Williams married Elizabeth Bell, daughter of the previous lessee, in 1762, and they moved onto the island. They had a large house on the western end.
The Williamses started raising a family there: six children born between 1765 and 1772, and another due to arrive on 6 July 1775.
Henry Howell Williams’s runaway advertisements in the Boston newspapers showed his household sometimes included other people as well: an eighteen-year-old Irish servant named Joseph Sullivan in 1764; a twenty-three-year-old “Negro Girl Servant, named PHILLIS,” in 1778.
Williams periodically advertised a stallion raised on the island as available “to cover.” That horse was named “the Young Barbe.”
In several summers Williams ran ads chastising people for coming onto the island to shoot birds, enumerating the harm they did:
- “killed a Number of my Sheep” (1768).
- “treading down the Grass on the mowing Ground” (1769).
- “to conceal it, throw the [dead] Sheep into the Wells or Pond Holes” (1769).
- “putting my Family in Danger of their Lives” (1770).
- “bringing on Dogs, and driving my Stock from one End of the Island to the other” (1772).
the 9th Inst. as a number of men were mowing, a scoundrel of a gunner fired his piece and covered one of the men with a shower of small shot, which providentially did but little damageWilliams forbade other people from hunting on Noddle’s Island. Of course, the fact that he kept placing the ads meant people kept ignoring his ban.
I didn’t find any notices about hunting from Henry H. Williams in 1773. But the 26 July Boston Evening-Post ran this news item:
Last Saturday…Afternoon, Mr. Henry Knox, of this Town, Stationer, being a Fowling on Noddles Island, in discharging his Piece at some Game, it burst near the Breech, whereby his left Hand was shattered in a very dangerous manner; his little Finger entirely tore away, and the two adjoining ones were obliged to be cut off at the middle Joints, his Thumb and Fore Finger only remaining, and his Hand being otherwise so much hurt that it is feared whether even these will be saved.I quoted the letter Knox wrote to one of his surgeons in the following March back here.
It’s possible that Henry H. Williams had given Knox special permission to go hunting on Noddle’s Island that July. And it’s possible Williams heard about the young bookseller’s accident and muttered, “Serves him right.”
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