and Hooper schooner. Delivered John Spinney his maintopsail block &c. Employed Dennin and Franks 8 hours each. This evening John Moore [and] Robertson were both put in one grave. Arrived Ben Boden [in the schooner Betsey from Falmouth] from sea. This night Sister Martin delivered of a son, [he] weighed 15¼.

2 This day employed on Captain Russell and Hooper’s rigging. Received a coil of shrouding from Captain Russell for schooner. Received a small coil of wormline for Russell and Hooper. Deliver schooner Hawk’s topsail gear and a foresheet block strapped for Colonel Lee, schooner Polly. Deliver 1 set of block strapped for runner and tackles, Captain Pearce. Employed Dennin and Frank 9 hours each.

3 This day employed on Russell’s shroud. Finished fixing all. Received a coil of wormline from the [rope]walk for Russell. The painter painting the Adventure’s blocks. Sail a number of our fishermen. Received a pattern of an ensign from Colonel Lee for schooner Polly. Employed Dennin and Franks 9 hours each. Fine weather for rigging.

4 This day smart cold. Do nothing at loft. Arrived schooner Woodbridge, [Slyfield, from Virginia]. Much snow.

5 This day smart cold. Do nothing at loft. Arrived brig Patty, [Jeremiah Ballister, from Cadiz]. Delivered a Jack mended to Captain Gerry 8 to a [...].

6 This day finished all Russell’s and Hooper’s shrouds and coiled them away. Received a coil from Captain Russell store for tie and bowsprit shroud for schooner and fixed them. Delivered an ensign to Colonel Lee, schooner Polly. Employed Dennin and Frank 8 hours each.

7 This day I attended Church all day. Note: Brother Martin son, Ambrose, was christened. Some rain. Came from Newbury Captain Skillings’s new schooner, Richard Horton.

Monday, 8 This day employed on R[obert] H[ooper’s] straps. Delivered a pair of 2 single shrouds and jibstay to Captain John Pearce. Received some blocks from Mr. John Clark for Russell and Hooper. Received bunting for a pair of an ensign and burgee for Mr. Hooper, schooner Ann, and 10 yards of bunting from Robert Hooper Junior for his fishing schooner. Employed Dennin 9 hours. No Franks. This evening the remains of Mr. Bacon was buried who had been blind a number of years. This day wife mended a flag for Mr. Sam White, s[hillings] 1.4., First Attempt.

9 This day received all Mr. Gerry blocks from Mr. John Clark’s. Delivered a small Jack to Robert Hooper Junior. Delivered two single served shrouds and a strap to Captain John Pearce. Received some small cordage from Captain John Russell. Employed Dennin 8 hour.

10 This day do nothing at loft. Gave a memorandum for sloop Sarah rigging. Delivered an ensign and burgee to Mr. Hooper, schooner Ann.

11 This day employed on serving straps for Russell and Hooper and finished a forestay for sloop Sarah. Smart cold. Employed Dennin 9 hour.

12 This day so cold could do nothing at loft.

13 This day employed on brig Patty’s backstay. Smart cold. Employed Dennin 8 hours.

14 This day Mr. Nichols preached at Church. Arrived ship Guardoqui.

Monday, 15 This day employed on Mr. Gerry blocks. Came from Nantasket brig Union, [Edward Hales,] who had 119 day passage from Swansea in Wales. Employed Dennin 7 hours.

16 This day employed on Russell and Hooper straps. Fixed a fish pennant and two shiftlines[?] pennants for schooner Adventure. Delivered a suit of color to store for schooner Adventure, a St. George ensign. Employed Dennin 7 hours. Received a pattern of an ensign from Colonel Lee, Captain Pearce. Arrived [schooner] Broad Bay, John Lee, [from Cadiz].

17 This day received 40 yards of parcel[ing] from Captain Courtis for sloop Sarah. Cleared loft first part [of the day]. Some rain. Later fair. No Dennin.

18 This day employed on a square sail horse for schooner Adventure. Received a shroud hawser and jibstay, a small coil of 4-inch, 3 coil of spun yarn, 1 of wormline from Mr. Hooper’s for Colonel Lee, sloop Sarah. Employ Dennin 8 hour.

19 This day employed on sloop Sarah’s shroud and strapped some blocks for Robert Hooper, Junior. Raw cold. Delivered an ensign to Captain John Pearce. Employed Dennin 9 hours.

20 This day employed on sloop Sarah shrouds. Strapped 6 blocks for Captain Foster and company for [...] &c. Note: I am to find tallow for sloop Sarah. Employ Dennin 8 hours.

21 This day I attended Church all day self and wife half day. Wind easterly. Arrived Captain Coombs [in the schooner Dolphin] from Virginia.

Monday, 22 This day much snow. Do nothing at loft. Annual meeting. Arrived Will Andrews [in the schooner Hawk from Dominica, St. Eustatius, and St. Martins] from West Indies.

23 This day employed on sloop. Received a pair of a pair of main-topmast backstays for brig Patty. Employ Dennin 9 hours. Fine and warm.

24 This day employed on brig Patty backstays and delivered them for main-topmast strapped some blocks for schooner, Hooper and Russell. Received a pattern Patty’s colors to mend. Employed Dennin 8 hours. This evening received a pair of a small ensign from Captain Foster for W. Main schooner and flag.

25 This day a smart gale of wind at NE. Much rain. Received 4 bushel of corn from Captain Coombs. Employed Dennin 4 hours on sloop Sarah’s rig.

26 This day so cold do nothing at loft. Delivered brig Patty’s color mended, viz. Jack 2/8, ensign 2/6, pendent 8, top armors 4d. Received a piece of red bunting from Mr. Hooper for Foster and company.

27 This day raw cold. Do nothing at loft.

28 This day self attended Church all day, wife half day. Brother Bowen the 2d Sunday for the winter.

Monday, 29 This day delivered an ensign and flag to Captain Foster for Will Main, ensign 3/4, flag 1/4. Employed serving straps. Employed Dennin 10 hours. Received 10 yards of white and 1 of blue bunting from Captain Foster for Hooper and company. Fixed a large block for sloop Ashley.

30 This day delivered schooner Adventure rigging to Arnold Martin, sloop Ashley. Seized sloop Sarah shroud and coiled them with stays in the Adventure berth. Employed Dennin a day, or 12 [hours].

31 This day employed on sloop Sarah ties and horses straps and employed Dennin a day. Received the hook and thimbles from Mr. Foster’s for sloop Sarah.

[April 1773]

1 This day employed on sloop Sarah’s straps. Employed Dennin 8 hours. Arrived D[avid] Lee, b[rig Young] Phoenix, [from Lastas].

2 This day much rain. Do nothing at loft. Arrived Thomas Collyer [in the brig Lydia from Lisbon] from Europe. Received a pattern of a ensign from Mr. Sam Gerry for his father [’s] schooner and an ensign for Thomas Gerry, Junior. Delivered an ensign and flag and burgee to Captain Foster for Hooper’s and selfs great schooner. No Dennin.

3 This day do nothing at loft but received a jibstay from Thomas Gerry, Junior for his schooner. Dennin absent.

4 This day came two first fare men, one well fished and one with the loss of two of her hands.

Monday, 5 This day fixed a jib forestay, T[homas] G[erry]. Dennin absent. Sail brig Patty, Jeremiah Ballister, for Maryland and schooner [Sally], Peter Faneuil Jones, for Europe [Cadiz].

6 This day employed on Russell and Hooper block. Completed the whole for three sails. Received 25 yards of parceling from Will Courtis for brig [Young] Phoenix. Employed Dennin a day. Received a small coil of wormline.

7 This day received a shroud hawser from Colonel Lee’s store for brig [Young] Phoenix and coil of spun yarn for [Young] Phoenix. Deliver a suit of rigging to Mr. Thomas Gerry, Junior, Captain Alexander Ross, with 44 blocks. Received 7½ yards of red bunting from Mr. Elbridge Gerry for Mr. Thomas Gerry. Ditto deliver an ensign to Mr. Brull for Mr. Gerry. Note: I sent the [ ] for straps blocks wanting hooks at [ ]. Employ Dennin a day.

8 This day employ on brig [Young] Phoenix shrouds. Finished the whole except seizing them. Employed Dennin a day.

9 This day is Good Friday. I attend Church the forenoon. Very warm for the season.

10 This day finished seizing brig [Young] Phoenix shrouds. Dennin absent. Joseph Wiggin’s wife buried.

11 This day is Easter Sunday. Some rain.

Monday, 12 This day employed Dennin a day. Note: I have engaged to fix the old Africa’s rigging by the day and to be accountable for Dennin’s time. Arrived Captain [Michael] Whittrong [in the schooner Nancy]. Arrived Northey [in the schooner Charming Sally] from Falmouth. Sail [schooner] Broad Bay, [John] Lee, [for Mole St. Nicholas].

13 This day employed on Africa rigging, self, Dennin, and Mr. Davis a day each. Arrived H[ugh] Hill from London in brig [General] Wolfe.

14 This day employed on brig Africa shrouds. Received a forestay new and a pattern of two pair of fore shrouds from the ropewalk for Africa. Arrived schooner Tryal, Small Ropes, from the Banks. Employed Dennin a day. Wind easterly. This a[fter]noon the remains of Governor Proctor widow was buried.

15 This day a yearly FAST. My Ashley and Hannah both were catechized [and] received a book apiece.

16 This day employed on brig Africa rigging. Dennin and self a day each. Came in a number of fishermen.

17 This day employed on Africa’s rigging. Received bunting for schooner that was Joseph Picket’s. Employed Dennin a day.

18 This day I attended Church all day. Wind easterly. Our fishermen daily coming in.

Monday, 19 This day employed on brig Africa rigging by the day. Employed Dennin a day.

20 This day employed on brig Africa rigging. Delivered an ensign and signal flag to Captain John Glover, John Gale. Employed Dennin a day. Sailed R[ichard] Dolliber [in the schooner Molly for the West Indies].

