January History in Fairhaven

 

JANUARY 1

1906 Construction of the original St. Joseph’s Church is completed.

1910 Henry DeW. H. Browne assumes proprietorship of the drugstore in the Phoenix building from Levi M. Snow.

1947 The Millicent Library reduces its operating hours from 76 a week to 63 a week.

1950 At the age of 76, William D. Champlin resigns from the position of Town Clerk/Treasuer.

1951 Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church on Park Avenue is dedicated.

JANUARY 2

1940 Leonard E. Pierce begins working at the National Bank of Fairhaven.

JANUARY 3

1841 At about noon on this cold Sunday, Herman Melville sails from Fairhaven in the whaleship Acushnet.

1888 Franklin B. Dexter Franklin Dexter, a descendant of John Cooke, in a lecture delivered to the Fairhaven Improvement Association, says of his Pilgrim ancestor, “his bones doubtless rest in the neglected if not forgotten burying-ground on this side of Oxford Village.” It is the earliest known suggestion that John Cooke may have been buried in what later became Cooke Memorial Park. This assertion, coming nearly 200 years after Cooke's death, has no primary documentation to back it up.

1899 Henry H. Rogers addresses the audience at the dedication of Mattapoisett’s Center School, which he donated to that town.

JANUARY 4

1847 The whaleship Omega , Israel Morey, captain, departs for the Indian Ocean on what will be a voyage of about 3½ years.

JANUARY 5

1744 The new meeting house at Head of the River (Acushnet) is dedicated. It stands next to the burial ground, west of Parting Ways.

1993 State Senator William Q. “Biff” MacLean Jr. retires from public office. He was first elected to serve on the Fairhaven School Committee in 1960 and was elected a state representative later the same year.’

2006 Weekly publication of the Fairhaven Neighborhood News is begun by Elizabeth “Beth” David, to replace the Free Press, which had ceased publication three weeks earlier. 

JANUARY 6

1879 The Fairhaven STAR reports that the Acushnet River is frozen enough that people are crossing from Oxford Village to Pope’s Island.

1903 The parish house of the Unitarian Memorial Church is dedicated.

JANUARY 7

1862 At 7:30 p.m. the main building of the Empire Rock Oil Company, owned by William P. Handy and Barnabas Ewer Jr., is consumed by fire.

2021 Town Administrator Mark Rees retires after serving in the position for five years.

JANUARY 8

1897 The official dedication ceremony for Oxford School is held at the Town Hall, with Superintendent of Schools E.B. Gray serving as master of ceremonies.

JANUARY 9

1823 The First Congregational Church votes to ask the Reverend William Gould to serve as acting pastor.

1832 In what is said to be the first instance of a building in Fairhaven Village being destroyed by fire, Noah C. Sturtevant loses a barn and its contents estimated to be worth about $1,000.

1873 Alfred Manchester is installed as the pastor of the Unitarian Church.

JANUARY 10

1832 Henry Huttleston, Fairhaven businessman and grandfather of Henry H. Rogers, dies at the age of 64.

1940 Fairhaven High School principal Chester M. Downing announces that Fairhaven will cease athletic competitions with Fall River’s Durfee High School because of “a series of unpleasant experiences.”

2020 "Junkie," a short film written and directed by Fairhaven native and URI student Alyssa Botelho, is screened in the auditorium of the Town Hall.

JANUARY 11

1832 A meeting of subscribers to build a Christian meeting house is held at the home of Warren Delano.

1890 The town votes to accept the layout for a road from Main Street to the proposed terminus of the Coggeshall Street Bridge.

1968 In the Phoenix Press, 38-year-old Channing Hayward announces his candidacy for the office of Fairhaven Planning Board.

JANUARY 12

1706 Jabez Delano, son of Jonathan and Amy (Hatch) Delano, is born.

1923 The American Theatre opens on Main Street opposite Oxford School. The new brick building has store fronts and the theater on the first floor and offices and a large hall above.

1932 Bradford W. Luther becomes a director of the National Bank of Fairhaven.

JANUARY 13

1647 Seth Pope is born to Thomas and Sarah (Jenney) Pope.

JANUARY 14

1849 The members of the First Congregational Church vote to allow members of the defunct Centre Congregational Church to worship with them.

1890 Frank “Eben” Brown is born to Frank and Hannah (Richardson) Brown. He will serve as a selectman, state representative and Postmaster.

