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A carpenter and house joiner and a descendant of one of the early post-Mayflower settlers of Plymouth Colony, Artemas Cushman was born in Middleborough, Mass., on April 7, 1781, the son of William and Susanna Cushman. As a young man, Cushman relocated to the central Vermont town of Braintree, where on July 10, 1803, he was married to another transplant from the South Shore, Phebe Spear (1783-1852). The couple raised a large family that included four sons -- Holmes (1804-1874), Artemas (b.1806), William (b. 1809), and Earl (1828-1910) -- and five daughters: Content (1811-1889), Phebe (b. 1815), Philinda (1818-1891), Emily (b. 1822), and Minora (1825-1903). Cushman died in Braintree on April 29, 1864, at the age of 83.
Artemas Cushman, Jr., became a widely respected figure in the region. Living in the portion of Braintree that was separated out as the new town of Rochester in 1824, Cushman earned a commission as brigade inspector in the Vermont militia in 1828, eventually rising to the rank of Major General. A justice of the peace from 1835-1851, he represented the town of Warren in the state house in 1835, 1836, and 1842, and was a state senator from Windsor County in 1846 and 1847.
Cushman's small ledger is a fine record of the day-to-day work of an antebellum carpenter in rural Vermont. Part daybook and part account book, and often lacking in detail, Cushman's entries document the work of a skilled artisan engaged in constructing or repairing houses, windmills, cider mills, bake houses, sheds, and barns, and at least one school. Occasionally, he applied his skills to smaller projects such as mending a wheel or making a wagon body or coffin, and less frequently he was compensated for manual labor (haying or planting). In a cash-poor economy, Cushman was typically repaid through an exchange of labor, or through commodities such as brandy, grain, or pork. Periodically, Cushman and his debtors co-signed notes formalizing the settlement of their accounts.
Cushman's account book includes the names of other early settlers in Braintree, including Maj. William Ford, Henry Brackett, Capt. Joseph Spear, and Samuel Lamb. Around the turn of the twentieth century, the volume was used as a scrapbook, leaving a few pages obscured with pasted-in newspaper clippings.
The collection is open for research.
Acquired from unidentified source, Aug. 1996.
Processed by I. Eliot Wentworth, Aug. 2014.
On Cushman, see: