Thursday, June 4, 2026

William Morril of Moultonborough

Graves/Morrill Gravestone
Bean Cemetery
Moultonborough, NH



William & Betsey Morrill Gravemarker

William Morrill was born in Berwick, Maine 1765, son to William Morrill and Rachel Warren of Berwick.

As mentioned in other blog posts, all Morrill families appear to descend from one of two English immigrants:  

  1. John Morrell of Kittery, ME (1640-1723), a Quaker who came originally from Ireland, it is thought, and who was a founder of North Berwick.  Pretty much all Morrill/Morrill families coming from York County Maine (many of whom migrated to southern New Hampshire) descend from John.
  2. Abraham Morrill of Salisbury, MA (1615-1662), who came originally from Essex, England
As these folks migrated all over New England, the spelling of the names became interchangeable, so the way a current family member may be spelled doesn't necessarily directly tie to the founder that you may think.

Anyhow, William Morrell (1765-1852) was the 2nd great grandson of John Morrell of Kittery.  In November of 1781, at the very young age of 16, he enlisted in the Revolutionary War.  He enlisted in  Berwick, joining Captain William Mills' & Colonel John Brooks' 7th Massachusetts Regiment.  He served a period of two years, and was furloughed in June 1783 at West Point, but he stayed on a few more months and returned to Berwick in November of that year.

William's Regiment saw plenty of action in the Revolution:  the Battles of Saratoga, the Cherry Valley massacre, and the Sullivan Expedition.  However, William's pension paperwork declares that he himself saw no battles.  I wonder why, but he was 16 through 18 years old at the time.

When he returned to Berwick, he married Elizabeth Tiney of Berwick in 1784.  They immediately moved to Moultonborough, New Hampshire at this time.  Many folks from Southern Maine were leaving for cheaper southern New Hampshire after the Revolution.  Berwick's location directly on the Salmon Falls River made it a natural jumping-off point for exploring adjacent territories in Strafford County.  New towns were forming, land was abundant and cheap, and new jobs were being created.

William's little brother Jotham was 12 years old when William departed Berwick.  He would follow soon enough, as he appears living next door to his brother for the 1800 Moultonborough Census.

1800 US Census - Moultonborough, NH

William and Betsy had nine children in Moultonborough:
  1. Lydia
  2. Rachel 
  3. William (died young)
  4. Timothy
  5. Betsey
  6. William
  7. Charlotte
  8. Joseph
  9. Sewell

In 1818, William applied for pension, and he went through a pretty rigorous review process by the Town of Moultonborough.  His old military buddies, Jacob Hodsdon and Robard Tripp had to verify in sworn statements that they had served with him in the 7th Regiment.  In 1820, he finally got his pension.

William lived his remaining years in Moultonboro, and died in 1852, surviving his wife and five of his nine children.  For his final years, he was living with his daughter Charlotte and her husband Jacob Graves.

William and Betsy are buried at Bean Cemetery in Moultonboro, sharing a grave with the Graves family.  I still haven't figured out where his brother Jotham is buried - but he moved to Tuftonboro by 1850 and was listed as a pauper on the Census.  I doubt that the Graves family allowed William's brother to be buried there with William.



Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Niels Thim of Falmouth Maine

In my ongoing efforts to uncover the story of Marcus Timm of Hamburg, I will now write about a family who lived in Portland during the same time period as Marcus, that of German-born Niels Thim of Portland (and later Falmouth).  Was he perhaps a nephew to Marcus?  Is his father Peter one of the famed "brothers who never spoke again" who arrived on the ship with Marcus, as per oral legend (a legend which I've heard many other families speak of in their own families)?


Niels Pedersen Thim was born in 1852 in the town of Rødding in Schleswig-Holstein-Germany (which in 1920 became part of southern Denmark).  This would make him old enough to be a nephew to Marcus (who was born in 1824).  But that region is still about 90 minutes north of Hamburg, where I knew Marcus lived before sailing to America in 1848.  Niels and his family sailed to Maine, and landed in Portland on 18 Apr 1887.

His parents were Peter Thimm (born 1810, which is 14 years prior to Marcus....) and Ane Maria Vind.  Niels married Amelia Hilchenstelia, also of Germany, and they had eight children together:

NEILS THIM FAMILY
ABOUT 1920
LIKELY IN FALMOUTH, MAINE AT THEIR HOME ON WOODVILLE ROAD

1. Peter Nielsen Thims (1876-1973), born in Vejrup Parish in Ribe County, a part of Southern Denmark that was not ever part of Germany.  He spent his adult years in Portland, where he worked as a laborer, and was drafted into WWI.  He and his wife Edna had no children.