21 This day employed on brig Africa rigging. Employed Dennin a day.

22 This day employed on brig Africa rigging. Employed Dennin a day. Self half a day. This afternoon I assisted on board Captain Coombs’s schooner about rigging her mastheads.

23 This day employed on brig Africa rigging. Delivered an ensign, Jack, burgee, and bag to Colonel Lee, Jo Pie Bruse[sic]. This day delivered a suit of rigging to Captain Israel Foster for a large schooner for Benjamin Boden with 44 blocks and a suit of rigging to Captain John Russell and Mr. Rob Hooper, Junior for another schooner with 44 blocks, John Martin, coaster.

24 This day employed on brig Africa rigging. Employed Dennin a day. Wind easterly. Rain. Delivered an ensign to Sam Gerry. Received a Jack for Colonel Lee, Small Ropes.

25 This day I attended Church all day. Wind easterly. Some rain. Came in a ship from Cadiz consigned to Sam White Esq.

Monday, 26 This day employed Dennin a day on brig Africa’s rigging and completed our working.

27 This day employed on sloop Sarah rigging. Fixed a set of top[sail] gear for schooner Tryal, John Willis. Employed Dennin a day.

28 This day employed on sloop Sarah’s rigging. Fixed a mouse on a jibstay for Captain Coombs. Deliver a new Jack and burgee mended to Colonel Lee, schooner Tryal. Received a large ensign from Hooper and Russell to make an ensign for their new schooners. Received a pattern of a burgee for schooner Vulcan. Employed Dennin a day.

29 This day delivered a suit of rigging to Captain Coles for sloop Sarah and a burgee for schooner Vulcan with a Union in the head. Employed Dennin ½ day.

30 This day no rigging in hand. No Dennin.

[May 1773]

1 This day no rigging in hand. Sailed John Hooper in schooner Lynn for Europe and a number of fishermen. Delivered a burgee to [...].

2 This morning arrived schooner Adventure, [John] Tittle, from Boston, new, and [Stephen] Blaney [in the schooner Polly] from Lematt. This evening arrived Captain A[lexander] Ross in schooner [of] T[homas?] G[erry?] from Newbury[?], new.

Monday, 3 This day no rigging in hand. Employed on board Captain Coombs’s schooner 3 hour at 6 per hour.

4 This day no rigging in hand.

5 This day no rigging in hand.

6 This day fixed three blocks for Captain Higgins for runner and tackles. Received a coil of cordage for brig [Young] Phoenix’s backstay. Gave a memorandum for a suit of cordage for a sloop’s standing rigging for M. Wells and company. Received 50 yards of parceling from Captain Courtis for Messrs. Wells and company.

7 This day employed on brig [Young] Phoenix’s back[stay]. Received a coil of shrouding, 4 coils of spun yarn, two of wormline for sloop, Wells and company. Employ Dennin a day. Received a pattern of a St. George Jack for sloop, Wells, and pattern of a St. George pennant for Adventure.

8 This day employed on sloop, Wells, shrouds. Delivered two pair of backstay to [Young] Phoenix. Sailed [George] Rapell, schooner Britannia, [for Lisbon]. Employed Dennin.

9 This day attended Church all day.

Monday, 10 This day employed on sloop, Wells, rigging. Received a jibstay and coil of 4-inch and four stay, all for sloop, Wells. Finish seiz[ing] all her shrouds and bowsprit shrouds and 1 tie for sloop. Employed Dennin a day.

11 This day employed on sloop, Wells, &c. Completed all her standing rigging. Received a pattern of an Irish ensign from Colonel Lee for schooner Adventure. Employed Dennin a day.

12 This day received a shroud hawser and a jibstay, a coil of 4-inch, 4 coils of spun yarn, and 1 of wormline from the ropewalk for Colonel Gallison and an old stay for a forestay. Employ Dennin a day.

13 This day employed on Colonel Gallison sloop shrouds. Delivered an Irish flag to Colonel Lee, schooner Adventure, and white pendent. Sailed Captain [William] Sinclair [in the schooner Betsey] for Barbados. Dennin absent. Received a pattern of a burgee from Colonel Lee for [Young] Phoenix.

14 This day much rain. Employed on Colonel Gallison shrouds. Delivered a set of standing rigging to Captain [ ], Wells, and a Jack and pendent to Wells. Received a half barrel of flour from T[homa]s G[erry]. Received 40 yards of bunting from Mr. Elb[ridge] Gerry to pay Captain Russell and Hooper for their ensign lent. Employ Dennin a day. Arrived snow Champion.

15 This day employed on Colonel Gallison’s sloop’s rigging. Received two pair of shrouds from Mr. Swett’s for Captain Felton and spun yarn. Delivered a burgee to brig [Young] Phoenix. Employed Dennin a day.

16 Fine and warm day.

Monday, 17 This day employed on sloop of Colonel Gallison. Finished all his shrouds and two pair for Captain Felton. Employed Dennin a day.

18 This day employed on Colonel Gallison’s rigging. Received 3 pair of old shroud from Colonel Gallison to refit. Delivered 2 pair of shroud to Captain Felton. Dennin half a day. Made a burgee for schooner Absalom.

19 This day employed on Colonel Gallison rigging. Employed Dennin half a day.

20 This day employed on Colonel Gallison’s rigging. Employed Dennin a day.

21 This day employ on Colonel Gallison’s rigging. Received a number of blocks from Mr. John Clark for Colonel Gallison. Employed Dennin a day.

22 This day employed on Colonel Gallison block. Delivered 3 straps to Mr. Thomas Stephens of Colonel Lee at 4 pence apiece for fixing. Employed Dennin a day.

23 This day I attended Church all day.

Monday, 24 This day employed on Colonel Gallison’s blocks. Employed Dennin a day. Deliver a Irish flag [to] Adventure.

25 This day employed on Colonel Gallison’s blocks. Got turpentine and payed the most of them. Employed Dennin a day. Much hail.

26 This day GRAND ELECTION. Some rain.

27 This day sailed brig Young Phoenix, D[avid] Lee, [for Barcelona]. No rigging in hand. Enlarged an ensign for Captain John Glover.

28 This day no rigging in hand.

29 This day no rigging in hand. Received a bushel of potatoes from Captain Higgins.

30 This day attend Church all day.

Monday, 31 This day do but little at loft.

On Small Pox

1

A sore distemper is crept in

It seized on all both old and young

But by what means I cannot tell

And very fatal proves to some.

2

In Scripture we may plainly see

And read such words as these

Can evil in the city be

Except the Lord be pleased.

3

Short-sighted creatures as we are

Could not our danger see

Tho often-times distressed with fear

What this disease should be.

4

Surely the hand of Providence

Over us did bear a sway

Tho we so much distressed with fear

Must fall an easy prey.

5

The 24 day of July

We were all fenced around

Before the 17 of August came

Eight bodies are lain in the ground.

6

How do you think dear friends

What we must feel within

To see so many carried out

That had our neighbors been.

7

Not only neighbors unto some

But their dear friends likewise

Which makes our very hearts relent

And draws tears from our eyes.

8

Let’s not impute it all to chance

Nor merely second cause

But let us view the hand of God

As what we do deserve.

9

[   ]

A memorandum of the smallpox from the first discovery at Marblehead, 1773.3 About the first of June, Captain John Wooldredge in his schooner returned from a cruise on the Banks. It happened that while out that Mr. Wooldredge and Mr. William Mathews, one of the crew, went on board a French ship, as tis common for our fishermen to do and that Mathews brought with him a piece of Castile soap, and he saith nothing else from the French. But the day fortnight after Mathews’s wife had washed his sea-clothes she broke out and swelled to a great degree. Doctor Joseph Lines was sent for, and all hands said Mrs. Mathews was poisoned, and Mary Ingalls attended said Mathews while sick.

It is to be understood that this Mrs. Sarah Mathews was daughter to Mrs. Sarah Shaw, widow, sister to Mr. Ebenezer Stacey, deceased, and I married James Shaw’s widow, [he being a] son[-in-law] to said Sarah Shaw and that Mary Ingalls was [another] daughter to Mrs. Shaw.

About the 20 of June 1773 my wife went to see Sarah Mathews, and her sister came here to see her, and I sent for wife directly. And when she returned she told me that Mrs. Mathews was so much poisoned that her head was like to bust open. I asked what they did for her. She told me that Mol Ingalls did wash her with salt water and the liquor of elder and that Joseph Lines attend[ed] her. It happened about this time a girl, daughter to Mr. Isaac Williams, was broke out with poison to a very great degree and got well of it.

As this Sarah Mathews had a daughter named Sarah Hindley, and of course assisted in nursing her mother, catched the said poison, and [so] Mol Ingalls [and] some of the neighbors washed her with salt water and liquor of elder as all the neighbors all round took their turns to watching as in any other sickness. And on Thursday, July 15, 1773 my wife went to see her relative, and when she returned told me that Sarah Hindley was full as bad poisoned as her mother had been before and further said that if she had been acquainted with smallpox she would be sure that they had it.

However, all matters were overlook[ed], viz. respect[ing] of their having the smallpox, although John Melzard swore to it that it was the smallpox [...] and about the 20 of July Mother Shaw was taken herself and Mol Ingalls spared no pains for to get assistance to her mother, and tis supposed that nearly an hundred or more of Mother Shaw’s relations and friends frequented the house all the time from her first complaint. Mol would have it that her mother was struck with old age, she being 79 year. My wife was sent for to see her mother before she died.

On Thursday, July 22, 1773, this morning my wife went to see her Mother Shaw before breakfast. I coming home, she told me that her mother was a-dying with old age. I being very busy at my loft give no great attention; however, this evening I came home [and] I found my wife abed. I inquired the reason [and] found her to be ill of a fever. My sisters came and pound up her head and made her some tea of balm. I sat up with her the fore part of the night. Latter part, she seemed somewhat better. Friday, her sister came to attend her whom had had the smallpox and tarried till the evening. Then she returned home. I sent for a watcher, but the next news it was said to be the smallpox and that five or six was complaining of it at Mother Shaw’s, so could get nobody to watch.4

[June 1773]

1 This day some rain. No rigging in hand. This evening my honored father came from the country.

2 This day employed on Mr. Thomas Gerry’s topmast shrouds. Arrived brig Nancy, [Thomas] Power, from Lematt. Employed Dennin 9 hours. Payed all the blocks.

3 This day received a small coil of shroud from the [rope] walk for Captain Jonathan Glover’s schooner Tabitha. Employed on serving shroud. Employ Dennin a day, 9 hour. Sail Leech.

4 This day delivered two pair of shrouds and two pennants for mastheads to Thomas Brimblecome for Captain Jonathan Glover, schooner Tabitha. Yesterday sailed the ship for Portsmouth and brig Pitt Packet, [Nathaniel] Leech, for Europe. This day came from Newbury brig n[ew Young] Africa, [William] Coles. Employed Dennin 4 hours.

5 This day no rigging in hand. Delivered an ensign and pendent to Captain Coles, brig n[ew Young] Africa.

6 This day sailed John Adams in schooner John [for Lisbon] and Sam Green in schooner Hitty [for the West Indies].

Monday, 7 This day no rigging in hand.

8 This day delivered a suit of rigging to Colonel Gallison for a sloop. Received two small coils from the [rope]walk for Captain Gerry, brig Union’s main-topmast shroud and backstays, and a coil of spun yarn. Employed Dennin 9 hours. Delivered a Jack and white flag and pendent [and] 2 vanes to brig new [Young] Africa. Jack 2s. White flag 8d. Sailed new [Young] Africa for Maryland. Arrived Pearce [in the schooner(?) Ranger from Maryland].

9 This day finished and delivered 3 pair of topmast shrouds [and] one pair of backstays to Mr. Fraser, mate of the Union, and a remnant of backstay. Employed on brig Heart of Oak’s fore-topmast gear. Note: the cordage came from Mr. Tedder for brig Heart of Oak. Employed Dennin a day.

10 This day employed on brig H[eart of] O[ak] rigging. Received 21½ yard of canvas from Captain J. Proctor for brig. Employed Dennin 9 hours.

11 This day no rigging in hand. Received a ball of wormline from Mr. Tedder for b[rig] Heart of Oak. Smart cold for the season. No Dennin.

12 This day do nothing at loft. Sailed schooner Nancy, [Michael] Whittrong, for Barbados. No Dennin.

13 Attended Church all day. D[eacon?] Whitaker at New Meeting House.

Monday, 14 This day I finished brig Heart [of] Oak’s forestay. No Dennin.

15 This day do nothing to signify. Finished brig Heart of Oak’s futtock shrouds.

16 This day no rigging in hand.

17 This day no rigging in hand. Made a burgee for brig Union, David Ross. This evening a boat belonging to Salem oversat and 7 women drownded and three men drownded, one man and a boy saved, 5 women pregnant.5 Came from Newbury the schooner [of] Benjamin Boden.

18 This day no rigging in hand. This afternoon I went and assisted in getting the Custom House boat up and found 6 women drownded in the cuddy, but no men.6

19 This day no rigging in hand. Warm weather. Sailed schooner Adventure, John Tittle, for Europe [Alicante].

20 This day some showers. Self attended Church all day, wife half day. Ben Bowen published to Martha Florence. Samuel [Russell] Gerry published to Hannah Glover, daughter to Captain Jonathan Glover.

Monday, 21 This day received some cordage from Captain Foster for Captain Bowen straps.

22 This day no rigging in hand.

23 This day employed on B[en] B[oden] strap.

24 This day employed on B[en] B[oden’s] fore shrouds. Employed Dennin half a day. Delivered a St. Andrew’s burgee to Captain Alexander Ross.

25 This day employed on B[en] B[oden’s] block. Employed Dennin half a day. Arrived a tender at the bottom of the harbor, brig Gaspé, Hunter.7

26 This day do nothing a[t] loft. I saw Captain Hunter in brig Gaspé.

27 This day attended Church all day. Wife at her Meeting [House] half day.

Monday, 28 This day no rigging in hand. Warm. Sailed brig Gaspé, Captain Hunter.

29 This day received a coil of shrouding from the ropewalk for Captain Gerry, George Clark. Employed Dennin a day. Finish two pair shroud for mainmast [...].

30 This day employed cutting and tarring parceling for Colonel Lee, Jo Picket’s house. Employed Dennin a day. Arrived a large ship [Mermaid, Captain Yowart] from Cadiz.

[July 1773]

1 This day fixed two pair of shroud for Captain Gerry, George Clark. Deliver an ensign and flag to R[obert] H[ooper] and employed Dennin a day.

2 This day employed on cutting and tarring [parceling?] for schooner Pelican. Employ Dennin a day.

3 This day received a coil of shroud from the ropewalk for Colonel Lee, schooner Pelican. Sailed schooner Nancy, Ben Boden, for Europe [Bilbao] and ship [Mermaid] for Baltimore. Note: I have delivered 4 pair of shroud to Captain Gerry, George Clark, in the whole. Employ Dennin ½ day.

4 This day I attended Church all day.

Monday, 5 This day employed on schooner Pelican’s shrouds. Received a suit of rigging from Mr. John Calley and John Rich. Employed Dennin a day.

6 This day delivered two pair of shrouds to Colonel Lee, schooner Betsey. Employed Dennin a day. Delivered fifty yards of canvas cut and tarred for Colonel Lee’s new house by J. Picket’s.

7 This day employed on schooner Pelican rigging. Received a number of blocks from J. Clark’s for Russell and Hooper for topsail gear. Employ Dennin.

8 This day employed on schooner Pelican rigging. Received a pattern of two pair of shrouds from the [rope]walk for R[obert] H[ooper] Esq., schooner Frances, and a pair of shrouds and coil of spun yarn from Tedder for schooner Barberry Bush and a coil of laniards for H[ooper] & Russ[ell], schooner William. Employed Dennin.

9 This day employed on schooner Pelican rigging. Delivered Pelican fore rigging to mate. Employed Dennin and King Farrow a day each. Received a memorandum for a large sloop, [to be] done in a month.

10 This day employed on schooner Eagle shrouds. Delivered schooner Pelican’s main shrouds. Employed Dennin a day. A smart shower with thunder and lightning.

11 This day I attended Church all day. Very hot weather. Missed mug from loft; found ditto at home.

Monday, 12 This day employed on schooner Eagle’s shrouds. Delivered her fore rigging. Employed Dennin and Farrow a day each.

13 This day employed on schooner Pelican blocks. Delivered most of them with four ties. Received brig Barberry Bush shrouds to refit. Employed Dennin [and] Farrow a day.

14 This day delivered Captain Lewis a number of blocks for topsail gears. Employed on Captain Pote’s main shrouds. Received bunting for a suit of colors from Colonel Lee for schooner Pelican. Received two pair of shrouds from Colonel Lee for John Lee, Esq. Employed Dennin and King Farrow a day each. Delivered schooner Eagle’s main shrouds.

15 This day employed on Captain Pote’s shrouds. Delivered two pair of shrouds to John Lee, Esq., schooner, Lacey[?]. Employed on schooner Frances fore rigging. Employed Dennin and Farrow a day.

16 This day employed some on brig Barberry Bush’s rigging and some on schooner Frances. Delivered brig Bar[berry Bush’s] main rigging and fore rigging to schooner Frances. Employed Dennin and Farrow a day. Sailed R[ichard] Stacey [in the schooner Rockingham for Bilbao].

17 This day employed on brig B[arberry] B[ush’s] fore shrouds and schooner Frances main shrouds. Fixed a boom pennant for Colonel Lee, schooner Eagle. Delivered a long strap to Captain Pote for mainstay. Finished all the B[arberry] B[ush’s] fore rigging and schooner Frances main rigging. Sailed Captain B[enjamin] Calley [in the schooner Molly for Bilbao]. Employed Dennin and King Farrow a day.

18 This day I attended Church all day, wife half day. William Courtis [...] 33 [...] £20.

Monday, 19 This day delivered Captain Pote’s fore rig to himself and schooner Frances main rigging to R. Cowell. Employed on Mr. John Calley shrouds. Delivered a boom pendent to Colonel Lee, schooner Eagle, and Jack, ensign, and burgee and bag to Colonel Lee, schooner Pelican. Received a pattern of a boom pendent from Colonel Lee for schooner Bartor and a coil of spun yarn for Bartor. Received a coil of 4-inch from the ropewalk for schooner, Sproul. Employed Dennin and King a day each.

20 This day employed on Mr. Calley’s shrouds. Delivered a boom pennant and two ties, tie block and spans to Colonel Lee, schooner Bartor. Delivered Captain Pote 0.1:3 pounds of cordage of Mr. Hooper’s remnant. Finished Pote’s fore tie. Received two pair of shrouds from schooner Darby to refit. Employed D[ennin] for a day. Some rain.

21 This day finished schooner Darby’s main shrouds. Employed serving straps for schooner and sloops. Received bunting for a Jack and burgee for schooner Darby. Employ Dennin a day, King Farrow half day.

22 This day employed on straps for sloop, Calley and Rich, and schooner, Sproul. Delivered a boom pennant to Colonel Lee, schooner Abigail. Employed John Rimshire half day. Sailed [schooner Sally], Alexander Ross, for Europe [Bilbao]. This morning my wife went to see her Mother Shaw before breakfast. I coming home she told me that her mother was a-dying with old age. I being very busy at my loft gave no great attention; however, this evening I came home [and] found my wife abed. I inquired the reason [and] found her to be ill of a fever. My sisters came and pound up her head and made her some tea of balm. I sat up with her the fore part of the night. Latter part, she seemed somewhat better.

23 This day employed on schooner, Sproul, shrouds. Delivered a burgee and Jack and ensign mended to schooner Darby and [a] vane. Served two ties to for schooner Darby. Wife quite ill. Her sister came to attend her whom had had the smallpox and tarried till the evening. Then she returned home. I sent for a watcher, but the next news it was said to be the smallpox and that five or six was complaining of it at Mother Shaw’s, so could get nobody to watch. [Delivered] boom pennant to Captain Lewis, schooner William. Employed Dennin and John Rimshire a day each.

