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TOWN
OF HANCOCK, BERKSHIRE COUNTY, MASSACHUSETTS
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INCORPORATED
1776 |
Town
Hall - Hancock, MA. - (413) 738-5225
Open - Monday thru Friday - 9 AM - 12 PM
Annual Town Meeting - First Monday of May
Selectmen's Meeting Dates, Time & Place
First and Fourth Tuesday of Every Month at 7 PM
Town Hall - Main Street |
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Hancock
is a long, narrow, and mountainous township in the northern
half of the western side of Berkshire County, and 158 miles
west
of Boston. Pittsfield, on the Boston and Albany Railroad, and
Lebanon Springs, and Montreal (in Stephentown), on Harlem Extension
Division of the Vermont Railroad, are the nearest stations.
This town is bounded north by Williamstown, east by New Ashford,
Lanesborough and Pittsfield, south by Richmond, and west by
New Lebanon and Stephentown in New York. Its length is 16 miles
north and south. and from two to three miles east and west.
The assessed area is 20,696 acres. Of this, 9,683 acres are
devoted to forest, which here consists chiefly of beech, birch
and maple.
Much of the land is too rough for cultivation, but the sides
of the mountains afford excellent pasturage. On Kinderhook Creek
(which, flowing southward, leaves the town at the middle of
its western side) there is a long, narrow valley of singular
fertility, where may be seen some of the best farms of the county.
On this stream, at its westward turn, is Hancock village, principally
on one street shaded by maple trees. Here and at other points
are two tanneries, saw mills and a carding mill. At the southwest
angle is the " Shaker Settlement." Between these two
little villages, embracing about one-half the township, the
land is so mountainous and broken that it is almost uninhabited
and roadless. The principal elevation is Old Tower Hill, near
the centre of the tract. There are 69 farms in the town, whose
product in the last census year was valued at $74,407; and the
manufactures at $71,586. The valuation in 1888 was $364,686,
with a tax-rate of $10.50 on $1,000. The population was 613,
and there were 120 houses. The five school-houses are valued
at $2,500. There is a Baptist church here; and the Sunday school
has a library containing about 300 volumes.
This plantation was called "Jericho," on account of
its mountain walls. It was incorporated a town July 2, 1676
[1776?], and named for the patriot, John Hancock. The
early settlers here were mostly Baptists from Connecticut and
Rhode Island. Among them were Timothy Hurlburt, Col. John
Ashley, Josiah Dean, Martin Townsend and Asa Douglas.
The latter was a grantee in 1760, but lived just over the line
in Stephentown, N. Y., and was the great grandfather of Stephen
A. Douglass. The settlers built their first meeting-house
in 1791, having worshipped in a log-house previously. Elder
Clark Rogers, settled over them about 1770, was the first
minister. The Shakers settled here as early as 1780, and built
a meeting-house in 1784. Their circular stone barn, 270 feet
in diameter, is a unique structure that attracts the attention
of the traveller.
This town furnished 70 men to the Union armies in the late war,
and lost ten.
pp.
354-355 in Nason and Varney's Massachusetts Gazetteer, 1890
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RESOURCE
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CONTRIBUTOR |
Hancock,
formerly known as Jerico plantation, was founded in 1776.
It had no parent town. No records have been published.
July 2, 1776, established as a town.
June 25, 1835, part of Hancock annexed to the district of
New Ashford.
May 20, 1851, bounds between Hancock and New Ashford established.
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From
the Rollin H. Cooke collection in the Pittsfield, MA library.
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From
Early Massachusetts Marriages Prior to 1800, By Frederick
W. Bailey
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Resource
Needed!
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Transcribed
by Margaret Davis
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CEMETERIES
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Gardner
Cemetery
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Transcription
Needed!
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MAPS
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MILITARY
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Resource
Needed!
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PENSIONS
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Send
your Hancock Photos in for posting!
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Hancock
is the site of a Shaker Village. Check the link for further
info about the Shakers. Was your ancestor a Shaker? Check
here
to see a list of the Hancock Shakers.
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