Treasures from the New Hampshire Room #5

All Things Sanborn and and Sanbornton!

In this New Hampshire room installment we’ll look at special items related to the Sanborns and Sanbornton.

We have two excellent genealogies of the Samborne, or Sanborn, family – our town’s founders:

Sanborn, Elmer Corliss. A Collection of Sanborn Family Genealogies 1600-1993. Baltimore: Gateway Press Inc., 1994.

Sanborn, V. C. Genealogy of the family of Samborne or Sanborn in England and America. 1194-1898. Concord, NH: The Rumford Press, 1899. (2 copies)

The Samborne family coat of arms

The Samborne family coat of arms

Together these two resources provide more than either could alone. The first is quite recent and covers about a hundred years further toward the present date. The more modern writing still may also be more accessible for current readers. The second book, however, is remarkable in scope – going much further back than many other American genealogies to extensively trace English history.

For those looking to stay to more local, there’s the 1882 Runnels History of Sanbornton – still the go-to source for historical information about the town. This two-book masterpiece contains one volume of history and a second volume of genealogies for prominent town families. The History‘s author, Moses Thornton Runnels, Reverend of the Congregational Church at the time, did other writing – albeit lesser known – than his history.

Moses Thornton Runnels

Moses Thornton Runnels

 

For those interested in more of his works and more about the man behind Sanbornton’s chronicle, there’s A Genealogy of Runnels and Reynolds Families in America; Record and Brief Memorials of the Earliest Ancestors, so far as known, and of many of their descendants, bearing the same and other names. This was written in 1873, almost ten years before Runnels’ magnum opus.  

Treasures from the New Hampshire Room #4

Gathered Sketches compiled by Francis Chase – 1856 

From The Early History of New Hampshire And Vermont; containing Vivid and Interesting Accounts Of A Great Variety of the Adventures Of Our Forefathers, And of other Incidents of Olden Time.

Title page

Title page

 

An old book cover!

An old book cover!

Published in Claremont, New Hampshire, Gathered Sketches contains a selection of biographical portraits and adventures from the early days of New Hampshire and Vermont (generally the early 1700s). The book also has a useful introduction, which details the beginnings of these two states and their inter-connectivity. 

By far the most stunning feature of the work is the woodcut illustrations though, which earn it this spotlight.

010

014

The book’s text is preoccupied with tales of Indian attacks and captured colonists, and Native Americans are almost universally painted in an unsympathetic light. However, one must remember that this piece dates to 1856, four years still to the Civil War and a year when later icons like Booker T. Washington, Sigmund Freud, Nikola Tesla and Woodrow Wilson were just born. Taken in that light, the book is valuable as a tool to show how Americans at that time view their past history.   

Treasures from the New Hampshire Room #3

Picturesque New England

Boston & Maine Railroad – 1908

004From the title page: “Published With A View Of Interesting Those In Search Of An Attractive And Healthful Place To Spend The Season Or Vacation Period. Issued By The Passenger Department Boston And Maine Railroad, C. M. Burt, General Passenger Agent.” 

Produced by the Boston and Maine Railroad company, this book was intended as a tourism device to drum up demand for locations on the railroad’s route. The book is composed entirely of plates of different scenic locations, and each is accompanied by a caption, giving the name and location for each photo, as well as how to reach the area via the railroad. The “New England,” title is slightly misleading, as the book is split between photographs from Massachusetts and New Hampshire, with one final image of Vermont – not providing as broad a cross section of the region as the publication aims. However, these postcard-like pictures provide a fascinating peek back in time at popular tourist destinations now only a cutting-edge train-ride away for Boston elite.

In The Cathedral Woods Intervale, New Hampshire Located on Conway Branch, Eastern Division, Boston and Maine R. R.

In The Cathedral Woods
Intervale, New Hampshire
Located on Conway Branch, Eastern Division, Boston and Maine R. R.

The "Tip-Top House" Mount Washington, New Hampshire Reached from Fabyan or Bretton Woods, on Whtie Mountains Division, Boston and Maine R. R.  Connection at Base Station with Mount Washington Railway

The “Tip-Top House”
Mount Washington, New Hampshire
Reached from Fabyan or Bretton Woods, on White Mountains Division, Boston and Maine R. R.
Connection at Base Station with Mount Washington Railway

Birthplace of Horace Greeley Amherst, New Hampshire Located on Manchester and Milford Branch, Southern Division, Boston and Maine R.R.

Birthplace of Horace Greeley
Amherst, New Hampshire
Located on Manchester and Milford Branch, Southern Division, Boston and Maine R.R.

Nameplate

Nameplate

Other than the New Hampshire State Library, we are the only library in the state in possession of one of these copies. So, if you’re doing research or just want to take a peek at cool old photographs, be sure to keep us in mind!