24 Employed on schooner, Sproul’s shroud. This day I have the misfortune to find my wife to have the smallpox. This morning I was satisfied that my wife had the smallpox and her sister came again. This afternoon I removed her to her Mother Shaw’s. At 9 o’clock in morning I went and acquainted the Selectmen and the whole town was in an uproar about smallpox, and I went and saw Sarah Mathews and her daughter who had both had the smallpox. There was a fence directed both ways [across] the road, and at 3 o’clock afternoon I removed my wife to her Mother Shaw’s where she caught the pox for some of them to attend her, but Mol [Ingalls] was very hard to be persuaded that it was the smallpox although so many was ill with it. Mrs. Mary Bowen removed. Sarah Gould, Sarah Reith Rogers, Ann Rogers widow, Mercy [or Mary] Brinto[?], Mrs. Chambers, [and] Mrs. Dodd all have taken smallpox at the same time and many more are much suspected to have it.8 Delivered Captain Pote fore-topmast rigging to himself. Employed Dennin [and] Rimshire a day.

25 This day wife quite ill of smallpox. Did not attend Church. Attend at the fence for wife. This day I attended the fence at Captain William Courtis’s warehouse. Note: the women that were now complaining are Mrs. Sarah Gould, wife of Mr. Thomas Gould; Sarah Reith [Rogers]; widow Ann Rogers; Mrs. Clark, widow; Mercy [or Mary] Brette[?]; Mrs. Chambers; and Mary Dodd, wife of Mr. Thomas Dodd; and Elish[a] Rogers all are supposed to have taken the smallpox at one time. Many more suspected. Note: Mr. Thomas Gould supposed he hath had the smallpox before [so] attended the house withinside the fence. And Mr. Thomas Dodd was so indifferent about the matter that he stayed and attended with Gould. Mother Shaw quite ill.

Monday, 26 This day so busy about wife could do nothing at rigging. I attended the Town Meeting.9 Arrived [William] Sinclair [in the schooner Betsey] from Barbados.

27 This day do nothing at loft. Received schooner Manchester’s colors to mend. Wife ill of the smallpox. Dennin employed at Ferry.

28 This day smallpox day. At 5 o’clock this morning departed this life Mother Shaw with the smallPOX and was buried this forenoon over to the Neck just above Blackjack’s Cove and in that plain. Some people moved to Ferry. Deliver ensign and burgee to schooner Manchester.

29 This day stagnated with the smallpox. Wife’s pock not turned [so] like to do well. Children well.

30 This day do nothing at the loft. I supposed my Nathan to have taken the smallpox. I am confined at home. Delivered a Jack mended and blue flag mend[ed] to Mr. Hooper, schooner Frances.

31 This day I was confined at home with my son Nathan. At 10 o’clock before noon came Doctor John Lowell and his opinion was Nathan had not the smallpox but the chicken pox. At noon came Doctor Hall Jackson to see Nathan and declared he had the smallpox, and soon after the Selectmen came and removed him to his mother, which was at Ingalls’s almshouse as an hospital for that purpose. This day I delivered all Mr. John Calley and Rich’s rigging to Calley and Rich with all their straps served except mainsheets but none seized in.

[August 1773]

1 This day departed this life Sarah Reith Rogers with the smallpox. Note: I went to assist burying her over to [the] Neck. Arrived ship Vulture from Gibraltar [Lematt, John] Sawin, master. Thomas Dodd drooping.

Monday, 2 This day wife and son in a good way to do well. Employed on schooner, Sproul’s, rigging. Employed Farrow a day. Fixed two pair of shrouds for schooner Absalom, 4 shillings 8/. Received a pattern of a blue flag and a burgee from Mr. Hooper for brig Amherst.10

3 This day wife and son in a fair way to do well. Delivered a suit of rigging to [ ] for schooner, Sproul, complete for three sails except seizing in 18 of the smallest blocks. All the straps served for them. Employed Farrow a day. Thomas Gould drooping.

4 This day do nothing at loft. Employed taking care for the sick of my family. Wife in a good way. Son Nathan about street barefooted.

5 This day received a pattern of a boom pendent from Colonel Lee for schooner Abigail. Received 33 yards of old canvas from Captain Courtis for sloop, Stanwood and company, at 10d per yard. At 3 o’clock p.m. departed this life Elisha Rogers with the smallpox. I was immediately sent for to assist in burying him, and I with Thomas Hogan and Lilly took the corpse in a small boat and carried him to the Neck and buried him about a stone’s throw from Mrs. Reith Rogers to the S-east of her. Much rain. Wind easterly. Note: [...] was [...] and made a shroud for ship Friendship, made suit of [...] old tenor.

6 This day much employed with sick wife. Do little at loft. Would have employed Rimshire but he refused. Deliver boom pennant to schooner Abigail. This afternoon received a suit of rigging from the ropewalk for sloop, Stanwood, with spun yarn. Arrived schooner Broad Bay, J[ohn] Lee, [from Mole St. Nicholas]. Most of the neighbor removed to Ferry as there was provision prepared there for them.

7 This day employed on straps for sloop, Stanwood. We hear from Ferry that Elizabeth Arbunkle is dead [of] smallpox, and her child. Wife not so well as before. Arrived John Hooper [in the schooner Lynn from Cadiz] from Europe.

8 This day I do not attend Church but the sick. Hannah Lewis [or Lovis] is dead at Ferry [of] smallpox. Arrived Will Andrews.

Monday, 9 This day do nothing at loft. Wife poorly. This day died at the almshouse Mrs. Clark of smallpox. Note: I assist buried her over to [the] Neck.11

10 This day do but little at loft. This day died Mrs. Gould at the almshouse. This afternoon I assisted in burying her. Arrived R[ichard] Dolliber [in the schooner Molly from St. Lucia] from the West Indies.

11 This day fixed two pair of shrouds for Captain John Glover for schooner [Hannah], John Gale. Died Thomas Dodd [at the almshouse]. This afternoon I assisted burying him over to the Neck. Sailed S[tephen] Blaney in brig [Polly, for Cadiz]. Employed Smith a day. Died Priscilla Adley at Ferry.

12 This day employed on sloop, Stanwood’s, shrouds. Employed Mr. Humphreys ¾ a day and Edward half a day.

13 This day employed Mr. Humphreys a day. Employed on sloop, Stanwood’s, shrouds. Son Ashley not well, doubtful he might have the symptoms of the smallpox, and son Nathan drooping.

14 This day employed Mr. Humphreys a day. Employed Edward ¾ a day. Employed on sloop, Stanwood’s, shrouds. Son Ashley not well. Son Nathan really hath the smallpox severely.

15 This day son Nathan in a good way to do well. Son Ashley hath not the smallpox. Wife well. Self well and Hannah.

Monday, 16 This day at 8 o’clock before noon I attended and buried a child of Mrs. Clark’s [who died at the almshouse]. This afternoon I attended in burying Mr. Thomas Gould, the eight[h] person at the Neck. Employed Mr. Humphreys and Edward a day each.12

17 This day employed on sloop, Stanwood’s, blocks. Employed Mr. Humphreys a day at 3 shillings and 4 [pence].13

18 This day I have engaged Mr. Humphreys by the month, viz. four Pounds per month, ¼ [in] cash. Employed in Mr. Hooper’s loft with schooner Neptune shrouds. Finished one pair of main shroud.

19 This day employed on schooner Neptune’s shrouds, Mr. Humphreys and self. Deliver a large strap to Captain John Glover, sloop Don Carlos. Delivered two pair of shrouds and straps to schooner Neptune.

20 This day employed on sloop, Stanwood, rigging. Sailed brig [Woodbridge,] Sam Pote, [for Bilbao]. Arrived [Michael] Whittrong [in the schooner Nancy] from St. Martins [Barbados]. Note: I was a bearer to Captain John Williams.

21 This day finished all the sloop, Stanwood’s, rigging and delivered it to Captain Stanwood himself with blocks and all complete, 4 shroud a side. Mr. Stephen Sewall complaining of smallpox.

22 This day Mrs. Whidden died with smallpox [at the Ferry].

Monday, 23 This day died Mrs. Savage with smallpox [at the Ferry]. This day employed on cutting parceling for Mr. Sam Gerry’s house. Mr. Humphreys absent a day. Wife and son in a good way. Note: I carried the memorandum for snow Guardoqui’s, rigging to the ropewalk. Received a coil of 4-inch cordage from the [rope] walk for snow Guardoqui and some cordage from Colonel Lee store for D[ ].14

24 This day employed in tarring parceling for Mr. Sam Gerry. Wife so well the Select Gentlemen intend to have her home but the rain prevented it. Son Nathan in a good way to do well. Mrs. Mason removed to Ferry.

25 This day do but little. Self at loft. Mr. Humphreys employed serving straps for Guardoqui. This day at 4 o’clock my wife came home from the smallpox house [Ingalls’s almshouse].

26 This day employed on snow Guardoqui straps. Delivered 45 yards of parceling to Mr. Sam Gerry, cut and tarred for his dwelling house. Received 50 yards of old canvas from William Courtis for snow Guardoqui and all the futtock hooks for Guardoqui.

27 This day employed on snow Guardoqui’s straps. Received a pattern of a suit of colors from Mr. Hooper for schooner Neptune. Arrived George Bruce from fishing with all hands sick with smallpox [and a boy dead] and are gone to Rainsford Island.15 Much rain. Wind easterly. D [ ].

28 This day employed on snow Guardoqui futtock shrouds. Received a pattern of an ensign from Colonel Lee for ship Vulture. Sailed Thomas Collyer in brig [Lydia(?) for Europe].

29 This day self lame in foot.

Monday, 30 This day at home, lame of a leg. Do not go to loft. Mr. Humphreys received 4 pair of shrouds from Colonel Orne, F. Ellis. Son Nathan removed to Ferry.