1976 Mrs. Mary D. Silveira, 67, is murdered in her home at 235 Green Street. The case is never solved.

JANUARY 15

1718 Susanna Jenney, daughter of Hannah and Samuel Jenney Jr., marries Stephen West Jr., son of Stephen and Mercy (Cooke) West.

1818 Joseph Bates Jr., who will go on to found the Seventh Day Advent Church, is married to Prudence M. Nye. The ceremony is performed by A. Wheeler.

JANUARY 16

1888 Dr. George Atwood, highly esteemed village M.D. and first president of the Fairhaven Library Association, dies.

JANUARY 17

1898 Warren Delano II, a China Trader and the grandfather of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, dies at the age of 88. He is buried in River-Side Cemetery, which he created in 1850.

1945 Scottish born florist Peter Murray dies at the age of 75. Murray had been the gardener for Walter P. Winsor and developed a carnation that was chosen by Queen Mary as her coronation flower. He later established greenhouses on Washington Street.

1960 Magician/mentalist Jon Stetson is born.

JANUARY 18

1792  Ruby (Eldredge) Merrihew, widow of Stephen Merrihew and great grandmother of Henry H. Rogers, married her second husband, Jethro Allen.

JANUARY 19

1831 The whaleship Albion, John E. Coggeshall, captain, departs on a voyage to the South Atlantic.

1946 At 10:15 p.m., fire alarm box 53 is sounded, summoning firefighters to the blaze that will destroy the first Centre Methodist Church building.

JANUARY 20

1841 Abbie Palmer Gifford is born to Capt. Peleg and Amelia (Hammond) Gifford. She will become the first Mrs. Henry H. Rogers.

1904 Marine artist Charles H. Gifford, age 66, dies at his home on Lafayette Street.

1929 John I. Bryant, selectmen for a total of 25 years during three different periods beginning in 1887, dies at the age of 79.

JANUARY 21

1729 The Reverend Samuel Hunt, the first ordained minister of the Church of Christ at Head of the River, dies at the age of 48.

1858 The Fairhaven Branch Railroad station at Ferry Street is destroyed by fire.

JANUARY 22

1936 Seven women move into the Kings Daughters Home for the Aged on Center Street, which has been donated by the estate of George Howland Cox. In 1969 the home will be renamed Bradford-Russell.

JANUARY 23

1888 Benjamin F. Beetle sells the lot now numbered 103 Green Street to David N. Kelley, who will build a house there.

2005 A blizzard drops about 30 inches of snow on the region, closing schools for a week.

JANUARY 24

1996 A public meeting is held at Town Hall to outline the proposal for a Poverty Point Historic District. The proposal is later withdrawn because of opposition from property owners in the neighborhood.

JANUARY 25

2005 Norman H. Reid, caretaker of River-Side Cemetery for more than 50 years, dies at the age of 96. Mr. Reid inherited the position from his father Hay B. Reid and handed it down to his son Peter.

JANUARY 26

1852 Classes are held for the first time at the original Fairhaven High School, which the town started in the former Methodist Church building on Main Street.

JANUARY 27

1902 A lavish dinner hosted by Henry H. Rogers celebrates the 50th anniversary of the original Fairhaven High School.

1845 The Whitfield Building, 54 Main Street, originally the home of the Princess Theatre, is purchased by American Legion Post 166, which had been meeting at that location for several years.

JANUARY 28

1850 Former privateer and veteran of the Battle of Bunker Hill, Capt. Noah Stoddard, dies at the age of 95.

JANUARY 29

1840 Henry H. Rogers is born to Rowland and Mary (Huttleston) Rogers.

1883 The Fairhaven Improvement Association is founded with Edward A. Dana as its first president.

1912 The memorial monument to Henry H. Rogers, installed on the median strip at Huttleston Avenue and Main Street, is dedicated in a ceremony held at Town Hall.

JANUARY 30

1873 Millicent Gifford Rogers, the third daughter of Henry H. and Abbie Rogers, is born.

1893 On what would have been the late Millicent Rogers’ twentieth birthday, the Millicent Library is dedicated in her memory.

JANUARY 31

1872 The new railroad locomotive “Charles L. Wood,” also known as No. 385, arrives in town.

1926 Galen W. Hill ends his service as Librarian of the Millicent Library.

2000 Bernard R. Roderick retires from the position of Superintendent of Schools.


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