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Word: bayed (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
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Usage:

There are two female physicians on the Back Bay, Boston, who are said to make $10,000 a year from their profession...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fact and Rumor. | 2/2/1887 | See Source »

...should be pleased to have any students join us in the escort to the Trappeurs. We meet at the Quincy House at 6.30, prompt. Torches will be furnished, and all the uniform necessary will be a Jersey or a toboggan suit. The route will be over the Back Bay...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LE TRAPPEUR PROCESSION. | 2/1/1887 | See Source »

...when "schools were not yet nurseries," and when students "liked books that made them think." (Dickens and De Quincey). Nestor's boast of the prowess of his youthful days is paralleled at last. Yes, the youth then were more mature and (individually) they wore Indian blankets, made by the Bay State Mills, in chapel; and there then prevailed "a high, keen, intellectual energy among us all." But why continue such quotations? No true Harvard student can fail to catch the latent sneer so carelessly concealed...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Harvard Monthly. | 11/17/1886 | See Source »

...signal a mark our great mother University on the Cam has put upon this region about Boston harbor and its affluents. One of the first expeditions which the Pilgrims at Plymouth sent out, was one by boat under command of Miles Standish to explore the waters of Massachusetts Bay, as Boston harbor was then called. As they passed the islands, which then as now stand watch and ward over the entrance of this estuary of the Charles, they bestowed upon those islands a name which they still bear, that of the Brewsters, after their Elder, William Brewster, who had been...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Gift of the Old Cambridge to the New. | 11/7/1886 | See Source »

...their gaze some of their foibles in his "Simple Cobbler of Agawam?" What a void in the history of toleration would exist if Roger Williams with his doctrine of Soul-liberty, as he called it, had not passed, for the good of both, I suspect, from the bay of the Massachusetts to that of the Narragansetts? These were but few of the spirits who were transplanted from the banks of the Cam to the neighborhood of the Charles, and fairest among them all, the most fortunate character that ever passed into our earlier American history, John Harvard, that...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Gift of the Old Cambridge to the New. | 11/7/1886 | See Source »

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