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              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                <text>Metal and glass dress clips with red coloring.</text>
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              <name>Title</name>
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                <text>Newspaper advertisement of an Egyptian Mummy touring the area.&#13;
The second image is an advertisement for the same Mummy touring the Saratoga Springs New York area.&#13;
     George Barclay of New York imported two Egyptian  Mummies from Italy in 1826. One of the Mummies went on display in the New York Museum of Ruben Peale. In 1827 it was sold to an upstate trio and displayed in Ithaca. During January of 1828 the Mummy toured in the Rutland Vermont area. Later in that year it was on display in Rennselaerville New York where it was destroyed by a group of eight men. No trace of it remains today.</text>
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                <text>Dottie Case from the micro film collection at the Forbes Library Northampton, Massachusetts.</text>
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                <text>"The Egyptian Mummy in Nineteenth Century America"&#13;
by S.J. Wolfe.</text>
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                  <text>Artifacts and documents held by private collectors and shared on this website with the owners' permission.</text>
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                <text>Elijah Hubbard house, built 1818.</text>
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                <text>Elijah Hubbard House, built 1818. Montague road East side.</text>
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                <text>David Paulin</text>
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                <text>Circa early 20th Century.</text>
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            <name>Title</name>
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                <text>Circa 2019</text>
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                <text>Elliot David Puffer was born in Sunderland on the 21st day of August 1847. He  lived on the family farm on what is present day Reservation road. At the age of 17 he enlisted in the Massachusetts 34th regiment, being mustered in on December 30, 1863. He served during the war and was captured at Salem Virginia on the 15th of May 1864. While imprisoned at Andersonville Georgia he was  tortured and starved, eventually dying of scurvy on the 12th of November 1864. He is buried at Andersonville National cemetery Georgia.&#13;
This image was taken by former Sunderland resident Mary Gorman who visited Andersonville while researching for her published book on the "Andersonville Raiders". In a 2021 correspondence with the Swampfield Historical Society Gorman stated that visiting the grave, taking the photo and presenting it to the society "seemed like the neighborly thing to do".</text>
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