Historic O'Neil Farm
Historic O'Neil Farm
PO Box 2755
146 Winter St. 
Duxbury, MA 02331
historiconeilfarm@gmail.com
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1724  Joseph Chandler and Samuel Chandler 149th lot reference and transfer of property.  Book also details early Chandler families in Duxbury.   

2/22/2014

 

Carl O'Neil Mass Memories' Road Show - Horatio Chandler's Sawmill

2/13/2014

 
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"Horatio Chandler, my great grandfather, built and operated this mill. He cut logs on the land on which Horatio Chandler Pond is located, then flooded the area to supply water power for the mill."  Carl O'Neil 

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Carl O'Neil October 23, 2010 at the Mass Memories Road Show

April 27, 2004 Duxbury Clipper Newspaper Article by Tony Kelso "The Story of the O'Neil Farm"

2/13/2014

 

Sliding Oxen Yoke

2/11/2014

 
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Donated by Mr. Delano.    Many oxen yokes were designed to harness the power of a team of two oxen. The yoke is made up of pair of bows that the farmer or teamster would put around the oxen’s neck. Hanging from the yoke between the two bows there was often a ring or some other mechanism that attached the yoke and the oxen to the load, whether that load is a wagon, a log or a plow. This particular yoke may have been used for hauling freight.  These sliding yokes were developed in New England. 


Antique Forge

2/10/2014

 
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from article posted in the Spring 2013 newsletter
Among the historical treasures at the Historic O’Neil Farm is the antique forge donated by Dean and Jean Fisher.  the forge is another example of how things were done many years ago.

Blacksmiths and ferriers might use forges to repair iron wagon parts or shoe horses. A small forge, like the one at the farm, could have been moved from place to place if necessary but was probably kept in one area to be close to tools, fuel and a workspace.
The farm’s forge includes a fire pot where coal would have heated iron until it was red hot and malleable. A bellows or possibly a crank blower would have been fitted to the bottom of the fire pot to blow air on the coal to generate even more heat. Though we do not have the anvil or other tools that went with this forge, one can imagine tines being used to move red-hot iron onto an anvil where a blacksmith would hammer iron into whatever shape needed. 

We do not know exactly how old the forge is. But it harkens back to a time before the nearby store where one could by a replacement part for just about anything. A time when a farmer might have to repair a bent tool or fashion a new iron piece in order to do what needed to be done.





The 1627 Cattle Division of Plymouth Colony

2/10/2014

 
Standish, Alden,  Delanoy (Delano) are just of few of the Duxbury early family names that can be found listed in the 1627 division of livestock previously held as common property of the Plymouth colony residents. 
source: " Records of the Colony of New Plymouth, in New England: Deeds, &c., 1620-1651 ..." By New Plymouth Colony page 9.

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