228 T/ze HAZARD FAMILY where, says a near neighbor and intimate friend, ‘his home life diffused all around it an influence and charm, and, by its high example, elevated the standard of the domestic and moral life ofa whole community. “ He was stainless, wise, patriotic, fit to be trusted with the administration of great interests, public or private. He was a lover of scholarship. He had the ear of the people during a time of great peril and trial. He never gave it dishonor— able counsel or uttered a word which would debase or degrade it. CHILDREN 2529. AUGUSTUS G. BULLOCK; married Mary Cband/er, of Worcester, Mass. 2530. ISABEL HAZARD BULLOCK; married Nelmz S. Bartlett, of Boston, Mass. 2531. FANNY BULLOCK; married William H. Workman, of Worcester, Mass. § 1895- GEORGIANA HAZARD, 8 (Augustus G., 7; Thomas S., 6; Ste— phen, 5; Thomas, 3; Stephen, 3; Robert, 2; Thomas, I), was born July 29, 1827; she died September 20, 1882; she married October 22, 1850, Joseph Sex— ton, of New York. CHILD 2532. EDWARD BAILEY SEXTON, born Jan. 24, 1852; married Dec. 20, 1883, [la Marian Smith, of New York. § 1896. FANNY HAZARD, 8 (Augustus G.,7; Thomas, 6; Stephen, 5; Thom- as, 4; Stephen, 3 ; Robert, 2; Thomas, I), was born October I, 1830. She mar- ried, November 3, I869, Ephraim Ward Bond, of Springfield, Massachusetts; they had no children; but previous to her marriage, she adopted the four orphan children of her sister, Mrs. Dakin. The children were taken not only to her home, but to her heart. Ephraim Ward Bond was born in West Brookfield in 1821. Five years later his father moved to Springfield, and his whole life was practically identified with that place. He entered Amherst College, and graduated at the age of twenty with honours. After leaving Amherst he took a year’s course at Yale, and then entered the Harvard Law School, from which he graduated in 1844. In 1845, he began the practice of law in Springfield. Six years later he formed a partnership with the late E. D. Beach, which continued up to 1864, and the firm of Beach and Bond was well known not only in Springfield but throughout the State. Mr. Bond at his death was president of the Springfield Five Cents Savings Bank and the Springfield City Library, and a director of the Pynchon National Bank. He had served as seleétman, before Springfield became a city; was largely instru— mental in securing a city charter; was subsequently councilman and alderman, and for one term was a member of the Massachusetts House of Representa— tives. This in brief, is the record of Mr. Bond’s life, but his character and ability have extended in influence for good beyond this bare recitation of facts. He had con— 1Bullock’s Addresses, by Hon. George F. Hoar. tr1buted