Benjamin first built the Curtis mills on the Third Herring Brook. [Samuel Deane, "History of Scituate, Massachusetts, from its First Settlement to 1831."]
The Curtis Mills on the Third Herring Brook were built in part as early as 1688, when Benjamin built a sawmill, and later a grist mill. They were known at one time as the Clapp and Curtis Mills, Constant Clapp having been part owner. Served as Selectman. Lived in the house on the corner of Main and Union Streets, Hanover.
"Honey has always been a luxury of the wilderness. Benjamin found bee trees in the forest. These were generally hollow lindens or butternuts, and were easily felled. He would not only secure the honey, generally a hundred pounds, but would capture the bees and hive them for domestic purposes. If the queen was secured, the swarm would settle down to work in the old cone-shaped straw hive, and add largely to the home comforts. In those early days at least half of the settlers had a few swarms, and occasionally some one would accumulate a hundred. After the honey had been extracted it was kept in jars, and the wax was melted. This constituted one of the first articles of commerce from a frontier home. He would climb to the top of a forty-foot ladder and brush a swarm into a pan and come down with it, unstung. But woe to the mortal whom the bees by some instinct failed to like! Not recognizing the Mosaic Sabbath, they would swarm when the family ought to be at church. It was necessary to leave one at home, who in case the bees came out hung a sheet from the chamber window. The good man at church was kept from going asleep over the thirty-ninthlies by looking out for the possible flag. Every swarm was worth ten bushels of corn."
[Taken from: Richard Silvester of Weymouth, Massachusetts, and some of his Descendants by Albert Henry Silvester.]
Silvester, Albert Henry, "Richard Silvester of Weymouth, Mass., and Some of his Descendants," New England Historical and Genealogical Register volume LXXXV (Boston, MA: 1931), p. 263.
- Baptized in the Second Church of Scituate on March 21, 1666/7.
- Married Benjamin Curtis, son of William Curtis, in Scituate, 1689.
- "Living in 1715, when she nursed her mother during her last sickness"
Resided on Main Street, near the Curtis Schoolhouse.
Occupation: Carpenter
Joshua, known as 'carpenter,' constable 1672, and selectman 1682 and 1691. He resided on Frot Hill St
History of the Town of Hingham, Massachusetts, Town of Hingham, 1893.
On 25 Apr 1705 when Solomon was 22, he married Hannah Stetson, in Scituate, MA, granddaughter to Cornet Robert Stetson.
["Scituate Births, marriages, and deaths," transcribed by George Ernest Bowman, Mayflower Descendant, various volumes.]
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