Teddy Roosevelt, a grandstanding performer with plenty ofย rhetoric but fewer accomplishments, campaigned from the caboose of a train in New England.
Author: Gordon Harris
Death in a Snowstorm, December 1, 1722
On December 1, 1722, Daniel Rogers was returning to Ipswichย from a court case in Hampton and took a wrong turnย that led deep into Salisbury marshes. Hisย body was found a few days laterย near Salisbury beach. Suspicion fell on one Moses Gatchel but no charges were filed, there being a lack of solid evidence.
Awful Calamities: the Shipwrecks of December, 1839
Fortitude, Rectitude and Attitude. Remembering the Life and Times of Ipswich Police Sergeant Frank Geist
Yankee Dictionary; a Compendium of Useful and entertaining Expressions Indigenous to New England
Summer Street
Nancy Weare
The Boy Who Fell Beneath the Ice
The Rev. Joseph Dana served the Second Congregational Church at the South Green from 1765 until his death in 1827 at age 85. Rev, Dana's tombstone in the Old South Cemetery reads: "In memory of the Rev Joseph Dana D.D., for sixty-two years, Minister of the South Church. His protracted life was eminently devoted to… Continue reading The Boy Who Fell Beneath the Ice
What Our Ancestors Ate
Ipswich Woman Survived Two Train Crashes on February 28, 1956!
Play Ball! Bialek Park
Ipswich in the Great Depression
David Tenney Kimball, Pastor of First Church, 1805 – 1855
The Spectre Ship of Salem
Meeting House Green Plaque Commemorates Lafayette’s Visit to Ipswich
The recently installed plaque on N. Main St. commemorates the visit by the Marquis de Lafayette to Ipswich in 1824 courtesy of the Lafayette Trail organization and the William G. Pomeroy Foundation. When the First Provincial Congress met in Salem Massachusetts on Friday, October 7, 1774, Ipswich was represented by General Michael Farley. At 56… Continue reading Meeting House Green Plaque Commemorates Lafayette’s Visit to Ipswich















