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Berkshire County, Massachusetts

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Profiles

  • Brig.Gen. (CSA) Edward Aylesworth Perry, FL Gov. (1831 - 1889)
    Aylesworth Perry (March 15, 1831 – October 15, 1889) was a general under Robert E. Lee during the American Civil War and the 14th Governor of Florida.Early lifeHe was a descendant of Arthur Perry, one ...
  • Carl Henry M. Baade (1894 - 1990)
    "Services will be private for Carl H. Baade, 95, of 524 Buckingham Ave., who died Monday at the Ashmere Manor Nursing Home. Burial will be in Memory's Garden, Albany. There will be no calling hours. Mr...
  • Eleazar Waterman (1792 - 1856)
    His wife's link is courtesy of Find A Grave contributor 46910450. This birth date I have is calculated from his death date and his age at death on his marker. He, his son Horace and grandchild Charlora...
  • Ada M. Paulus (1855 - 1930)
    Ada had a first marriage that ended in divorce. Her first husband is currently unknown Her second marriage was to Albert Paulus and he died before she did. Information on him is also currently unknown.
  • Chloe Ann Clark (1819 - 1865)

Please add profiles for those who were born, lived or died in Berkshire County, Massachusetts.

Official Website

The Mahican (Muh-he-ka-neew) Native American tribe lived in the area that now makes up Berkshire County until the early 18th century, when the first English settlers and frontiersmen appeared and began setting up farms and homesteads. On April 25, 1724, “The English finally paid the Indians 460 pounds, 3 barrels of cider, and 30 quarts of rum for what is today Berkshire County.” This deal did not include modern Sheffield, Stockbridge, Richmond, and Lenox, which were added later. Berkshire County remained part of Hampshire County until 1760.

In the 19th century, Berkshire County became popular with the American elite, which built what they called "cottages" throughout the countryside. The Gilded Age ended in the early 20th century with the income tax, World War I, and the Great Depression. In the 20th, century some of these cottages were torn or burned down, while others became prep schools, historic sites, or bed-and-breakfast inns.

Today Berkshire is known throughout the East Coast and the country as the summer home of the Boston Symphony Orchestra. It includes attractions such as Tanglewood, the Norman Rockwell Museum, Mass MOCA, and Hancock Shaker Village.

Adjacent Counties

Cities, Towns & Communities

Adams | Alford | Becket | Cheshire | Clarksburg | Dalton | Egremont | Florida | Great Barrington | Hancock | Hinsdale | Housatonic | Lanesborough | Lee | Lenox | Monterey | Mount Washington | New Ashford | New Marlborough | North Adams | Otis | Peru | Pittsfield (County Seat) | Richmond | Sandisfield | Savoy | Sheffield | Stockbridge | Tyringham | Washington | West Stockbridge | Williamstown | Windsor

Cemeteries

Cemeteries of Massachusetts

Wikipedia

USS Berkshire County LST-288

National Register of Historic Places

Berkshire Family History Association

Roots Web

Genealogy Trails

RAOGK

Forebears.io

MA Gen Web



upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/6b/Map_of_Massachusetts_highlighting_Berkshire_County.svg/300px-Map_of_Massachusetts_highlighting_Berkshire_County.svg.png