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Lyman White was born on January 1, 1820, to Eli and Olive White in Greenwich, Massachusetts.
Mr. White worked as a farmer until he was drafted into the Civil War on October 19, 1861, at the age of 43. He served as a Private in the 26th Massachusetts Regiment and was quickly promoted to Corporal, but was discharged about a year into his service on October 10, 1862, due to a disability.
Mr. White was discharged in New Orleans, Louisiana and returned to Wendell, Massachusetts. Presumably he reunited with his wife, Hannah Jane Davis, whom he had married on November 19, 1861, while actively serving in the Union Army.
By 1872, Mr. White was incarcerated in Massachusetts State Prison, where he died seven years and seven months later on August 2, 1879, at the age of 59 due to heart disease.
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Simeon Peck III was born on June 20, 1825, to Simeon and Elvira Peck in Deerfield, Massachusetts.
Mr. Peck worked as a farmer until he enlisted in the military on March 14, 1862 to serve the Union in the Civil War. He served as a Private in the 21st Regiment, Massachusetts Infantry for eight months until he was honorably discharged in Philadelphia on November 24, 1862 due to a disability.
Mr. Peck married Lucinda Allis and continued to work as a farmer until he was incarcerated at Massachusetts State Prison, where he died on June 22, 1879, of cerebral softening at the age of 54.
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William Wilson was born in 1842 in Manayunk, Pennsylvania.
He worked as a laborer in Pennsylvania before being drafted in June 1863; he began his naval enlistment in the Civil War on April 23, 1864.
He was incarcerated in the Massachusetts State Prison in 1866 for 19 years and 8 months until his death on March 26, 1886, of chronic tobacco-poisoning and acute Bright’s disease. He was 43 years old.cription here.
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John Finneran, also known as John Burke and Henry Atwood, was born in 1837 in Ireland. Unable to read or write, he found work as laborer after arriving in the United States.
Mr. Finneran enlisted in the United States military on June 15, 1861, at age 23. He served as a private in Company B of the 7th Infantry, and fought on the side of the Union.
He enlisted in Massachusetts as a spinner living in Fall River. He deserted on September 5, 1862, but was arrested on June 26, 1863. He received a draft on June 30, 1863, and rendezvoused at Boston Harbor. He was mustered out on June 27, 1864.
He was incarcerated in the Massachusetts State Prison in 1860. He remained there for 11 and a half years until his death from syphillis on May 18, 1882, aged 44.
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William Ryan was born in 1849 in Manhattan, New York City, to Irish immigrants Patrick and Ellen Ryan. Prior to his incarceration, he lived in Gloucester, MA, working as a laborer. In 1896, Ryan married Mercy Smith of Rockland, Maine, in Boston. The 1910 census listed him as widowed.
On July 12, 1910, William died at the Massachusetts State Prison from angina pectoris and coronary sclerosis. He was 61 years old.
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Wassili Ivanowski was born in Russia in 1889 to Peter Ivanowski. He later immigrated to the United States, first settling in Pittsburgh, PA, and then in Massachusetts. Records show that his mother, sisters, and brothers also lived in the U.S., though it’s unclear if Wassili lived with them.
On March 7, 1911, at the age of 22, Ivanowski was executed by electrocution at the Massachusetts State Prison in Boston.
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Andrei Ipsen was born in Russia in 1892 to Ignace and Olga Ipsen. He later immigrated to the United States, first settling in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and then in Essex County, Massachusetts.
Ipsen was highly educated, speaking Russian, Polish, and German; he could also read and translate Greek and Latin.
On March 7, 1911, ate age 19, he was executed by electrocution at the Massachusetts State Prison in Boston.
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James L. McGee was born on May 6, 1886, in Ohio to English immigrants James McGee and Eva Girourd. He lived in Charlestown, MA, and worked as a laborer.
In January 1911, Mr. McGee contracted tuberculosis in Charlestown and was transferred to the Rutland Prison Camp and Hospital for treatment.