2. Wilhelmina "Minnie" Thim (1878-1926), also born in Vejrup, but spent her adult years briefly in Portsmouth, NH, but primarily in Westbrook, Maine, very close to the Danish community living there and going to Trinity Lutheran Church on Main Street.  She and her husband Neils Due had five children, only two of which survived to adulthood, and lived their lives in Westbrook.

3. Frederick Thims (1880-1957) - also born in Vejrup, grew up in Maine, had two wives, five children.  

4. August N. Thims (1883-after 1943) also born in Vejrup, twins with John, lived in Everett, worked as a motion picture operator at the Strand Theater in Malden, Massachusetts with his wife and three sons.  He was drafted into WWI, but also drafted into WWII at age 59 in 1942, and in 1943 he was still in Everett, doing the same work (his wife had died that year).  No trace of him thereafter.  Interestingly, for the 1900 Census, soon after arriving from Denmark, he wasn't living with the rest of his family in Falmouth - he living on Forest Avenue, listed as August THIM, at the "Home for Friendless Boys," a work farm.

5. John Niles Thims (1883-1968) also born in Vejrup, twins with August - grew up in Maine, and lived in Portland with his wife Ruby.  No children.

6. Christian Thims (1885-1964), born in Sonder, in Ribe, came to Maine with his family, but lived his life in Northern California, settling in Orinda.  Later in life, he went by "Chris Thim", was married and had one daughter, Rosalie Rogers.

7. Paul Alfred Thims (1889-1938), aka "Albert", born in Falmouth, Maine.

8. Christina Thims (1892-1961), born in Falmouth, Maine, and married George V Olmstead of Falmouth.  They had three children:  Hazel, Albert & Gladys.

Census records claim that these Timms migrated to the US in 1888.  This would be about 30 years after Marcus had arrived.

There was quite a bit of variation of this name over the years:

  • In 1860 Denmark Census, as a 9 year old boy, he and his family were named THIM.
  • In 1870 Denmark Census, his family was named THIIM.
  • In 1880 Denmark Census, his family was named THIM
  • In 1889, Minnie's marriage record said her name was THIMS.
  • In 1892, Niels' naturalization record has him listed as THIM.
  • In 1896, eldest son Peter was using the hame THIMS in Portland.
  • In 1898, Portland directory, Niels is now TIMM, and his son Peter is THIMS.  Discovering this spelling is what triggered my research on this.  They were living at 24 Summit in Portland at this time.
  • In 1900 Portland directory, Niels THIM was working as a "bung maker" at the Portland Cooperage Company on Commercial Street, while his son Peter was listed as a THIMS. 
  • In 1900 Falmouth Census records, they used THIM.  But Niels' oldest child Peter was living in Portland under the name of THIMS.
  • In the birth records of Christina's children in 1917 and 1918, however, Christina was using the surname THIMS.  
  • On the gravestone, erected in 1922, they were using THIMS.
  • In Christina's 1961 obituary, her parents were named THIMS.
  • In a 2000 obituary of Christina's daughter Gladys named her mother as a TIMMS,
Niels died in Portland of acute edema of the lungs.  He died with several descendants in the Greater Portland area, as well as the suburbs of Boston.  I wonder if any of the living descendants today may have old photo albums and might know if Niels had an uncle Marcus...probably a long shot, but the names and origins are similar enough to be worthy of study.

Monday, June 1, 2026

Clifford Henry Temm of Scarborough


My grandmother's older brother was Clifford Henry Temm (1897-1973).  I am uncertain where the name "Clifford" originated, as there are no other family members with that name.  The middle name "Henry" comes from the middle name of his father, John Henry Temm.  His mother, Hattie Morgan, also likely had an affinity for the name Henry, because her grandfather was named Henry Gray Morgan.

Clifford was the first of eight children born to Henry and Hattie.  I believe he was born directly in Scarborough at the family farm at the Northeast corner of Beech Ridge Road and Dresser Road (the "1st Temm Farm").  This was land that had already been lost to foreclosure, but the Temms were still living there until 1920, when new land down the street (75 Beech Ridge Road) was purchased for the 2nd Temm Farm.  Clifford never got to meet his paternal grandparents, as they had died beforehand.  His grandmother Sarah Jane Temm had died just five years prior to Clifford's birth.  His maternal grandparents, however (Emily Morrill-Morgan-Hall and William Sanford Morgan), were living separately in Portland, and it's likely that they got to meet this new grandchild.