31 This day at home lame. Had D[octor] Ryan[?]. Mr. Humphreys employed on Colonel Orne shrouds. Died a child at Ferry, son to John Adams.

[September 1773]

1 This day leg somewhat better. This day makes seven year in this book. This day died [at Ferry] the wife of Mr. Joseph Abbott with smallpox and child. Delivered two pair of shrouds to Colonel Orne from Ellis. Arrive Hinkley [in the schooner Three Brothers from St. Lucia] and [Peter Fanueil] Jones [in the schooner Sally from Mole St. Nicholas].

2 This day delivered an ensign to schooner Neptune, Captain [Michael] Corbett, which make his suit, viz. blue flag, burgee, and ensign. Lame in both feet with rhumatism. Mr. Humphreys employed in loft.

3 This day at home lame with the gout. Delivered an ensign to ship Vulture, Captain [John] Sawins. Mr. Humphreys finished two pair of main shrouds for Colonel Orne for Ellis. Mr. Humphreys employed on snow Guardoqui topmast shrouds. The carpenters are very busy a-framing an hospital for Cat Island. Sailed Richard Hendley, Captain White’s schooner.

4 This day at home lame. Sailed schooner Neptune, Captain Corbett, for West Indies. Some rain. The carpenters a-framing a pesthouse for Cat Island.

5 This day at home lame. Son Ashley and daughter Hannah attended Church all day.

Monday, 6 This day I got out again. Note: I took my father’s mare and rode to the Ferry to inquire of Nathan. Could not see him. Mr. Humphreys employed on snow Guardoqui topmast shrouds.

7 This day Mr. Humphreys absent a day. Sailed ship Vulture, [John Sawin, for Alicante] for Europe and W. Blaney [in the schooner Sarah for the West Indies]. Do nothing at loft. I new slung a pair of scales for Captain Gerry.

8 This day employ in loft with snow Guardoqui shrouds. Nobody taken with smallPOX this day. I settled some accounts with son Ashley.

9 This day employed on snow Guardoqui shrouds. No person taken with smallPOX this day. This afternoon much rain. I expected son Nathan home but he did not come. This afternoon was buried A. Oakes.

10 This day employed in loft with snow Guardoqui stays. I gave a memorandum for snow Guardoqui’s lengths and sizes for her running rigging. Some rain. Nobody taken with smallpox this day.

11 This day employed on snow Guardoqui’s straps. Died [at Ferry] Mrs. Stone and Lear, the baker, with smallpox. Nobody taken this day with smallpox.

12 Much rain. Wind easterly. Ashley attended Church this afternoon. Died Ann Mills with smallpox [at Ferry].

Monday, 13 This day wind easterly. We hear Captain Joseph Northey’s child is dead of smallpox [at Ferry]. Received a pattern of a suit of color for Guardoqui. This afternoon I brought son Nathan home.

14 This day arrived a schooner of Mr. Joshua Orne’s who had buried her skipper, Mr. John Dolliber, with the smallpox. Employed on snow Guardoqui rigging. Wind easterly.

15 This day employed on snow Guardoqui rigging. Wind easterly.

16 This day employed on snow Guardoqui rigging. Employed Thomas Crute ¾ a day. Received a pattern and two pair of shrouds from Colonel Orne for Mr. Josh Orne. Sailed Richard James [in the schooner Hannah for the West Indies] and [Michael] Whittrong [in the schooner Nancy for the West Indies].

17 This day employed on snow Guardoqui rigging. Employ T. Crute a day. Received some canvas from Mr. Joshua Orne.

18 This day employed on snow Guardoqui rigging and some on Mr. Joshua Orne’s shrouds. Employed Mr. Crute a day.

19 This day I attended Church all day. Note: I stood for a child of Henry and Sarah Writehead [Whittingham?]. Parson Bailey preach[ed] and stood for Mr. Weeks’s child.

Monday, 20 This day employed on snow Guardoqui rigging. Delivered two pair of shrouds to Joshua Orne, Skipper Cash. Employed Thomas Crute a day. Received three coil of cordage from the ropewalk.16

21 This day employed on snow Guardoqui rigging. Employed Thomas Crute a day. Fixed a boom pennant and mainsheet strap for Colonel Lee, [ ], Phollet. Died Captain Joseph Skillings. Sailed [William] Sinclair [in the schooner Betsey for the West Indies]. Died Richard Mace [Massey?] of smallpox [at Ferry].

22 This day employed on snow Guardoqui rigging. Employed Mr. Humphreys and Thomas Crute a day each. Cut and tarred 11 yard of canvas for Mr. Sam Gerry.

23 This day employed on snow Guardoqui’s, blocks. Borrowed a coil of spun yarn from Colonel Fowle for Colonel Lee. Captain Skillings buried. Employed Thomas Crute and Mr. Humphreys a day each.

24 This day employed on snow Guardoqui blocks. Employ Mr. Humphreys and Crute a day each. Mr. John Tucker drownded.17

25 This day employed on snow Guardoqui blocks. Delivered all her standing rigging to Mr. Joseph Lee himself with main and fore ties trusses bobstay and straps for stays, no topsail sheets nor ties. Note: the painter painting the block. Employed Mr. Humphreys a day and Mr. Crute a day.

26 This day self attended Church all day, wife half day. This evening I attended Mr. John Tucker’s funeral. Died John Bartol.

Monday, 27 This day delivered all the blocks for snow Guardoqui to Mr. Spence and a suit of color for the Guardoqui. Son Nathan began with his aunt to school.18

28 This day do nothing at loft. Smallpox broke out again. Huss Pitman moved.

29 This day much rain. Wind NE. Some people broke out with smallpox.

30 Some rain. Elsie Bray and Jean Dolliber moved to Ferry and Mr. Baker moved to Ferry. This day died at Ferry a child of John Bray [from] smallpox.

[October 1773]

1 This day wind easterly. Put back Richard Hinkley in schooner Woodbridge. Some people moved to Ferry with smallpox. John Bray’s child died. Delivered an ensign mended and burgee new to Colonel Lee, schooner Bartor. Ensign 1/4. Pendent 2/4. Father Bowen not well. Mrs. Stiles not well.

2 This day much rain. Wind NE.

3 Sailed Richard Hinkley. Will Sandy’s wife moved to Ferry with smallpox.

Monday, 4 This day delivered a boom pendent and main tie [to] Colonel Lee, schooner Polly, and two strap for foresheet and a span to schooner Bartor.

5 This day do nothing at loft. Arrived [John] Bartlett [in the schooner Nancy from Mole St. Nicholas] and Fettyplace [in the schooner Elizabeth from Montserrat] from West Indies. Died Mary Sandy [at Ferry] with smallpox. Elizabeth Mason Parson moved to Ferry. The surveyors a-surveying the harbor.19

6 This day somewhat cold. Arrived Joseph Northey [in the schooner Francis] from West Indies [Barbados]. Died Molly Pitman with smallpox. John Bray and Mr. Uncles moved to Ferry. No rigging in hand.

7 This day no rigging in hand. Received a half barrel flour from Colonel Lee.

8 This day no rigging in hand. Died at Ferry a boy of Mr. Baker’s with smallpox. Wind NE.

9 This day no rigging in hand. Died Mary Baker [widow] with smallpox [at Ferry]. I assisted the Selectmen in gathering Mr. Dixey’s corn. Deliver an ensign mended and long pendent new to Colonel Lee, schooner Broad Bay. Brother Bowen not well.

10 This day self attended Church all day. Sister Stiles sick. Fixed blocks for ship Vulture.

Monday, 11 This day no rigging in hand. Brother Bowen not well.

12 No rigging in hand. This afternoon I went with Mr. Sam White to Little Harbor 3 hours. A gal moved to Ferry with smallpox. Deliver a Jack to schooner Broad Bay.

13 No rigging in hand. This morning I went to Little Harbor 3 hours. Came in Phil Hoy with smallpox on board [and is] gone to Rainsford Island. Note: Mr. White went with schooner self.

14 No rigging in hand. Nobody broke out with smallpox. Great preparation of the hospital on Cat Island for inoculation.

15 The last evening Mrs. Reddan was moved to Ferry. This day no rigging in hand. This afternoon I went to Ferry to see about my things. Sandy Green’s widow buried. Sailed John Hooper [in the schooner Lynn] for West Indies and Burnham [in the schooner Eleanor for West Indies]. This day came to town General Hall Jackson, Grand Physician, for inoculation on Cat Island with a number of volunteers with him.

16 This day no rigging in hand. This afternoon I went to Ferry and brought my things, viz. feathers from a bed, 1 sheet, 1 blanket, 1 bolster lift, 1 sheet, son’s shirt, [...]. Great preparation for the hospital on Cat Island.

17 This day fair and pleasant weather. Doctor H[all] Jackson at Church with a number of volunteers for inoculation. Self at Church all day, wife half.

Monday, 18 This day do nothing. Moderate. We hear of the pox breaking out at Ipswich Harbor. This day the whole that is doing is about inoculations. It seems that the first cow that they had on the isle was so discontented that she took her calf on her back and swam for the Neck and was discovered and carried back.

19 This day all our inoculators sat off for Cat Island. Forepart much rain. Latter, fair wind NW. Moved to Ferry a child of Mrs. Uncle’s. This day at noon Colonel Orne with a body of volunteers and a number of invalids landed at Cape Pus on the NW end of the Isle of Cat and laid siege to the Castle of Pox, General Jackson, commander-in-chief; General Randall, leftenant general of Castle Pox; Arnold Martin Esq., chief admiral of the white, in sloop Ashley. Tis supposed this siege will last thirty days. By an express from Castle Pox General Jackson had a smart engagement and wounded nearly a 100 of Colonel Orne’s body of volunteers the first evening they landed, of both sexes from the age of 3 years to 60 first day, and that General Randall engaged the Colonel himself.20

20 This day no rigging in hand. Smallpox in a good way. Note: Sam Giles attends the island with his boat. Arrived a brig from New York. This day at 11 a.m., Commodore Giles in the Mercury cruiser came to sail and turned to the Isle of Cat in whom went passengers Doctoress Nick and some volunteers and anchored off Cape Pus. Wind NE and landed at Kitten Cove, p.m., Commodore Giles returned with intelligence that all the volunteers were in good spirits and the bucks began to train.