He died from the disease on March 26, 1911, in Rutland, MA, at the age of 24.
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William Murhead was born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, in 1890 to James Murhead and Bella Haslett, both Irish immigrants. He worked as a stationary fireman.
Mr. Murhead died of acute miliary tuberculosis on March 27, 1911, at the Rutland Prison Camp. He was 21 years old and married at the time of his death.
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Michael Moriarty was born on September 7, 1862, in New London, Connecticut, to Irish immigrants John Moriarty and Bridget Sheehan.
He lived in New London County with his parents, two brothers, and five sisters. His sisters worked at a cotton mill, while his elder brother, Morris, was a painter.
After finishing school, Mr. Moriarty started working at a rubber mill in Connecticut. Later, after moving to Massachusetts, he became a painter like his brother.
Mr. Moriarty passed away from pulmonary tuberculosis and tubercular laryngitis while incarcerated at the Rutland Prison Camp on April 23, 1911. He was 48 years old.
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Lawrence Murphy was born on December 21, 1870, in New Brunswick, Canada. He lived in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, with his parents, Peter Murphy and Elizabeth Butler. Later, he immigrated to the United States, residing in New Bedford, MA, and worked as a wire worker.
Lawrence reportedly contracted tuberculosis in Canada before immigrating to the U.S. He had the disease for three years before being admitted to the Rutland Prison Camp Hospital in February 1911. He passed away from tuberculosis on June 2, 1911, at the age of 41.
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George Rogers was born on May 15, 1889, in New York City to Frank Rogers and Mary Clark. He had a brother named Ralph.
Standing 5’7\” with black hair and hazel eyes, he was a Protestant. He worked as a machine hand in Boston before being admitted to the Massachusetts Reformatory on April 14, 1911.
Mr. Rogers died there by suicide on July 21, 1911, at the age of 22.
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James McKay was born around 1840. By 1855, he was living in Boston, Massachusetts, working as a tailor. McKay contracted tuberculosis while in Boston.
He died from tuberculosis at the Rutland Prison Camp on December 19, 1910, at the age of 70. At the time of his death, he was married.
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Thomas Ford was born in New Hampshire. He was incarcerated in the Massachusetts State Prison on April 5, 1876. He died there on July 18, 1878, and was buried two days later in the first grave at the Concord Reformatory Cemetery.
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Horace Miner was born in 1849 in Virginia. He later lived in New Bedford, Massachusetts, where he was employed as a whaler aboard the vessel Petrel. In 1870, his job listed him as being African American, twenty-one years of age, and 5’7”.
He was incarcerated in the Massachusetts State Prison by the end of 1873, where he died on July 31, 1878, at 29 years old.
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Abraham H. Williams, also known as ‘Abram,’ was a multiracial man born in 1838 to Peter and Nancy Williams in Lowell, Massachusetts. He married his wife, Mary Haskell, on January 4, 1863, in Gloucester, when he was 24 and she was 18. The pair resided together in Wenham, where he worked as a shoemaker.
In Boston on June 29, 1863, Mr. Williams enlisted and was later drafted on January 22, 1864, into the 5th Regiment Massachusetts Colored Volunteer Cavalry for a three-year term. From July to September 1865, he performed detached service at the Brazos Railway in Texas. During his service, he also served on the USS Wabash. He was honorably discharged on October 31, 1865, in Clarksville, Texas, due to the expiration of his service, following the end of the Civil War.
On February 12, 1870, Mr. Williams was incarcerated in the Massachusetts State Prison. He died while incarcerated on September 3, 1878, aged 50.
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Gottfried Zeigler was born in 1836 to Johann and Barbara Ziegler in Germany. Upon moving to the United States, he worked as a dyer. On August 10, 1876, 40 year old Mr. Zeigler he married Huldah Koenig, age 28, in Boston.
By 1877, Mr. Ziegler was incarcerated in the Massachusetts State Prison. He remained there for nine years and two months until he died from a two year struggle with phthisis on September 17, 1886. He was 50 years old.
