Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Massachusetts Genealogy

United States Massachusetts  Plymouth  Bridgewater

Brief History
This area was established as a part of Duxbury in 1645 by purchase from the Native Americans by 54 proprietors - most who did not settle there. Bridgewater was created on 3 June 1656 from Duxbury in Plymouth Colony. The town was placed in Plymouth County when counties were formed in 1685. For a brief time, the town was part of the Dominion of New England from 1686 to 1689. The town is still in Plymouth County, though was in limbo, until the "Colony" was merged with Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1691 that became the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

== Historical Data == Associated names Bridgewater at times has been called Duxburrow Plantation, Foords Farm, Hockomock, Ketiticut, New Plantation, Nunketest, and Titicut.

Village or section names include Bridgewater Iron Works, Bridgewater Junction, Dublin, Japan, Nippenicket Park, Paper Mill Village, Pratt Town, Scotland, South Bridgewater, Sprague's Hill, Stanley, State Farm, and Titicut. Border changes Top of Page

Town Histories
Works written on the town include:


 * Nahum Mitchell, History of the Early Settlement of Bridgewater, in Plymouth County, Massachusetts, including an extensive Family Register (Boston, 1840; rep. Bridgewater, Mass., 1897). This is an important early work on town history and genealogy. The latter is three-quarters of the 400-page book. Digital versions at Internet Archive, Google Books, and on Ancestry ($). WorldCat (Other Libraries); (orig. book) or  (var. rep.).


 * The family sketches include the families: Alden, Aldrich, Alger, Allen, Ames, Angiers, Bacon, Bailey, Barber, Barrell, Barrett, Bartlett, Bass, Bassett, Bates, Battles, Beal, Bearce, Belcher, Benson, Bessee, Bicknell, Bisbee, Blanchard, Blossom, Bolton, Bonney, Bowditch, Bosworth, Bradley, Brett, Brown, Bryant, Buck, Bowker, Burr, Butterfield, Byram, Carr, Carver, Cary, Caswell, Chamberlain, Chandler, Cheesman, Chipman, Churchill, Cleveland, Clift, Cobb, Cole, Colwell, Conant, Cook, Copeland, Corthrell, Cowing, Crafts, Crane, Crocker, Crooker, Cross, Curtis, Daniels, Davenport, Dawes, Dickerman, Dike, Downie, Drake, Dumphrey, Dunbar, Dyer, Eaton, Eddy, Edson, Egerton, Erskin, Faxon, Fearing, Field, Fillebrown, Fitzgerald, Flynn, Fobes, Freelove, French, Fuller, Fullerton, Gannett, Gay, Gilbert, Gilmore, Godfrey, Gould, Groves, Gurney, Haines, Hale, Hall, Hanks, Hamlin, Hanmer, Harden, Hamlin, Harlow, Harris, Hartwell, Harvey, Hatch, Hathaway, Hayden, Hayford, Hayward, Hearsey, Heiford, Hegene, Henry, Hewett, Higgins, Hill, Hobart, Holden, Holloway, Holman, Holmes, Hooper, Horton, How, Howard, Hudson, Hyde, Inglee, Jackson, Jacob, Jameson, Jenkins, Jennings, Johnson, Jones, Joslyn, Keen, Keith, Keyser, Kiff, King, Kingman, Kinsley, Knapp, Knowlton, Landers, Latham, Lathrop / Lothrop, Lawrence, Lawson, Lasell / Lazell, Leach, Lendall, Leonard, Lincoln, Lindsay, Littlefield, Loring, Lovell, Loveridge, Lowden, Manly, May, McBride, Mehurin, Mitchell, Monro / Munroe, Moore, Morse, Morton, Muxam / Maxim, Nash, Newbury, Newell, Newhall, Niles, Norton, Noyes, Orcutt, Orr, Osborne, Packard, Parris, Perkins, Perry, Pettingill, Phillips, Phinney, Pierce, Pinson / Pincin, Pool, Pope, Porter, Powers, Pratt, Price, Prior / Pryor, Ramsdell, Ratchford, Rathburn, Read / Reed, Rea, Reynolds, Richards, Richardson, Rickard, Rider / Ryder, Ripley, Robbins, Robinson, Rogers, Russell, Ryon, Sanger, Sawin, Seabury, Sealy / Seeley, Sears, Sever, Shaw, Shelly, Sherman, Shepard, Shurtliff, Silvester / Sylvester, Skinner, Smith, Snell, Snow, Soper, Sorein, Soule, Southworth, Sprague, Standish, Staples, Starr, Stetson, Storrs, Sturtevant, Swift, Taylor, Thaxter, Thayer, Thomas, Thompson, Tilden, Tilson, Tirrell, Tolman, Tompkins, Torrey, Trask, Tribou, Trow, Turner, Vail, Vaughn, Vickery, Vinton, Wade, Waldo, Wales, Ward, Warren, Washburn, Waterman, Wentworth, Wesley, West, Weston, Wharton, White, Whiting, Whitman, Whitmarsh, Wilbor, Williams, Willis, Wilmarth, Winslow, Wood, Woodward, Woodwiss, Wormal, and Young. Next is more brief family sketches of some original proprietors of Bridgewater, but were never residents. These sketches include Allerton, Barnes, Bartlett, Bonney, Bradford, Brewster, Brown, Carver, Chandler, Church, Clark, Collier, Cushing, Cushman, Delano, Eaton, Faunce, Ford, Hall, Hobart, Howland, Hunt, Irish, Loring, Merrick, Morton, Nash, Partridge, Paybody / Peabody, Pierce, Prince, Sampson, Simmons, Soule, Wadsworth, West, Weston, and Winslow.