Clifford wasn't the first child born to Hattie, however.  Hattie had a previous marriage to James Downey, and had five children with him, two of which had survived.  Annie was 8 years old and Maggie was 5, and they were living on the 1st Temm Farm with John and Hattie (their father James had died a few years prior).  Clifford wouldn't be the baby of the family for very long, as the other 7 kids would be born in rapid succession until Clifford turned 10.

Clifford grew up on the 1st Temm Farm, and attended Beech Ridge School along with his siblings.  The school was just a twenty minute walk from home.  The kids likely walked together, along with their neighbors, the Bennetts, the Smiths, and the ever present Libbys.

Portland Press Herald
January 12, 1918

In January of 1918, there was a measles outbreak at the Temm Household, and it affected everyone.  We can thank the nosy reporters of back then for publishing this information in the paper, and the insinuation that perhaps he shared the disease intimately with Miss Sherwood.  Additional such announcements were published about other family members, so that is the more likely story.

In June of 1918, Clifford joined the military.  This family hadn't seen military service since his maternal grandfather joined the Civil War effort 50 years prior.  I wonder if the Temms got pressure/inspiration from old William Sanford Morgan, who was a decorated war veteran.  Either way, the law of the time stated that all men who had turned 21 needed to register for the draft by that June.  Now, by this time, Clifford was the breadwinner of the family, manning the family farm for his then elderly parents.  Nonetheless, he didn't claim an exemption for this on the WWI draft form.  He was the first of the Temm kids to leave home (although his sister Adelaide had been out of high school for a few years and was finishing up her teacher training at Gorham Normal School).  

Portland Press Herald
October 1, 1918

Clifford was stationed at the newly established Fort Devens in Worcester, Massachusetts.  By September, he had become ill, and it prompted a visit from his parents.  Good old newspaper has us covered there too.

Clifford never served overseas, as the War came to a halt in November of that year.  When he came back to the 1st Temm Farm, honorably discharged in early 1918, it wasn't long thereafter until his father purchased the >40 acres from the Dressers that later became known as 75 Beech Ridge Road.  The 2nd Temm Farm was established by 1920, and the family moved there soon afterwards.

Portland Press Herald
September 5, 1922

Apparently the house that was built there was burned by an exploding lantern in a shed, destroying all the buildings, and almost killed his father.  It's likely that Clifford had to be the one to drag his father out of there.  By then, his sister Adelaide was living up the street with her new husband, Toy Ahlquist, but the rest of the family was there, and survived the fire. 

At some point in the early 20's, Clifford went visiting. He visited his older half-sisters Annie Downey-Dunn in Biddeford or Berwick, and Maggie in Somerville, Mass.  Albert Temm tells of this, and that Clifford didn't enjoy his visits.  Maggie and Annie had some kind of family disagreement, and that was why they didn't live near each other.

By 1926, he was living somewhere in Stroudwater, and married Susie Finney of Gorham.  He moved in with the Finney family soon after the wedding.  According to oral history, Clifford took Susie's family to court in order to succeed to title of the Finney house on Bar Mills Road/Hooper Road.

In 1927, Clifford bought some speculative real estate on Ainsworth Street - ten acres of farmland that he reportedly used for growing apple orchards.  He held this property until his death in 1973.

Ralph Temm
(1928-2013)
About 1946

In September of 1928, while living in Gorham, Clifford and Susie welcomed the birth of their first child, Ralph Edwin Temm.  His middle name appears to have been chosen for Susie's father, but coincidentally was also the name of Clifford's brother.  Ralph was also a volunteer fire fighter with Engine 5 in North Scarborough. Like his Uncle Carlie, he served his country in Germany during WWII with the U.S. Army.  Ralph and John Olson were the only two survivors of his platoon, and kept in touch with each other until Ralph passed.  Also like his Uncle Carlie (and some of his Temm cousins), after the war, Ralph worked at the S.D. Warren paper mill.  He worked there for 30 years, and was also a member of the Masons and the Odd Fellows.  Ralph drove a '55 Buick, which was among many other cars abandoned in the barn when they cleaned up the land after he was gone.  Clifford's old 55 Oldsmobile Holiday and a 54 Chevy.  It was said that the cars still worked like a charm when they were cleaned up.

In September 1930, Clifford & Susie bought land from the Martha Briggs Estate at the northeast corner of Saco Street and Buxton Road/County Road, with the address of 79 Old County Road, at an area which used to be called the "Coal Kiln Corner".  The property was with the Temm family until 2014.

