Hazard, Frederick Henry

Frederick Henry Hazard (1908-1983)

Winchester, NH; Keene, NH; Swanzey, NH

In 1930, 21-year old Frederick Hazard of Woodstock, VT, resided in Ashuelot, NH– an unincorporated community in the town of Winchester.  He was working as a laborer locally and was living within the household of his older brother John N. Hazard.  Also in the household was John’s wife and children, as well as Frederick’s mother Amanda (53 years old) and his sister Rachel (24 years old).  The Hazard clan had moved to New Hampshire in the mid-to-late 1920s and it is where Frederick would live out his adulthood.

Frederick Henry Hazard was born on June 19, 1908 in Woodstock, VT, the 8th child of William Frederick Hazard and Amanda (Dunbar) Hazard. At the time, Fred’s father was 53 years old and worked in the lumber industry. His mother Amanda was 32 years old and at home caring for the family’s six living children.

The 1920 census indicates that the family was struggling with hardship.  At age 11 and 13 respectively, both Frederick and Rachel Hazard were sent to live at the Vermont Industrial School in Vergennes City, Vermont, in 1919.  The Industrial School was established in 1874 to reform youth offenders, but quite quickly became a shelter for children of families facing extreme poverty.  

According to the Eugenics Survey of Vermont: 

Throughout its history, Vermont Industrial School superintendents struggled with the challenges of meeting the needs of a mixed population. Not only did the severity of offenses committed by the inmates vary, but the school also served as a temporary shelter for children who were not delinquent, but were dependent or neglected children from poor families who could not care for them from towns that wished to be rid of them. 

During the progressive era, jurisdiction over juvenile cases broadened. Municipal and county courts and justices of the peace could have children committed to the reform school in Vergennes. In 1915 "juvenile delinquency" was legally defined to include such offenses as school truancy, associating with "disreputable persons," using vulgar language, and "wandering around the streets at night."

It is unclear how long the Hazard children remained in the industrial school.  As young adults, Frederick and Rachel moved into their older brother’s home in Winchester, New Hampshire, where their mother also resided.  In his early years in NH, Frederick found work doing general labor but soon found a permanent position with the NH State Highway Department. 

On February 27, 1936, at the age of 28, Frederick married Emily Marion Jocylin in Troy, New York.  The couple continued to live in Winchester, NH, with a short residency in Keene, NH in the early 1940s. In 1943, their daughter Marcia Jean Hazard was born in Winchester, NH.  

By the 1950s, Frederick, Emily, and Marcia Hazard had moved to Swanzey, NH, where they lived for sometime before moving, once again, to 12 Pinehurst Avenue in Keene, NH. In 1962, daughter Marcia “Mickey”  graduated from Keene High School.  Years later, she relocated to Washington state.  Marcia died September 10, 2005 in Snohomish, Snohomish County, Washington, and is buried in Winchester, NH, with her family.  

Frederick’s wife Emily H. (Bryant) Hazard died on April 13, 1968 at the age of 59.  Two years later, widower Frederick Hazard married Lucille (Hill) Beauregard on January 15, 1970.  He died in Keene in 1983 and is buried in Evergreen Cemetery in Winchester with his family in Section Q, Lot 75.

 

GENEALOGICAL SUMMARY

FREDERICK HENRY HAZARD was born in 1908 in Woodstock, VT, to WILLIAM F. HAZARD and AMANDA DUNBAR. He married 1st EMILY MARION JOCELYN (WHT, 1909-1968) in Troy, NY, in 1936.  They had: Marcia Marion (1943). Frederick married 2nd in NH in 1970 LUCILLE R. (HILL) BEAUREGARD.

MARCIA MARION JEAN HAZARD (1943-2005). 

SOURCE MATERIALS

 Barre Daily Times, 29 Jun 1922, p.7

 Bridgeport Sun, 2 Dec 1915, p.3

Findagrave.com

Keene City Directory, NH, 1941. Historical Society of Cheshire County, Wright Reading Room, Keene, NH.

New Hampshire Vital Records, Deaths, 1968- Ancestry.com

New Hampshire Vital Records, Marriages, 1970- Ancestry.com

Rutland Daily Herald 22 Mar 1958, p.2; 25 Mar 1858, p.4

Springfield Reporter: 18 May 1922, p.1; 6 Jul 1922, p.6

Struthers. “Evergreen Cemetery Winchester 1739-2003”. Historical Society of Cheshire County archives, Keene, NH.

Swanton Courier newspaper 6 Oct 1893, p.3

U.S. Federal Census, 1850, 1860, 1870, 1880, 1900, 1910, 1920, 1930, 1940, 1950

 Vermont Journal ,2 Jan 1875, p.1

Vermont Standard newspaper, Feb. 1, 1945, p.8; 22 Nov. 1956, p.4

 Vermont Tribune 19 May 1922, p.1

Vermont Vital Records, Births, 1877, 1908- Ancestry.com

Vermont Vital Records, Deaths, 1882, 1945- Ancestry.com

Vermont Vital Records, Marriages, 1869- Ancestry.com

World War II Draft Registration Card, 1940- Ancestry.com

 
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Hazard, Amanda (Dunbar)