21 This day the chief of our time is spent about the inoculation hospital. Received 50 yards of bunting for a flag for hospital. Delivered a Jack mend[ed] to Captain Hill, 1 shilling. This day Commodore Giles and Commodore Green in N[oah’s] Ark21 set off for the Isle of Cat, small wind easterly, with some volunteers on board and a cow and calf and hay &c. At 3 p.m. arrived Commodore Green in the Noah’s Ark from the Isle of Cat with intelligence that all was well except the fundamental part of some of them complain to be tired. Cannonading day.

22 This day fine and pleasant weather. This morning died Elizabeth Parsons of smallpox. We hear some children are sick of the measles at Cat Island and that Elias Vickery is sworn boatman at [ ]. This day matters are all still at the Isle of Cat. This evening we hear that some children have the flux at Isle Cat.

23 This day arrived snow Guardoqui from Newbury. I delivered a large flag and a small one to Mr. Elbridge Gerry for the hospital on Cat Island. This day at noon died the wife of Sam Humphreys. Arrived John Stephens [in the schooner Polly from Martinique] from West Indies. This day at 10 a.m. Commodore Vickery set off for the Isle of Cat in the Mercury cruiser and Commodore Giles on the Noah’s Ark and Captain Stephens in schooner Two Brothers. At 1 o’clock p.m. the Mercury cruiser arrived from the Isle of Cat with intelligence that all was well. Note: Agent Victualler Reed came passenger in order to be sworn to the trust of an Agent Victualler for Castle Pox. At 4 ditto the Mercury cruiser set off for the Isle of Cat. Commodore Giles hoisted the signal flag onboard the Mercury cruiser. The same signal was worn on Castle Pox, viz. white field with a Union in the center. This is what they call chocolate days. Foggy.

24 This day some rain. Sailed brig Sally, Wyatt St. Barbe, [for the West Indies] and schooner Broad Bay, John Lee, both for West Indies. Came from Boston Knott Martin, Junior. The grand flag out at the hospital. This afternoon Mrs. Horton moved to Ferry. This evening I attended the wife of Samuel Humphreys burial. This morning we discovered the Castle flag hoisted at the Isle of Cat. At 10 a.m. Captain Knott Martin in sloop came down from Boston [and] spoke a number of the inhabitants of the Isle of Cat and they informed him that Captain John Glover’s daughter Hannah was broke out with smallpox. All the rest in good spirits. At noon, Commodore Giles confirmed the same.

Monday, 25 This day wind easterly. Much fog. Some rain. Tis said George St. Barbe’s wife hath the smallpox. They say that five or six persons are broke out at Salem and that nearly thirty more are suspected at Salem to have [it]. Delivered ¾ a hundred of sugar to Father Bowen for pud[ ]. At 1 o’clock p.m. Commodore Vickery in the Mercury cruiser arrived from the Isle of Cat and informs all was well and that not one person had yet broke out of smallpox. At 4 p.m. the Mercury set off for the Isle of Cat, in whom went passenger General [Dr. Ebenezer] Putnam [of Salem] who had an engagement with some disorderly people at Salem and supposed him to be mortal wounded in the engagement.

26 This day some rain. Tis said that St. Barbe’s wife hath not the smallpox. The Island boat went to the Island [and] find all well. This day at 11 o’clock a.m. sailed the Mercury, Commodore Vickery, for the Isle of Cat, in whom when passenger Captain Dalton and Captain Joseph Hooper and three fine young does to fat after their escape and to attend G[eneral] Jackson’s bucks. Note: as the tumult happened at Salem yesterday Squire Dodge being a busy man rushed in among some of them that were disorderly, and he supposed that he had got his death wound, upon which he applied to our busy men to enlist them under General Jackson at Castle Pox and a woman from Salem in the same order and they both took their passage with Commodore Vickery in the Mercury. At 3 o’clock p.m. the Mercury returned from the Isle of Cat with intelligence that the volunteers were in as good order as may be expected. Much rain. Great talks of their building an hospital at Salem, but they count the cost first.

27 This day much rain. We hear that Captain John Bartlett hath been quite ill of smallpox at the Island. This morning much rain. Wind NE. At 11 o’clock a.m. Commodore Vickery in the Mercury cruiser set off for the Isle of Cat with stores and sundries for the inhabitants of Castle Pox. We hear three people are removed at Salem this day. At 3 p.m. the Mercury returned with intelligence that nearly 80 of the volunteer are broke out with smallpox at Castle Pox and that many more had strong symptoms on them, now very ill. This afternoon somewhat clear. The inhabitants of the Isle of Cat hoisted their flag on the NW end of Castle Pox. Commodore Vickery was immediately ordered down to know the reason and found it to be nothing but that the middle staff was broke. It seems Captain John Glover [is] being very expeditious in getting the other flagstaff an ensign on the NW end of Castle Pox. Tis supposed he hath lost 24 hours ground behind the rest of the volunteers.

28 This day little wind. Arrived J[ohn] Adams [in the schooner John from Cadiz]. Sailed brig General Wolfe, [Hugh] Hill, for Virginia. This day at 9 a.m. Commodore Vickery in the Mercury cruiser sat off for the Isle of Cat with some provisions and sundry for Castle Pox, in whom went passenger Samuel Giles, master attendant for Castle Pox, and at 12 ditto Captain Dennis in the Noah’s Ark set off for the Isle of Cat with some hay, a cow and calf, and at half past noon the Mercury returned with intelligence that nearly sixty of Colonel Orne’s body are broke out with smallpox. At 3 p.m. the Mercury sat off for the Isle of Cat. Mr. John Gerry went passenger and returned by dark.

Plate XXV

Shipping sketches by Ashley Bowen.

Marblehead Historical Society

Plate XXVI

Marblehead as seen from the harbor, 6 November 1763. Churches from left to right are: St. Michael’s, New Meeting House, Old Meeting House. Brig Success, James Gilmore, of Portsmouth, N. H., in foreground.

Cat Island and the Smallpox Hospital as seen from the entrance of Marblehead Harbor, 1773.

Marblehead Historical Society

Plate XXVII

Cat Island, 1773, as seen from Marblehead Harbor. A—Ram Head. B—the Point of the Neck. C—Castle Pox (the inoculation hospital). D—the “Shifting House”. E—the Mercury cruiser.

The smallpox flag flown at the inoculation hospital on Cat Island, 1773.

Marblehead Historical Society

Plate XXVIII

1778. (Left) Schooner Sally, Thomas Boyles, from Marblehead. (Middle) Sloop Eagle, Nathaniel Hayward. (Right) Off Cape Charles en route to Baltimore, “where we made an American bottom of the sloop.”

Marblehead Historical Society

Figurehead sketch by Ashley Bowen.

Peabody Museum of Salem

Plate XXIX

1779. Sloop Eagle, Nathaniel Hayward, and schooner Gates (upper right). 1780—The vessels of a wooding voyage (see text) in August 1780.

Marblehead Historical Society

Plate XXX

Unidentified brig of the Royal Navy.

Marblehead Historical Society

Three views of the wreck of the Salem ship Postillion, January 1781.

Peabody Museum of Salem

Plate XXXI

The ship Argo, of Marblehead, Captain Samuel Russell Trevett, homeward bound from France, 1782. (See color plate of companion painting.) Argo, 370 tons, 20 guns, and 74 men was wrecked off York Harbor, Maine, on 21 November 1782.

Peabody Museum of Salem

Diagram of the sun’s declination for the year 1801.

Marblehead Historical Society

Plate XXXII

Shipping sketches by Ashley Bowen and Bowen Genealogical Table probably prepared by Hannah Crowninshield of Salem.

Essex Institute

Shipping sketches by Ashley Bowen, dated 1784 and 1789. Note the indistinct face in the tree (perhaps Bowen himself) and the vessels in the small circles, each with it! sails trimmed at the appropriate compass point as with a prevailing westerly.

Alexander O. Vietor

29 This day fine and pleasant for the season. Do nothing at loft. This day at 9 o’clock a.m., the Mercury cruiser set off for the Isle of Cat with store and sundries. Note: Captain Jonathan Glover went passenger in the Mercury. At ½ past 11 a.m. the Mercury returned and brought fine news from the Isle of Cat. General Jackson informs them that nearly ninety of the body of volunteers were so well recovered of their wounds that many of them may return to their respective tents in a week more. This afternoon the Mercury visited the Isle of Cat and Commodore Green in the Noah’s Ark went to the Isle of Cat with hay. We hear that one person was moved at Salem yesterday and one this morning moved. Tis said General Jackson’s volley of musketry have so peppered the body of volunteer that tis supposed they will be some of them well certified or pipito [sic] when returned to their tents o’ Israel.

30 This day do nothing at loft. Received and mended an ensign for Mr. Hooper, brig Nancy, 1 shilling. This morning the Mercury cruiser sat off for the Isle of Cat in whom went passenger Captain J. Prince and Captain P. Green and Captain Dan Glover in schooner John, victualler. And at 11 o’clock a.m. the John and Mercury returned with intelligence that there was but one sick person on all the Isle of Cat although so many were dangerously wounded. Fair weather flag flying [in] all weather on Castle Pox. Tis supposed that the next week the volunteers will be so courageous as to want fourteen cooks to one doctor and that Mr. Agent Victualler Reed must mind his Pees and Ques. At ½ past 3 p.m. the Mercury set off from Nick’s Cove, in whom went passengers Jeremiah Lee Esq. and Mrs. Lee and some other invalids and landed at Cape Pus. Wind at NW. Returned at ½ past 3 o’clock.

