46 NEW HAMPSHIRE AGRICULTURE. 



inhabitant, with his family — twelve acres fenced, mowed and 

 ploughed. 



William White. No house frame ready — three acres 

 ploughed — that's all. 



Nicholas White. Frame raised — possessed by Call, an 

 inhabitant there. 



Thomas Wilcomb. He had a house built, and had a man 

 there. 



William Whittier. No house nor inhabitant. 



Edward Winn. He had a house up not finished. 



John Wright. He had a house almost finished — an inhab- 

 itant. 



Ammi Ruhamah Wise. He had a house built and inhabited. 



David Wood. He had a house and a man on the spot — 

 ten acres fenced, mowed and ploughed. 



Total 100. 



The above is the account of the present state and circum- 

 stances of the Plantation of Pennv Cook, taken there by as 

 careful a view as we could, and the best information of the 

 principal settlers and inhabitants. 



October 20, 1731 . 



John Wainwright. 

 Jno. Sanders. 



APPENDIX B. 



HON. TIMOTHY WALKER. 



Hon. Timothy Walker was the only son of Rev. Timothy 

 Walker, the first minister of Concord, N. H., where he was 

 born June 26, 1727, and died May 5th, 1S22. He bore in suc- 

 cession the titles of Reverend, Colonel, and Judge Timothy 

 Walker, but longest the latter; by which he was designated 

 for some forty-five years. He was graduated at Harvard Col- 

 lege in 1756, 1 studied theology and preached, more or less, for 



1 Up to the Revolution, or thereabouts, the names of the students of Harvard 

 College were entered upon its catalogues according to the presumed social 

 positions of the families to which they severally belonged and not alphabeti- 

 cally or according to scholarship. Judge Walker's name stands as the eighth 

 on the roll of his class of twenty-five ; while that of his father was the twenty- 

 eighth in a class of forty-five. 