Vera Temm
(1932-2014)
About 1950

In August of 1932, they welcomed their second child, Vera Estelle Temm.  Vera was an instant favorite among the Temm and related families.  People still talk of her charm and friendliness to this day.  She was a personal friend to my mother, and I was honored to have known her.  She was also known for having excellent penmanship.  She practiced drawing and calligraphy and frequently made pies using strawberries from the farm out back.  She would sell the strawberries to neighbors for 5 cents a quart!  Vera also was known as "The Cat Lady of Coal Kiln Corner" due to her love of caring for stray kitties, which were kept out in the shed (not in the house).  It was said that she had been willed land across from "Pattern Farm" from the Finneys, which looked like a nice farm, maybe 100 acres, and folks often wondered why Ralph and Vera didn't move there as it was nicer than the old house on County Road.

Vera lived her entire life at the house on Old County Road, and died in Springbrook Nursing Home in 2014, surrounded by friends.

In April of 1934, at the home of Susie's parents in Gorham, they welcomed their third and last child, Clayton Henry Temm, who tragically died six months later.  Neither Ralph nor Vera had any children, so there are no descendants alive from Clifford's immediate family.  They all lived out the rest of their lives in the old house.  Ralph and Vera are both buried at Forest City Cemetery.

In 1938, however, the house burned down, and Clifford rebuilt an exact replica of the house immediately afterwards.  The shingle mill on the premises burned along with it, but a neighbor gave Clifford a building across Saco Street, which he converted into a new shingle mill.

Clifford made his money on pine shingles, which ran for half the price of the standard cedar shingles, so Clifford made a good living off of selling pine.  Both of his children worked there at the shingle mill right alongside him.  Cliff was known for being an extremely hard worker, a shrewd businessman, yet not the friendliest sort of fellow to most who met him, but he certainly had his share of close relationships with the family, neighbors, and friends.  He was known for strange eating habits as well.  He would peel a raw onion and eat it like an apple.  He told one town local that "a fried salt pork sandwich and a hot cup of tea was a lunch that would give a man energy to run that shingle mill till supper time".  He lost his fingers at one point, likely due to work at the shingle mill.  He would put homemade donuts on his finger stubs, dip them in hot lard out of a cookie tin, and eat the donuts just like that!

In addition to the shingle mill, he had his hands in apples too.  He had an apple orchard up in Buxton for a while, but towards the end of his life the orchard got a killer frost, and all the trees were destroyed, and Clifford fell into ill health at that time.

Clifford died in 1973, and his Estate went to Susie, who died in 1985.  In 1974, Susie sold the 10-acre Ainsworth Street property to the Shaw's corporation.  This land got folded into the Westgate Shopping Center.  Cliff's brother Edwin had died a few years prior, and his two younger brothers, Carl and Bill, with whom he was very close, died in 1974 and 1975, respectively.


79 Old County Road
Scarborough Maine
(after Vera's death)

Upon Vera's death, the old house got a lot of attention by the Town in two FB posts.  The Scarborough Fire Department used the house for fire drill practice for a while before the new owner got the demolition permit in order.  When the land was sold, the house was razed in 2024, and the shingle mill was relocated to Buxton (I was told David Fogg assisted with this relocation).  Even though it was the last shingle mill operating in Cumberland County at the time, the Town of Scarborough didn't want to preserve it, due to it being too dangerous.  There was a beautiful old maple tree which got removed, and now the property houses an Aroma Joe's drive-through coffee.  But one tree remains at the corner, as the new owner promised to preserve it.  A tree with a stone and plaque at its base in memory of Percy Knight, a friend of the family.

I wonder what happened to all the objects in the house.  I seem to believe that there were many files owned by Vera, and potentially some valuable old family photo albums.  Clifford had told Vera that if she died before he did, he would burn all that stuff himself.  I'd always wanted to get a look at this, and have copies made.  Perhaps some really old Temm photos are in there, maybe even some of Clifford's parents and grandparents.  I'm hoping someone reading this post could help me understand what happened with these objects.  In June of 2026, I did reach out to Mr. Fogg, who was Vera's representative, hoping that he could shed some light on it.

Wednesday, April 29, 2026

The Moody Family of Pittsfield, Maine

William Henry Moody, Sr. (1842-1920), who went by "Henry," was a farmer born in Cornville Maine, and died in Pittsfield, Maine of "insanity" (according to his death record).  In that time period, "insanity" was a catch all term for the unknown mental ailments that we've well categorized today (dementia, exhaustion, bipolar, syphilis, pellagra).

William's father, Benjamin Moody (1813-1883) was originally from Salisbury, Massachusetts, but had moved to Somerset County prior to 1840, where in Hartland he married Elvira Winship Chase of the same county, and bought property in Cornville, where they raised their family.

In 1874, Henry married Mary S. Kittredge (1848-1883), and around that time he bought 50 acres of land in Pittsfield (just south of the Palmyra border).  

