Primary Resources
Primary Sources Connected to 2008 Summer Institute Workshops
This is a page designed to help you locate local Essex County resources. They are linked to lessons which were created especially for the Essex LINCs seminars. You can access the lesson plans on the Lesson Plans page. Primary Sources listed here were located by our museum educator, Rebecca Zimmerman. Please contact us if you have any comments or questions regarding these documents.
(All images link to .pdf files)
The documents contained on this page are representative of town meeting materials from Essex County communities.Through close examination the reader can see how the governments of these towns evolved and the concerns of their citizens changed. The simulation of a town meeting of the fictitious community of "Cape Ann" was based on these documents, as well as others included on our primary resources pages. Transcriptions of all documents are included on their pages at the end of each .pdf.

- Town meeting minutes, Salem, 1634 & 1635 (includes article and transcript as .pdf)
- As might be expected the earliest town records to be found in the Archives in Salem concern the allottment of land, grazing of animals and the laying out of roads. Compare these subjects to the warrants of the 1700s and 1800s and you can see how much town affairs changed over time.

- Town Warrant, Gloucester, c.1700s (includes article and transcript as .pdf)
- This town warrant is a fairly typical one for a Cape Ann community of the early 18th century. It opens with a summons to male "freeholders" who are also property owners, to assemble at the Meetinghouse, and gives the major issues of the meeting. A noteworthy subject is whether the swine, and likewise the cattle, will "go at large" over the next year.

- Town Expenses, Gloucester, c.1800s (includes article and transcript as .pdf)
- As Gloucester grew in the 1800s, town affairs became more complicated. This document shows more attention to money owed to and expended by the town for services to its residents. New town jobs include selectmen and assessors, tax collectors, surveyors of highways, police officers and fire "engine men". Various committees are mentioned and it is clear that Gloucester is a thriving and active town.

- Town Meeting, Gloucester, 1822 (includes article and transcript as .pdf)
- Gloucester's town meeting this year is largely concerned with highways and school repair.

- Letter for Tax Abatement, Gloucester, c.1830 (includes article and transcript as .pdf)
- When manual laborers fell ill or experienced financial difficulties, they sometimes petitioned to have their taxes "abated" or lessened for a period until they were able to get back on their feet financially. This letter from a neighbor explains the hardship experienced by Mr. Clarke and his family in the Sandy Bay (Rockport) section of Gloucester.

- Town papers, Gloucester, c.1831 (includes article and transcript as .pdf)
- This elegantly penned list tells the needs of the fire "engine men" of Gloucester in 1831. Note the "trumpet," axes and buckets.

- Letter to Selectmen, Gloucester, n.d. (includes article and transcript as .pdf)
- In this letter to the Selectmen of Gloucester, the "citizens and legal voters" request a vote at town meeting to divide the surplus revenue of the town amongst the residents.

- Town Warrant, Rockport, March, 1839 (includes article and transcript as .pdf)
- Sandy Bay voted in 1839 to consider separating from the Town of Gloucester and re-naming itself. This document outlines the procedure and the outcome of the naming of "Rockport" as a new town in Essex County.
- Town Warrant, Andover Advertiser, 1862 (includes article and transcript as .pdf)
- As newspapers became more prevalent, notices of town meetings and their agendas were printed in them. This notice from the Andover Advertiser lists a number of relevant topics for the townspeople to consider, including aid to families of soldiers involved in the Civil War.
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