New Hampshire
History of Stoddard
This territory was first granted in 1752 to Colonel Sampson Stoddard of Chelmsford, Massachusetts, and others as "Monadnock Number 7".
It was known locally as "Limerick" before being incorporated as Stoddard in 1774, in honor of Colonel Stoddard.
Colonel Stoddard was appointed to survey southwestern New Hampshire by the colonial government, receiving several land grants for the service.
One of his surveying assistants was Benjamin Pierce, father of U.S. President Franklin Pierce. Colonel Stoddard never lived in the town of Stoddard.
The town was first settled in 1768 by John and Martha Taggart, immigrants from Derry, Ireland. Three years later, the Richardson family joined the
Taggarts in Stoddard. By 1774, the town had 24 residents. The first census taken in Stoddard, in 1790, reported 701 residents.
The town's first schoolhouses were built in 1792. The first post office was established in 1822; Isaac Duncan was the first Postmaster.
In 1800, Stoddard's 1,148 residents outnumbered those of the nearby county seat of Keene. During Stoddard's glass-manufacturing years,
800 people were employed by the industry. After the Stoddard glass industry ended in the early 1870s, the town's population declined; by 1960,
the census recorded 146 residents. As of 2010, the town had 1,232 residents.
Stoddard - Town of Stoddard Home Page
Cemeteries in Stoddard - Search the six cemeteries in Stoddard
Cheshire Co. GenWeb Project - Founded 15 November 1996
This site maintained by: GN Kidder - E-mail - address
Copyright 1996 by Randall Mitton
Copyright 1996-2023 by GN Kidder
NHGenWeb SC:George Kidder
NHGenWeb ASC:Norma Hass
Last Edited 5 Jan. 2024