They had four children together:

1. Orra Elizabeth Moody (1875-1897), died of dysentery in Waterville at age 21.  The 1880 Census record and her death record misgendered her as male.  In the Somerset Independent Reporter, 8/27/1896, she appeared in the correspondence section thusly:  "Miss Orra Moody, of Cornville, is visiting at her uncle's, Mr. Oakman Moody's."

Orra Elizabeth Moody (about 1890)

2. William Henry Moody, Jr. (1879-1924), fought in WWI, worked as a carpenter, and moved to  Florida, Georgia, and then finally Alabama with his wife Nellie.  They had five children.

William Moody, Jr. (about 1900)

3. Aquila Emery Moody (1881-1967) also fought in WWI like his brother, and worked as a steam fitter and lived in Portland with his wife Lucinda and five children, one of whom he named after his dear sister, Orra, and another, Roscoe, who died while fighting the Japanese in the Pacific in WWII.

Aquila Emery Moody (about 1910)

4. Benjamin Earl Moody (1883-1884), died at five months of age. 

Mary died just a few months after Benjamin was born.  After Benjamin died an infant, William married Lydia Osborn Fuller, my 2nd great grandmother, who had been widowed from her first husband Charles Fuller in Ottumwa, Iowa in 1878.  Lydia had to wait quite a long time in Iowa, with five kids of her own, until Charles' Will was settled. The lawyer had lost the documents in a storm and it was necessary to get depositions from the original witnesses who were still in Maine. It took almost two years to do this.  Then she and her children returned to Fairfield, Maine. Lydia's father Timothy Osborn sent her the money to come home to Fairfield, as she was penniless, after waiting so long in Iowa with her children. 

Lydia & William Moody (after 1884)


In the 1880 Agricultural Census, Henry owned 16 acres tilled, 15 acres pasture, 19 acres unimproved of land in Pittsfield, and one horse.

An 1883 map of Pittsfield shows Henry's 50 acres to be located on what is now the northwest corner of Highway 95 and Madawaska Avenue, right at the Palmyra town line, right across the road from where the Self Storage facility (and the neighboring Northeastern Environmental Service) are today.

W.H. MOODY
50 ACRE PROPERTY
Pittsfield Map of 1883
(look in the center right side, at Palmyra border)

It's unclear how Lydia met William Moody.  They married in 1884 and joined households.  By this time, all but her youngest daughter, Edith, and William's three eldest children, were the only kids to move in together in Pittsfield.  

In Sept 1885, Henry sold the Pittsfield property to his former mother-in-law, Susie Pratt, and also that summer he sold the Cornville property to William Bigelow.  In November of that year Henry Woodbury sold Henry Moody property (215/384) in Hartland (on the Athens border), on Elm Street (later known as Athens Road, North Hartland Road, Highway 43 and Route 51), where he would live the remainder of his life.

Stepsiblings (1887)
Edith Fuller standing at top
then, clockwise: William Moody, Jr., Aquila Moody, and Orra Moody

Below is a picture I uncovered from Family Search, which was tagged with many wrong names.  It's clear to me that the boy at the far left is Aquila, and at his feet is his sister Orra.  I do not now who the other four children in the photo are, but they aren't their siblings or parents (as has been poorly tagged in Family Search).  Perhaps they are cousins, but looking at Henry Moody's direct family, he only had one niece around this age, named Gertrude (and her photo doesn't resemble any of these young ladies).  

I think this is from about 1897, just before Orra died.  William Jr. doesn't appear here, but he was 18 at the time, so he would likely have already been at college, is my guess.

Therefore the other four children must be cousins from Henry's wife Mary Kittredge's side.  Mary had five siblings, but I've only been able to find one sibling with kids (Susie Kittridge-Norcross), who had a daughter Edith and son Charles, who would have been 16 and 9 years old, respectively, in this photo.  My guess is that the two Norcross kids are on the far right.



When Henry died in 1920, Ida and Edith Fuller, his spinster stepdaughters, were living with him.  By the 1930 Census, Ida had moved into a home in Bangor as a live-in housekeeper, and Edith was then living with her sister Anna in Madison.  Henry's sons William and Aquila were living in Alabama and Portland, Maine, respectively.  

I wonder what happened to the property afterwards?  Searching online records, I found that Henry had mortgaged the property to Benjamin Flanders in 1903, who then sold it to Ida Chapman in 1907 (270/584).  In 1923, she sold it to Amelia Martin (371/573).  So, it appears that Henry and his stepdaughters were allowed to live at the house at least until 1920, despite the change in property ownership.