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Whitman, Plymouth County, Massachusetts Genealogy

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Town of Whitman in Plymouth County, Massachusetts.


Guide to Whitman, Plymouth County, Massachusetts ancestry, genealogy and family history, town histories, vital records, city directories, cemetery records and cemeteries, churches, town records, newspapers, maps, and libraries.

Town Information[edit | edit source]

Description[edit | edit source]

This area was first called "Little Comfort" as a section of Bridgewater until is was set off as the town of Abington in 1712. The area was set off as the Second or South Parish of Abington in 1808. It is a Plymouth County town, and where it remains today.

Parent Towns[edit | edit source]

Populated Places[edit | edit source]

Includes Neighborhoods, Villages, Unincorporated Communities,
Districts, and Census-Designated Places:

Boundary Changes[edit | edit source]

Adjacent Towns[edit | edit source]

Plymouth Co.: Abington | Brockton | East Bridgewater | Hanson | Rockland

Town Records[edit | edit source]

In New England most original vital records of birth, marriage, and death can be found at the town clerk's office

Whitman Town Clerk[edit | edit source]

54 South Avenue, P O Box 426
Whitman, MA 02382
Phone: 781-618-9710
Fax: 781-618-9791
Email: dawn.varley@whitman-ma.gov
Website

Vital Records[edit | edit source]

Published records

There are no published vital records for this town.

Online records
  • Whitman vital records, 1875-1905, are browsable (i.e. not indexed as of Nov. 2012) on FamilySearch.

Births[edit | edit source]

Marriages[edit | edit source]

Deaths[edit | edit source]

Divorce[edit | edit source]

Town Reports[edit | edit source]

Resources[edit | edit source]

For more County and State resources see:

Biographies[edit | edit source]

Cemeteries[edit | edit source]

The following is a list of cemeteries in present-day Whitman. For more details regarding these cemeteries, see the state guide under cemeteries for books on the subject.

  1. Colebrook Cemetery, 1828. (A, B)
  2. Hersey Children's Burying Ground, n.d.
  3. High Street or Noyes Family Burying Ground, 1805. (A, B)
  4. Jenkins Family Burying Ground, n.d.
  5. Mount Zion or Old Cemetery, 1740. (A, B)
  6. St. James Cemetery, n.d.
  7. Smallpox House Cemetery site, 1778. (A, B)
  8. Amos Whitmarsh Cemetery, n.d. (B)

Abstracts of the cemeteries above are marked and keyed to:
(A). Vital Records of Abington, Massachusetts, to the year 1850 (Boston, 1912). [See links on Abington for various versions of this source.]
(B). New England Historic Genealogical Society, Manuscripts Dept., Boston, Mass.

Many of Whitman's cemeteries have been transcribed and added to the websiteFindaGrave.com

Census[edit | edit source]

Church Records[edit | edit source]

The following is a list of churches established in town in order of organization date (if known) and condition of records in the 1889 survey if listed.

  1. Congregational Church (now First Congregational Church of Whitman - United Church of Christ), 1807, records good.
  2. Baptist Church (later First Baptist Church of Whitman), 1822, records good, closed 2009.
  3. South Abington Methodist Episcopal Church, 1874, records good. [perhaps continued as the United Methodist Church below]
  4. Church of the Holy Ghost (Roman Catholic), 1887.
    Baptismal records held at the Archdiocese of Boston Archives.
  5. All Saints Parish (Episcopal), 1897.
  6. South Shore Pentecostal Church, n.d.
  7. Whitman United Methodist Church, n.d.

City Directories[edit | edit source]

Whitman was published in 1889, 1892, 1894, 1895, 1898, 1900, 1904/5, 1906/7, 1909/10, 1912/3, 1915, 1917, 1920, 1922, 1926, 1932, 1937.

The Library of Congress (Washington, D.C.) has one of the largest collections of city directories in the country. They are likely to own most of the years listed above. Their collection is in microfiche, microfilm, and books, but there is no online inventory of their holdings except for microfilm. See their guide online.

Other holdings:

Compiled Genealogies[edit | edit source]

Court Records[edit | edit source]

Immigration[edit | edit source]

Land Records[edit | edit source]

Local Histories[edit | edit source]

The basic data is from the "Historical Data" publication series[1] with additions from various sources.

Associated names

Abington at one time was called Little Comfort and South Abington.

Village or section names include Auburnville, East Whitman, Northville, South Abington, West Crook, and Whitman Line Park.

Border changes
Dates Events
4 Mar. 1875 The Second or South Parish of Abington and part of East Bridgewater set off to form the new town of South Abington.
24 Apr. 1875 Parts of South Abington and Brockton annexed to each other.
3 May 1886 Name changed to Whitman.

Works written on the town include:

  • David Hickey, Whitman (Charleston, S.C., 2003), 128 pp.
    WorldCat (Other Libraries); Not at FS Library.
  • Charles F. Meserve, "History of South Abington" in D. Hamilton Hurd, ed., History of Plymouth County, Massachusetts ... (Philadelphia, 1884), p. 503-522.
    Digital version at Internet Archive.
  • Abington and the Revolution and earlier wars : the story of old Abington, Massachusetts (now Abington, Rockland, and two-thirds of Whitman) and the part the town played in securing American freedom in the 17th and 18th centuries ([Abington, Mass.?], 1975), xi, 123 pp.
    WorldCat (Other Libraries); FS Catalog book 974.482 H2a.
  • Whitman Wikipedia page.

Maps[edit | edit source]

This selection incudes town, county, state, and historical maps

Migration[edit | edit source]

Military[edit | edit source]

Some Records are Searchable by Town

Revolutionary War, 1775-1783[edit | edit source]

For more Revolutionary War Military Records see:

Civil War, 1861-1865[edit | edit source]

For more Civil War Military Records see:

World War I, 1917-1918[edit | edit source]

For more World War I Military Records see:

World War II, 1941-1945[edit | edit source]

For more World War II Military Records see:

Newspapers[edit | edit source]

  1. Whitman / Hanson Mariner, 1990-1992.

Obituaries[edit | edit source]

Other Town Records[edit | edit source]

Probate Records[edit | edit source]

School Records[edit | edit source]

Tax Records[edit | edit source]

Websites[edit | edit source]

Research Facilities[edit | edit source]

Archives[edit | edit source]

Libraries[edit | edit source]

Museums[edit | edit source]

FamilySearch Centers & Affiliate Libraries[edit | edit source]

FamilySearch Center and Affiliate Library Locator map - search for local FamilySearch Centers or Affiliate Libraries

  • FamilySearch Centers provide one-on-one assistance, free access to center-only databases, and to premium genealogical websites.
  • FamilySearch Affiliate Libraries have access to most center-only databases, but may not always have full services normally provided by a FamilySearch center.

Local Centers and Affiliate Libraries

Societies[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]

  1. William Francis Galvin, Historical Data Relating to Counties, Cities and Towns in Massachusetts (Boston, new ed., 1997), 128. WorldCat (Other Libraries); FS Catalog book 974.4 H2h 1997