192 THE RETROSPECT OF THE YEAR. 



was considered one of the best business men who ever 

 lived in Danvers. 



His mother, Hannah Kimball, born in Boxford, March 

 23, 1787, was a daughter of Enoch and Huldah (Gould) 

 Kimball, a farmer. 



Formerly, for many years, Mr. A. W. Warren carried 

 on the wholesale grain and retail grocery business in the 

 brick block at the Port. Some years since, having realized 

 a competency, he retired from active business. He mar- 

 ried, Nov. 24, 1844, Hannah P. Woodbury, who with their 

 only daughter, Anna Phippen Warren, survives. 



Like his father he kept aloof from the arena of politics, 

 and had not held any public office. The business relations 

 of the father and son with the public had been such that 

 scarcely any persons were more widely known or more 

 respected and honored in the county of Essex than Jonas 

 Warren and his son, the subject of this notice. Their 

 strict integrity secured the confidence of all, and they have 

 left to their family a legacy of an untarnished name. 



Admitted to membership, July 17, 1867. 



WILLIAM Low WESTON, born in Brooklyn, Pa., 

 April 17, 1817, died in Danvers, Mass., Feb. 1, 1889. 

 His father, Samuel Weston, removed from Brooklyn, 

 Conn., to Pennsylvania. The town in Pennsylvania was 

 named from the town in Connecticut. His mother, Julia 

 Horton, was daughter of Foster Horton, whose father was 

 a Presbyterian minister of Bottle Hill, N. J. He received 

 his early education in Baltimore, Md., and later, being of 

 studious habits, he pursued his studies by himself. He 

 came from Boston to Danvers in 1841, and was appointed 

 cashier of the Village, afterwards the First National, Bank, 

 and succeeded Samuel B. Buttrick, the first cashier ; he 

 held this position until 1884, when he was succeeded by 



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