Top of Page
 * Records of John Cary, the first town clerk of Bridgewter, Mass., from 1656 to 1681 (Brockton, Mass., 1889), 14 pp. Digital version at Internet Archive.
 * Bridgewater Normal Association, Brief Sketch of the Pioneers in Establishing the First State Normal School in America [and] A Brief Sketch of the First Principals of the State Normal Schools, 1839-'40 (S.l., 1907), unpaginated. No digital version.
 * A Coppying Out of ye Olde Recordes Beginning With ye 4th Chh of Christ in Bridgewater - 1740 ([Brockton, Mass.], 1980), 837 + [80] pp. WorldCat (Other Libraries); . These are the verbatim transcript of the Fourth Parish Church of Bridgewater that became the First Parish Church of North Bridgewater in 1821 when that part of town broken off to form a separate town and that town was renamed Brockton in 1874.
 * Bridgewater Wikipedia page.

Vital Records
The town's vital records are available in many locations: Original records Published records
 * Bridgewater Town Clerk's Office 64 Central Square Bridgewater MA 02324 Phone 508-697-0921
 * Microfilm of the originals created by the Family History Library, 1656-1853, ; 1843-1905,.
 * Microfiche of the originals created by Archive Publishing covering town records that included vital records and a few other town records, 1641-1908, on 176 fiche. Part of Massachusetts, Town Vital Collections, 1620–1988 at Ancestry ($); Index
 * Official state copy of vital records started in 1841. See the guide to the state for more information here.
 * Vital Records of Bridgewater, Massachusetts, to the year 1850 (Boston, 1916), 2 v. These volumes were microfilmed by the Family History Library, ; abstracted online at Ray's Place; and in digital versions at Internet Archive (v. 1 and v. 2), Google books (v. 1 and v. 2), and Ancestry ($). In a database at American Ancestors ($). WorldCat (Other Libraries);.


 * This includes, in part, church records from the Unitarian Church (C.R.1), Trinity Church (C.R.2), Central Square Congregational Church (C.R.3), Scotland Trinitarian Congregational Church (C.R.4), and Church of the New Jerusalem (C.R.5). Deaths are included from Mt. Prospect Cem. (G.R.1), Pratt-town Cem. (G.R.2), Cherry Street or Harlow Cem. (G.R.3), Conant Street Cem. (G.R.4), Hillside Cem. (G.R.5), Scotland Graveyard (G.R.6), Old Graveyard (G.R.7), Alden or Vernon Street Graveyard in Titicut (G.R.8), Keith or South Street Graveyard in Titicut (G.R.9), Trinity Church Graveyard (G.R.10), Japan Graveyard (G.R.11), Great Woods Graveyard (G.R.12), and Small Pox Graveyards (G.R. 13).

Top of Page
 * "Bridgewater Records" in the New England Historical and Genealogical Register, 53 [1899]: 246. Private marriage record book, 1777, likely included in town records.
 * "Timothy Fobes His Book" in Pilgrim Notes and Queries, 2 [1914]: 152-154. Records from 1747 to 1803 (bulk 1774-1776).
 * "James Cary His Book 1720" in the Mayflower Descendant, 32 [1934]: 156-162. From an account book in the West Bridgewater Historical Society with records to 1786.
 * Missing from the published vital records are six marriages from county court records for 1692 and 1693 published in Pilgrim Notes and Queries, 3 [1915]: 120-122 at 122.

