In 1641, the General Court established four quarter-annual courts kept yearly by the magistrates of Ipswich & Salem, two to be held at Salem & the other two at Ipswich, with jurisdiction in all matters not reserved to the Court of Assistants. Read stories of Ipswich residents who faced the magistrates.
The Keeping of Cattle on Jeffreys Neck
The Hovey Clan and Knowlton’s Close, a 19th Century Neighborhood
Nathaniel Ward (1578-1652)
Measuring Time–by an Hourglass
Old Roads and Bridges of Newbury and Newburyport
Flight from Rooty Plain
The Cold Friday of January 19, 1810
A visit to the Whipple House with Paul Valcour & Gordon Harris
Arthur Wesley Dow’s Images of Ipswich
George Dexter’s Early Photos of Ipswich
The Peat Meadows
Lieutenant Ruhama Andrews and the 1775 Battle of Quebec
Smallpox
One of the most progressive citizens of Ipswich, Dr. John Manning opened a practice in 1760, and began inoculating members of his family for smallpox, incurring the wrath of the Town. An epidemic of smallpox spread through Boston during the British occupation of the city at the beginning of the Revolutionary War.















