J. L. BELL is a Massachusetts writer who specializes in (among other things) the start of the American Revolution in and around Boston. He is particularly interested in the experiences of children in 1765-75. He has published scholarly papers and popular articles for both children and adults. He was consultant for an episode of History Detectives, and contributed to a display at Minute Man National Historic Park.

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Wednesday, December 04, 2024

The Clough Family Bible Comes to Old North

Recently descendants of Ebenezer Clough, the brick mason who built Christ Church (now better known as Old North), donated a family Bible to the institution.

Even before the church went up in 1723, Clough built some nearby residences. One of them was bought for the church in 1959 and now houses offices, store rooms, a gift shop, and the Edes & Gill printing office. That building now carries the builder’s name, pronounced cluff.

The Bible is about as old as that building, printed in London in 1715. A few decades later, Ebenezer and Thankful Clough’s son John started to use it to record family events, including his own birth (retrospectively, of course), his marriage in 1745, and the births (and deaths) of his children.

As the Boston Globe reported and the photo above shows:
While modern Bibles often include pages set aside for family records, Colonists had to improvise, writing in any blank space, even on the title page, where the Clough family Bible records the death of a child by smallpox in 1792.
That volume traveled with members of the family to the Midwest. Eventually they began to pronounce that surname clow. The old family Bible descended into the hands of Harry Bulkeley of Galesburg, Illinois.

Bulkeley was a Resident Circuit Judge of Knox County. He’s also a big history buff, portraying Ulysses S. Grant at Civil War reenactments, leading graveyard tours, and writing opinion pieces for the local newspaper.

Visiting a daughter in Massachusetts about twenty years ago, Bulkeley saw the name of Ebenezer Clough on a plaque at the Old North complex and recognized it from the family history. Eventually he and his relatives decided to donate the Bible to the church to preserve and share with new generations of visitors.

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