Cemeteries
The following is a list of cemeteries in present-day Bridgewater. Remember that the "old" town included present-day East Bridgewater, West Bridgewater, and Brockton. For location of cemeteries, see PlymouthColony website. For more details regarding these cemeteries, see the state guide under cemeteries for books on the subject.


 * 1) Alden's Bridge or Great Woods Cemetery, 1815. (A) Transcription online.
 * 2) Auburn Street Cemetery, 18th century.
 * 3) Benson Town Cemetery, 19th century.
 * 4) Cherry Street / Harlow Cemetery, 1826. (B) Transcription online.
 * 5) Conant Street Cemetery, 1821. (B) Transcription online.
 * 6) First / South Parish Cemetery, 1716. (A)
 * 7) Hillside Cemetery, 1813. (B) Transcription online.
 * 8) Japan Graveyard, 1766. (B) Transcription online.
 * 9) Jennings Hill Cemetery, 1750. (A, B [as Old Graveyard]) Transcription online.
 * 10) Mount Prospect Cemetery, 1842. (B)
 * 11) Orange Street Cemetery, 1825. Transcription online.
 * 12) Pine Street Cemetery, 1833.
 * 13) Pratt Town Burial Ground, 1828. (B)
 * 14) Roman Catholic Cemetery, 1867.
 * 15) St. Thomas Aquinas Roman Catholic Burial Ground, 1854.
 * 16) Scotland Burial Ground, 1753. (A, B) Transcription online.
 * 17) Small Pox Cemetery, 1785. (A, B) Transcription online.
 * 18) South Street / Keith Cemetery, 1756. (A, B) Transcription online.
 * 19) Titicut / Great Woods Cemetery, 1793. (A, B)
 * 20) Trinity Episcopal Church Cemetery, 1748. (A, B) Transcription online.
 * 21) Vernon Street / Alden Cemetery, 1751. (A, B) Transcription online.

Abstracts of the cemeteries above are marked and keyed to: (A). William Latham, Epitaphs in Old Bridgewater, Massachusetts (Bridgewater, Mass., 1882) -- a digital version at Google Books. (B). Vital Records of Bridgewater, Massachusetts, to the year 1850 (Boston, 1916) [see links above under Vital Records]. Top of Page

Churches
The following is a list of churches established in town in order of organization date (if known) and condition of records in the 1889 survey if listed.

Top of Page
 * 1) First Congregational Church (now First Parish Unitarian Universalist Church), 1716, records good.
 * 2) Trinity Protestant Episcopal Church, 1747, records good.
 * 3) Bridgewater Congregational Church (now [www.csccuccbridgewaterma.org Central Square Congregational Church] [United Church of Christ]), 1821, records good.
 * 4) New Jerusalem Church [Swedenborgian], 1833, records good.
 * 5) Scotland Congregational Church (now Scotland Trinitian Church), 1836, records good.
 * 6) Saint Thomas Aquinas's Roman Catholic Church, 1855, older records to 1908 at Archdiocese of Boston Archives.
 * 7) Methodist Episcopal Church (now Gammons Memorial United Methodist Church), 1874, records good.
 * 8) Christian Science Church, no date.
 * 9) Faith Chapel Assemblies of God, no date.
 * 10) First Baptist Church, no date.
 * 11) South Shore Community Church, 1994.
 * 12) Trinity Covenant Church, 1983.

Newspapers
Top of Page
 * 1) Plymouth County Republican (first as We, the People and Old Colony Press, then Bridgewater Republican and Old Colony Press), 1832-1837.
 * 2) Bridgewater Banner, 1862-aft. 1866.
 * 3) Bridgewater Independent, 1884-present, available at NewsLibrary ($) from 13 June 2007 to present (search free, pay for articles).
 * 4) Bridgewater Townsman, 1985-present.

Libraries and Historical Societies
The following is list of research facilities in town:

Bridgewater Public Library 15 South St. Bridgewater MA 02324 Phone 508-697-3331

Maxwell Library Bridgewater State College 10 Shaw Rd. Bridgewater MA 02324 Phone 508-531-1394

Old Bridgewater Historical Society 162 Howard St. West Bridgewater MA 02379 Phone 508-559-1510 Thanks to the Massachusetts Society of Mayflower Descendants for their contributions to this page