Francis ChickeringFrancis Chickering was an early settler of Dedham, Massachusetts who served in the Great and General Court of Massachusetts[1] and on that town's Board of Selectmen for 15 years.[2][3] He was also a teacher in the first public school in America, today well known as the Dedham Public Schools.[4] He arrived in Dedham in 1637 from Suffolk, England with his wife, Ann, and admitted as a freeman in 1640.[1] Together they had Elizabeth in 1638, Bethia in 1640, and Mercy in 1648.[1] He was possibly the brother of Henry Chickering, with whom he served in the General Court.[1] He was a member of the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company.[1] Chickering was a part owner of a mill on Mother Brook, the first man made canal in America. The Town was displeased with the "insufficient performance" of the mill under Nathaniel Whiting's management[5][6] and so, in 1652, Whiting sold his mill and all his town rights to John Dwight, Chickering, Joshua Fisher, and John Morse for £250.[7] Whiting purchased it back the following year, however.[7] Though the schoolhouse was still standing, in 1661 school was kept in Chickering's home.[4] He signed the Dedham Covenant. References
Works cited
|