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Oliver W. Holden was born in 1826 in Rutland, Vermont. By age 34, he was living in Yalobusha County, Mississippi, working as a farmer.
On October 20, 1884, at 58 years old, Mr. Holden married Caroline Hunt Coggshall, aged 65, in Milford, Massachusetts. He was living with Mrs. Coggshall in Bellingham, Massachusetts, and working as a tinsmith until his incarceration in the Massachusetts State Prison, where he died of heart disease on March 25, 1888, at 62 years of age.
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Patrick Sullivan was born in 1844 to Timothy and Mary Sullivan in Ireland. He had brown hair and blue eyes, was 5’10”, and was a Catholic.
Upon moving to the United States, he lived in Worcester, Massachusetts, where he worked as a laborer. He married Miss Kate Hobbs on August 28, 1884 in Rockland, and the pair had three children.
He was incarcerated in the Massachusetts Reformatory on December 6, 1887. He died there on May 10, 1888, after taking his own life at 44 years of age. At the time of his death, he was widowed.
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John J. King was born on September 27, 1880 to Paul and Mary King in Jamaica Plain, Boston, Massachusetts.
He had brown hair and blue eyes, was 5’5”, and was a Catholic. He worked as a mill hand in North Adams, Massachusetts before his incarceration at the Massachusetts Reformatory on November 16, 1896.
He died of pneumonia while incarcerated on December 11, 1896, at just 16 years old.
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Thomas Lahres was born in 1834 to Jacob and Katherine Lahres in Germany. Once in the United States, Mr. Lahres worked as a shoemaker in Fall River, Massachusetts, where he also resided, at 524 South Main Street.
In 1894, he was incarcerated at the Massachusetts State Prison. He died there from gastric carcinoma 17 months later on November 12, 1895, at age 61.
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Wilford B. Davenport was born in 1865 to George and Maria Davenport in Hartford, Connecticut.
He later moved to Worcester, Massachusetts, where he worked as a carpenter until his incarceration in the Massachusetts State Prison in 1894.
He died after 20 months in the State Prison due to phthisis, age 31.
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Jordan Gayle was born in March 1868 in Christiansville, Mecklenburg, Virginia, to Banister and Mary Gayle. He had wool-colored hair and black eyes, stood just shy of 5’7”, and was a Protestant. At age 13, he was working as a laborer.
By 1895, Mr. Gayle was incarcerated in the Allegheny County Workhouse in Pennsylvania. After his release, he worked as a porter while living in Cambridge, Massachusetts. On September 14, 1898, he was incarcerated in the Massachusetts Reformatory with a five-year sentence for larceny. Boston’s Inspector Shields reported that he had just arrived from the South nine months prior to this incarceration.
Mr. Gayle died at the Reformatory at 2:15 P.M. on July 1, 1899, of tuberculosis, aged 31.
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Shesh Ordah, whose real name was Pral Tachjian, was born in 1880 in Armenia to Kirkor Tachjian and an unknown mother.
Upon coming to the United States, he lived in Fitchburg, Massachusetts, and worked as a boot-black. He was indicted in December of 1898 and sent to the Massachusetts Reformatory, where he died of a hemorrhage after falling down a corridor on October 26, 1899, at 19 years old.
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Edward Ducharme was born in March of 1887 to Nelson and Mary Ducharme in Fall River, Massachusetts.
He worked as a shoemaker until his incarceration in the Massachusetts State Prison, where he died after 10 months on July 9, 1906, of meningitis at age 18.
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Josef Zurgliwicz was born in Russia on October 24, 1888, to Martin and Annie Zurgliwicz.
He immigrated to the United States at the age of nine and later lived in Rockland, Massachusetts, where he worked as a machine shop hand. He was 5’8\”, had chestnut hair and hazel eyes, and was a Catholic.
Josef was incarcerated in the Massachusetts Reformatory on October 31, 1916, serving a three-year sentence. He died there on October 2, 1918, at the age of 19.
