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5 U.S. Monthly L. Mag. 507 (1852)
Hon. Nathan Weston, LL.D.

handle is hein.journals/usmlwm5 and id is 519 raw text is: Nathan Weston, LL.D., of Maine.              507
men of wit and genius, or those who could appreciate such qualities in
others, looking over the surviving bar, exclaimed with a sigh-
The blaze of wit, the flash of bright intelligence,
The beam of social eloquence,
Sunk with Is sun.
HON. NATHAN WESTON, LL.D.,
CHIEF-JUSTICE OF MAINE.
THE subject of this memoir was born in that part of Hallowell which
now constitutes the city of Augusta, in July, 1782. He was the fourth
in descent from Johm Weston, who emigrated from Buckinghamshire,
in England, twenty years after the landing of the Pilgrim Fathers at
Plymouth, and finally setled at Reading, Massachusetts,,about twelve
miles from Boston. The family were distinguished for their piety, and
somewhat remarkable for longevity.
His father was an enterprising, active man, of varied experience
through a long life. After a campaign or two, in the old French war,
prior to the capture of Quebec, he emigrated to Maine, which then con-
tained a small and scattered population.  Before the Revolution he
was the owner of Abicadassit Point, on Kennebec River, where he resi-
ded, engaging principally in commerce, and sometimes obtaining masts
for the king's ships, from the fine timber then to he found on Eastern
River, a branch of the Kennebec. Near the close of the Revolutionary
War he removed to what is now Augusta. He was, at one period, a
public man, and in successive years a member of the House, Senate,
and Council of Massachusetts. In 1781 he married the mother of the
chief-justice. She was the daughter of Samuel Bancroft, Esq., of Read-
ing, and sister of the late Dr. Bancroft. With her, although his third
wife, he lived fifty years. She had previously married Mr. Cheever, of
Salem, where she lived eight years, until his decease. Two children of
this marriage survived, one of whom was the father of Dr. Cheever, of
New-York.
Of her first husband she was accustomed to relate an anecdote, which
it may not be improper to introduce for its historical interest. Prior
to the battle of Lexington, Gov. Gage had sent a small force to seize
certain military stores which had been collected at Salem. The citizens
were apprised of the movement, and determined to resist it. While
they were removing a plank'from a bridge, over which the detachment
had to pass, Mr. Cheever received a slight wound from the' bayonet of
a British soldier, who was at once thrown into the stream by the citi.
zens. The force having no orders, probably, to proceed to extremities,
retreated, without effecting their object. There is little doubt that the
first blood shed in the drama of the Revolution flowed from the veins
of Mr. Cheever.
Judge Weston's mother had a strong and cultivated mind; her
father was the leading man in his town, which he represented many
years in the General Court during the stirring scenes which preceded

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