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Note: ed. Joseph purchased in 1707 from Phillip Turner a tract of land at Henchman's Corner in the South Parish of Scituate, upon which the house of the late Dr. Heyward Warren Cushing stands (1936). Joseph built a house uponthis tract when he married, and a corner stone of this first house is embedded in the lawn on Dr. Cushing's estate. The original house was enlarged by his son, Deacon Joseph, Jr., and later it formed the ell of a large house built by the latter's son George. After Joseph's wife, Mercy, died, he did not remarry,and his wife's sister, Alice Pickles was the foster-mother of young Joseph. CEMETERY: <a href="http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cushinc/photos/joseph_cushing_1677-1760.jpg">Joseph Cushing 1677-1760</a>
Note: Joseph Cushing Hon. (1677 - 1760) resided in Scituate and was a deacon of the Second Church, a justice of the peace, one of the judges in the Supreme Court, active in the community and greatly respect
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