Sanbornton is located in the fork of the Pemigewasset and Winnipesaukee rivers, the town was first called Crotchtown (no joke). It was incorporated in 1770, and has the charming character typical of an old New England Town.
He wed Mary McKinnon in Laconia (near Lowell, Mass) on June 24, 1896, and they moved north of the border to a small town in Canada, Dauphin in Manitoba province. Mary was born in Quebec which may have helped prompt the move to a newly founded community so far away from New Hampshire. Dauphin had been settled in 1883 with just a few settlers, then the railroad reached the area in 1896 and settlement increased. This is the time when the Smiths arrived.
Over the next few years they had three children, Marguerite, Vinton, and Russell. But the family returned to New Hamphire in 1905. The children lived with the Aunt Hope and Grandmother (Marshall's mother) in Laconia around 1910, Marshall relocated to Lowell, Mass. What happened to Mary, I have not yet discover (stay tuned).
In 1908 Marshall married again. Her name was Alice Deady. They moved to Billerica, Mass (town of about 5000 in 1920 near Lowell) and farmed for many years. The photo above is of Marshall about 1940 in his field of rye. I have a note that he and Alice ran a summer camp for children for years. He passed away sometime between 1941 and 1949.
The Bay Meeting House in Sanbornton built 1836. Pictured here about 1910.
Relationship Key:
Me ---> Mom ---> Marguerite Smith ---> Vinton Marshall Smith ---> Marshall B. Smith
Relationship Key:
Me ---> Mom ---> Marguerite Smith ---> Vinton Marshall Smith ---> Marshall B. Smith
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