31 This day arrived brig St. Paul, Captain Nicholas Gordon, from Cadiz. The smallpox folks at Cat Island in a very good way. This day at past ½ 8 o’clock a.m. the Mercury cruiser set off from Mr. Hooper’s wharf for the Isle of Cat, in whom went passenger Mr. Joseph Chipman of Salem and Mr. Peter Bubier and Mr. Dalton[’s] coachman. Wind SW. Fair weather. We hear a man died at Salem last night of smallpox and another like to die at Salem with it. At noon the Mercury returned from the Isle of Cat with her one crew and the said passengers. Commodore Vickery informs that the whole of the volunteers at Castle Pox are in as good health as when they landed and in much better condition.

[November 1773]

Monday, 1 This day do nothing at loft. Fine weather. Wind at SW. This day at 9 o’clock a.m. the Mercury cruiser set off from the brig St. Paul for the Isle of Cat, in whom went passenger the old Nick and sundry other passenger for the Isle of Cat, with oysters and other stores for Castle Pox. At ½ past 1 p.m., the Mercury returned with all her passenger and returned Squire Dalton and Air. Joseph Hooper from the Isle of Cat. Tis supposed by some that the volunteer will bring more scars than they were aware of before. The Mercury doth not return to the Island this afternoon. Died a child [at] Ferry.

2 This day no rigging in hand. Arrived Captain David Lee [in the brig Young Phoenix] from Gibraltar with his mainmast sprung. This day I received 1½ cord of wood from Calley and Rich. This day at 11 a.m. sailed the Mercury, Commodore Vickery, for the Isle of Cat, in whom went passenger Mrs. Swett Hooper, Dennis and Halleys. At 1 o’clock p.m. the Mercury return from the Isle of Cat with the said passengers as before and Mr. Sam Giles with them who informs us that all the inhabitants at Castle Pox were well and that G[eneral] Putnam <liked Colonel Orne’s daughter> so well that he took <her nature> upon him. It being the second time inoculation tis hinted that some of the b[uc]k volunteers are much more nice than wise on the willing ardor. Some are so polite as to drink nothing but Madeira abroad that can hardly get cider at home.

3 This day received a quintal merchantable fish from Colonel Lee, Joseph Davis, and received topgallant gear from Colonel Lee, snow Guardoqui. This day at 10 o’clock a.m. the Mercury cruiser, Commodore Vickery, set off for the Isle of Cat, in whom went passenger Mr. Joseph Hooper and Mr. S. White and Mrs. Prentiss and Mrs. Harris, and a strange gentleman, Mr. E[lbridge] Gerry. At one o’clock p.m. the Mercury returned with her said passengers. At 3 ditto the Mercury set [off] for the Isle of Cat with two Salem gentlemen. At dark the boat returned. Tis said there be great to be done at Castle Pox on the 5 instant. Note: Mr. Elbridge Gerry stayed at the Isle of Cat.

4 This day I served snow Guardoqui topgallant gear. This day at 10 a.m. the Mercury cruiser set off for the Isle of Cat with provisions and sundry of Castle Pox, and the Mercury returned at ½ past noon. At ½ past 2 o’clock p.m. the Mercury sat off for the Isle of Cat, in whom went passengers William and David Lee, Esq., Nick and Finch Gordon Esq., Captain John Prince, and two of the ship crew. At ½ after 4 ditto the Mercury returned with her said passengers. We hear that the Salemites are a-building an hospital for them in what they call the Great Pasture and have as many men as can work at building it.

5 This day great to do at Cat Island. This evening the Essex Hospital was illuminated and [ ]. This morning much rain. At noon we heard the Castle guns fired and at 1 o’clock p.m. the shipping at Boston fired. At 3 p.m. the Mercury cruiser put off for the Isle of Cat with tar barrel and sundries for a bonfire on the Isle of Cat this evening. The inhabitants on the Isle of Cat illuminated Castle Pox and made a bonfire on the body of the Isle of Cat. The inhabitants of this town made a stage with the Pope, the Devil, and so forth and hauled it about town, and a number of our gentlemen assembled at the Royal Exchange and spent the evening and they throw eighteen sky rockets off the balcony over the town.22 Note: the Mercury left Mr. Sam Giles at the Isle of Cat.

6 This day I have been ten years on shore. The smallpox broke out again. Mr. William Cruss wife was moved to the Ferry. This morning fair weather. At 10 o’clock a.m. the Mercury set off for the Isle of Cat, in whom went passenger Mr. John Gerry and Mr. Rob[ert] Hooper and two Salem gentlemen. Note: the following gentlemen went on board after the first, viz. Sir Jonathan Glover, Sir Thomas Gerry, Sir Benjamin Marston, aldermen for the Town of Marblehead.

Mr. Joseph Hooper

gentleman

Mr. Samuel White

ditto

Captain Sam Hooper

 

Mr. Thomas Lewis

ditto

Mr. Woodward Abrahams

ditto

Mr. Nathaniel Pearce

ditto

Captain Peter Green

 

All of them returned before 1 o’clock p.m. and brings fine news from the Castle of Pox. Tis said that 50 of the body of volunteers will be landed on the main on Tuesday next, entirely cured of their wounds, with the general servants.

7 This day I attended Church all day, wife half a day. Arrived brig Patty, Jeremiah Ballister, [from Lematt]. This last evening the Mercury went to the Isle of Cat, but nothing very remarkable. This day somewhat cold. At 8 a.m. the Mercury cruiser sat off for the Isle of Cat, wind at NE, with Mr. Joseph Lee, Squire Dalton, Mr. McCall, and returned [at] noon.

Monday, 8 This day I do nothing at loft. They talk of that some of the smallpox folks returning from the Isle of Cat on the morrow. This morning the Mercury cruiser set off for the Isle of Cat, in whom went passenger Mr. Sam White, Mr. Ea. Fettyplace [?], Captain John Russell, and Mr. Cobit of Salem, and they brought a list of whom were so well recovered of their wounds as to be sent off the Isle as invalids on the morrow.

9 This day returned a number of the inoculation gentry from Cat Island. This day at 9 o’clock a.m. the Mercury sat off for the Isle of Cat, wind SW, close weather, in whom went passenger Mr. Sam White and Mr. Joseph Hooper, Captain John Russell, Captain [Peter] Green, John Glover Junior, Captain Jonathan Glover, and at 2 o’clock p.m. the Mercury returned with an number of that body of wounded volunteer that behaved so well that General Jackson gave them a commission for invalids in twenty-two days after their being wounded and that some of them were as well in 15 days after their being wound[ed] as now. Much rain. Wind southerly.

10 This day came five of the inoculated from Cat Island. This day wind NNE. This afternoon the Mercury went to the Isle of Cat and when she returned brought with them five of the volunteers. Some rain. We hear [ ] Barton is dead at Salem of smallpox.

11 This day at 1 o’clock arrived Captain Knott Martin from Cat Island and brought Doctor Jackson and Colonel Orne, 40 of them in all, and Mr. Elias Vickery in the Island Boat brought 12 more from the Isle. This morning at ½ past 8 o’clock a.m. Knott Martin Esq. in sloop hoisted his colors and set off for the Isle of Cat with a number of Gentlemen in order to assist the General in bringing off the greater part of the volunteer that remained. At 1 o’clock p.m. arrived Knott Martin Esq., chief admiral of the blue, General Jackson and Colonel Orne and thirty of his volunteers are recovered of their wounds, this being the 24[th] day. Commodore Vickery in the Mercury returned the same time with 12 more of the volunteer, all of whom have General Jackson’s commission for invalids. This afternoon the Mercury sat off for the Isle of Cat.

12 This day Colonel Frye and a number of men and women belonging to Salem went to be inoculated. Doctor Jackson return to the Island again and we hear they were all inoculated the same day. This day at 10 o’clock a.m. Commodore Vickery in the Mercury cruiser set off for the Isle of Cat, in whom went passenger General Jackson with two recruits of volunteers for the second engagement. At noon the Mercury returned from the Isle of Cat. Note: a girl named [Sarah] Roads, [daughter of Sarah Mathews, wife of [ ] Mathews,] died at Castle Pox. Tis supposed she did not die of smallpox.23 At 2 o’clock p.m., Commodore Vickery in the Mercury cruiser set off with Colonels Frye, White, [and] thirty recruits, volunteers to reenforce Castle Pox. All the first body of volunteers are for the most part deserted Castle Pox and became invalids. Note: Colonel Frye and his recruit all belong to Salem, of both sexes and some of the finest does that belong to Salem.

13 This day somewhat cold. Captain John Glover returned to town with three of his children from Cat Island. Captain David Lee gone to Hampton to be married to Miss Polly Reed, daughter to Captain Samuel Reed. Tis said that the hospital at Salem Commons will be ready in a week more to inoculate. This day at 9 o’clock a.m. the Mercury cruiser set off for the Isle of Cat. At 2 o’clock p.m. the Mercury returned from the Isle of Cat with a number of the wounded volunteer with their commissions for invalids. Note: Captain John Glover and three of his children come from Castle Pox. The whole of their passengers were 19 besides the ships crew. Doctoress Nick returned and chase the basin.

14 This day I attended Church all day, wife half a day. This morning a child of Whithing was moved to Ferry with smallpox. At 11 a.m. the Mercury cruiser, Commodore Vickery, set off for the Isle of Cat. Much snow fell the last night, p.m. the Mercury returned from the Isle of Cat, in whom went passengers Mrs. Bourn and her children, Mr. Samuel Trevett and two neighbor. Note: General Jackson accompanied General Randall from Castle Pox to town as General Randall declined serving any longer at Castle Pox this season. Tis said that General Randall designs to take up his winter quarters on Long Island, his native country.

Monday, 15 This day employed about colors. Received an old ensign from brig [Young] Phoenix to mend and Captain Ballister’s colors to repair and ensign new. Returned some of the inoculators from Cat Island. This day p.m. the Mercury cruiser, Commodore Vickery, set off for the Isle of Cat, in whom went passengers General Jackson and Doctoress Hawes of Boston and some recruits, volunteers for reenforcement at Castle Pox. This evening the Mercury returned with no passenger.

