[Autobiography of Seventy Years, Vol. 1-2 by George Hoar]@TWC D-Link book
Autobiography of Seventy Years, Vol. 1-2

CHAPTER II
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Whether that judgment shall stand we may know when the question is settled, which is to be answered in every generation, whether martyrdom be a failure.
Among the inmates of my grandfather's household in my mother's childhood and youth was Roger Minott Sherman.

He was the son of the Reverend Josiah Sherman, my grandfather's brother, a clergyman of Woburn, Massachusetts, where Roger Minott was born.

His father died in 1789.

My grandfather took the boy into his household and educated him and treated him as a son, and just before his death gave him his watch, which is now in the possession of a son of General Sherman.
Roger Minott Sherman was unquestionably the ablest lawyer in New England who never obtained distinction in political life, and, with the exception of Daniel Webster and Jeremiah Mason and Rufus Choate, the ablest New England ever produced.* [Footnote] * See Appendix.
[End of Footnote] Roger Minott Sherman's father died in 1789.

The widow wrote to some of her friends to see what assistance could be obtained to enable her son to continue his studies at Yale.


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