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Charles Mardigan was born on March 15, 1893, in Armenia, to Jacob and Sema Mardigan.
He immigrated to the United States on May 15, 1913, and settled in Lawrence, Massachusetts, where he worked as a millhand at a labor yard. He was 5’5\”, had black hair and light maroon eyes, and was a Catholic.
Charles was incarcerated in the Massachusetts Reformatory on May 15, 1913. He died there on October 4, 1918, from pneumonia. He was 25 years old.
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James Hampton was born on May 29, 1903, in Lexington, Kentucky, to Cicero Hampton and Jennie Bentley. He had four brothers and \”three or four\” sisters. Before arriving in Massachusetts, Mr. Hampton lived in Milwaukee for eight years. After leaving school at 16, he worked on farms as a general laborer.
Mr. Hampton was sentenced to the Bridgewater State Farm on May 8, 1933, and transferred to Norfolk Prison Camp on January 27, 1934. He died at Norfolk Prison Camp on April 13, 1934, at 7:30 a.m., age 30.
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Joseph ‘Joe’ Fiske, also known as Frank Sidney, was born in Tennessee in May 1877 to parents from Georgia.
Mr. Fiske later moved to Boston, Massachusetts, where he worked as a porter at a hotel and then as a shipper at a brush store.
Mr. Fiske died while incarcerated at Massachusetts State Prison on May 11, 1934, at the age of 57.
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George Polichropoulos, also known as George Alais Polis, was born on January 13, 1908, in Greece to Christos Polichropoulos and Denedra Geauacopolos.
He immigrated to the United States in 1914, arriving in New York on the Greek Steamship Line, S.S. Patros. On March 27, 1928, he married Viola Doucas in Manchester, New Hampshire; they later separated around the time of his incarceration. George had a sporadic work history, including jobs as a toy worker, restaurant worker, and painting room worker. He had black hair, brown eyes, and was 5’4½\” tall.
He was sentenced to Massachusetts State Prison on October 14, 1931, and later transferred to Norfolk Prison Camp, where he died on October 19, 1936, at the age of 26.
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Adolfo Mattachioni was born in Italy on January 21, 1873. He emigrated to the United States in 1903 at the age of 30. He lived in Leominster, Massachusetts, and worked as a machine operator. His brother, Alphonso Mattachioni, also lived in Leominster.
Mr. Mattachioni was incarcerated for 27 years before his death at Massachusetts State Prison on November 30, 1937, at the age of 63.
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John Klonnberg was incarcerated at Massachusetts State Prison and died on February 18, 1944, in Boston, Massachusetts.
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Oran Allen Harrington was born on November 11, 1928, in Shelburne, Massachusetts, to Oran Elmer Harrington and Edith Louise Clarke.
He was raised at 177 Wells Street in Greenfield, Massachusetts, and grew up with his brother and three sisters. He was not employed before or during his incarceration.
Mr. Harrington died while incarcerated in the Massachusetts State Prison on June 28, 1950, at the age of 21.
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Richard R. Doney was born on December 5, 1940, in Watertown, New York, to Harold Doney, a building superintendent, and Evelyn Rivers.
In his youth, he lived there with his parents and two older brothers, Harold and Alfred, in an apartment at 232 West Main Street.
Mr. Doney died while incarcerated at the Norfolk Prison Colony on May 16, 1967, at the age of 26.
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Owen Patrick Glynn was born on April 18, 1918, in South Boston, Massachusetts, to John J. Glynn and Josephine M. Glynn.
He had two sisters and two brothers, and the family lived together in Boston, although they changed addresses multiple times.
Mr. Glynn was 5’10\” and had red hair and green eyes. He worked at the Burton-Furber Coal Company in Charlestown before being incarcerated in the Massachusetts State Prison by 1940.
Mr. Glynn was later committed to the Massachusetts Correctional Institute of Concord, where he died on May 13, 1981, at the age of 63.
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Text to go here to tell about the cemetery and the program
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