16 This day employed about color, some on brig [Young] Phoenix ensign, some on brig Patty and some on Colonel Gallison’s sloop Colonies. This afternoon Mr. Benjamin Robertson’s wife [and her child] was moved to Ferry with smallpox. This day at 10 a.m. the Mercury cruiser set off for the Isle of Cat, in whom went passengers General [ ] and twenty-six of the Newbury bucks. At 1 o’clock p.m. Commodore Vickery in the Mercury cruiser returned from the Isle of Cat. In her came Parson Squire Dodge and a number of the former volunteers.

17 This day Doctor [Humphrey] Devereux went to Cat Island to be inoculated. All most of the first set of inoculators are come home from Cat Island. We hear Mr. Cruss’s wife died at Ferry. Delivered brig [Young] Phoenix ensign, 6/1 the mend[ing]. This day completes the first siege of inoculation on the Isle of Cat. It happened that as General D[evereu]x yesterday happened to fall in company with a disorderly woman was so much shocked that he forgot his interest on land and so as to determine to enlist under General Jackson at Castle Pox in order to become an invalid, and he took Left[enant] General Bond and General D[evereu]x Junior his aide a camp for the safeguard. [We hear] that Mrs. Elsie Bray was brought here from Ferry. Finis for the First Class or the thirty days.

18 This day somewhat cold. This afternoon I assisted Captain Mugford in getting his schooner from the Neck.3½ hours.

19 This day at 1 o’clock sailed snow Guardoqui, George Gordon, for Europe [Bilbao] and [Peter Faneuil] Jones [in the schooner Sally] for Virginia. Small wind toward the NE. Died at home Elsie Bray.

20 This day somewhat cold. This evening the remains of Elsie Bray was buried. We hear eight people are broke out at Lynn with smallpox.

21 This day sailed brig Nancy, [Thomas] Power, for Europe [Bilbao] and brig [Young] Phoenix, [David] Lee, for Virginia. We hear a child [of Whithing] died at Ferry of smallpox. This day come to town Mr. R. Harris from Cat Island.

Monday, 22 This day do nothing at loft. This evening about 9 o’clock as two lads, servants of Mr. Joseph Abbott, were arriving at sea on board his schooner a sudden lurch of the schooner they both fell overboard and were drownded.

23 This day received a jibstay from Captain Mugford to fix. Delivered an ensign and burgee to Colonel Gallison for his sloop. £0.10.0.

24 This day small winds east. At 11 a.m. arrived brig Salisbury, Captain David Robinson, from Falmouth. Great preparations for yearly Thanksgiving. Came in Main, the fisherman.

25 This day all well. <Provincial> Thanksgiving.

26 This day I finished Captain Mugford’s jibstay. Note: I gave my account to Colonel Lee himself, brig Patty colors included. Received two cord wood.

27 This day I fixed a set of runner and tackles for Colonel Lee, schooner Horton.

28 This day at half past 10 o’clock a.m. I sat out for Church but hearing that Parson Weeks was not well I concluded to hear Mr. Whitwell. I went to his house, found he was not at home. I went to New Meeting House and found him there. Revel[ations] 1.6.

Monday, 29 This day fine and moderate for the season. Arrived brig Pitt Packet, [Nathaniel] Leech, from Europe [Cadiz] and ship Dartmouth, Hall, from London.

30 This day Grand Training, all hands.24 Dined at the Royal Exchange. Note: Doctor Jackson in town but returned this evening. Benjamin Eaton [a] day.

[December 1773]

1 This day High Training. Note: I dined at Captain John Prince’s with my honored father, Brother Bowen, Colonel Gallison, Mr. Whitwell, Captain John Reed, Mr. John Clark, Mr. Sam Selman, Captain Knott Martin, William and John Gallison, Mr. Peter Jayne, 3 sergeants, 2 fifes, 1 drum, 1 clerk, Captain Courtis, Captain Will Blackler. This day we hear that Benjamin Eaton Junior died [at Cat Island]. Note: Mr. Abrahams, Doctor Bond, Leftenent Martin of the Provincial dined at Captain Prince’s.

2 This day is Training. I delivered a jibstay to Captain Mugford.

3 This day is Training. We hear Doctor Humphrey Devereux died at Cat Island. This day a number of our gentlemen went to Cat Island in order to encourage the sick.

4 This day somewhat cold. At 3 o’clock the Mercury came from Cat Island with melancholy news from thence, viz. that as a number of gentlemen went down to see their friends that Captain Lowell of Newbury, in firing their cannon, was much wounded so as to have both his arms cut off, but [he is] not dead.25

5 This day somewhat cold. Self attended Church all day, wife half day. Note: Mr. Weeks preached. Will Blackler was published at the New Meeting House to Rebecca Chipman. The Mercury visited the Isle of Cat and returned at 4 p.m. and informs us that Captain Lowell is in good spirits. Arrived [George] Rapell from Falmouth and gone to Boston.

Monday, 6 This day Daniel Lisbon moved to Major Pedrick smallpox house at Ferry. Arrived Sam Gale [in the schooner Polly from Barbados and Anguilla] from West Indies.

7 This day fair weather. Not cold.

8 This day much rain.

9 This day fair weather. Brother Bowen poorly. Had Doctor Lowell.

10 This day much rain. Returned schooner Lydia, Tarday, wind bound.

11 This day fair weather. Arrived Captain J[ohn] D[evereux] Dennis [in the schooner Annis from Anguilla] from West Indies. We hear Mr. Fowler is removed with smallpox. A child of William Courtis Junior broke out [with] smallpox.

12 This day self attended Church all day, wife half day. This day William Courtis Junior’s child was carried to Cat Island with his wife and another child and all the family that was suspicioned of. A woman moved to Ferry with smallpox.

Monday, 13 This day arrived [William] Sinclair [in the schooner Betsey from Barbados] from West Indies. Brother Bowen so ill hath Dr. Bond to attend him. Delivered a picture to Captain Boden. Wife supped at Father’s.

14 This day mild for the season. Great talk of the Third Class filling up for Isle Cat. Died a child of W[illiam] Courtis Junior.

15 This day at noon the Mercury packet sat off for the Isle of Cat with a number of volunteers, viz. Captain John Glover’s wife [with] 2 children, Captain John Prince’s wife, Captain Sam Reed’s wife and 3 child[ren], Mr. W[oodward] Abrahams’s wife, Mr. S[amuel] R[ussell] Trevett’s wife, Mrs. Sally Bradstreet, Mrs. Molly Martin, Mr. Isaac Collyer, Eli Vickery son, Jo Halley son, John Chipman, A. Harwood [?]. Note: I went in company with the Mercury in a rowboat and returned at dark. The whole were inoculated at 1 o’clock p.m., all in good spirit.

16 This morning arrived brig Lydia, Captain Thomas Collyer, [from Bilbao] whom had had the smallpox at sea and all got well. Arrived Captain Tuck from West Indies [Mole St. Nicholas, in the schooner Dove] in Captain N. Bartlett schooner. We hear Mr. John Fowler died at Ferry [of] smallpox.

17 This day arrived brig Wolfe, [Amos] Granday, [from Lematt] and Sam Green in schooner Hitty and Edmund Lewis in schooner Benjamin and William Tucker in schooner. A great number of volunteers sailed for Essex Hospital. This afternoon the wife of Mr. Nathaniel Dennin buried.

18 This day arrived Captain B[enjamin] Calley in schooner Molly from Falmouth. Sometime this night arrived brig [Polly], Stephen Blaney, from Cadiz.

19 This day somewhat colder. At noon sailed the Mercury for Cat Island, in whom went passenger Isaac Mansfield Esq. and Captain John Prince [with one of his children to be inoculated] and some other passenger. This day died Captain Thomas Frothingham, suddenly.

Monday, 20 This day the Mercury return from Cat Island without most of her passenger. Smart cold.

21 This day smart cold. Came from Nantasket Road brig Sally, Captain [John] Grush. At 1 o’clock p.m. came from Cat Island the Mercury with news of all being well. Died at Ferry Mrs. Ashton [of] smallpox. About this time came a carcass from Castle Pox and lit on as fine a young doe as any in town, and burned her to such a degree that she died in about twenty-five days after H.B. [her birth?]. Died January the 14, 1774.

22 This day cold. Came from Rainsford Island brig Lydia, Captain Thomas Collyer, after being cleared [of] smallpox. This evening a girl called Carrage [Courage?] was moved to Ferry with smallpox. Sailed brig Patty, [Jeremiah] Ballister, for Europe [Bilbao].

23 This day moderate.

24 This day came from Boston Captain Calley and Captain Sam Green. This night arrived schooner Adventure, [John] Tittle, from Europe.

25 This day Christmas, although not cold. Arrived Richard James [in the schooner Hannah] from West Indies [Barbados and Turks Island].

26 This day first part much wind and rain at SE. At noon, wind WSW. A great sea [running]. At ½ past one p.m. I saw a small sloop run ashore on the North Gooseberry.

Monday, 27 This day somewhat cold. A Town Meeting about the hospital’s boats landing at town. A Town Meeting and voted the boat should not land at New Wharf, not [at] Nick’s Cove, but at Peach’s Point or Redstone Cove. I hear that Will Allen is brought home sick.

28 This day much snow. Wind easterly.

29 This day more moderate. This morning died W. Allen of a fever. Sailed schooner [Britannia, George] Rapell, for Virginia.

30 This day some more moderate. Delivered a burgee to Colonel Lee’s for brig St. Paul. I settled with Mr. Joshua Foster on account of Captain Skillings, to paid young [ ] Whitmarsh 12 shilling lawful on account of his brother. This evening wife and self attended Will Allen funeral. Sailed Jo[seph] Bubier [in the schooner William] for Europe [Lisbon].

31 This day received and fixed a jibstay for Colonel Lee, schooner Pelican. We hear Mrs. [Sam] Reed is quite ill at Cat Island.