1906-1923
HGO-02-105-A-E-204
GUSN-286968
Series I, Checkbook registers and financial logbook, 1906-1923 (#2.1-5.6), contains seventy-seven bound checkbooks registers and a financial logbook used by Woodbury Langdon (1837-1921) and Elizabeth (Elwyn) Langdon (1871-1945), while residing at the Governor John Langdon House in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. The checkbook registers record bank deposits made for savings and investments; and payments made to individuals, companies, and financial institutions. Contained within the financial logbook is a record of banking transactions. The series is arranged chronologically starting with the financial logbook, followed by the checkbook registers.
financial records
Financial records (4 files boxes)
MS040
Langdon family papers
1947
MS040.01
Bequest of Elizabeth (Elwyn) Langdon, 1947
Portsmouth (Rockingham county, New Hampshire)
Langdon Family
financial records
Series
HGO-02-105-A-E-204
John Langdon (1741-1819) was a naval merchant, politician, and four-term Governor of New Hampshire. In 1784, the Governor John Langdon House was built. Langdon and his family occupied the house until the governor's death in 1819. Daughter Elizabeth Langdon Elwyn (1777-1860) returned to the house after the death of her husband Thomas Elwyn (1775-1816) and resided there until 1833. The house was owned by several people outside of the Langdon family until 1877 when the property was purchased by Woodbury Langdon (1836-1921), a descendant of John Langdon's brother, Woodbury Langdon (1739-1805). The house functioned as a home for Woodbury Langdon's (1836-1921) mother, Frances Cutter Langdon Bassett (d. 1902), until her death in 1902 when the house reverted back to Woodbury Langdon (1836-1921). In 1904, Langdon deeded the house to his wife and third cousin, Elizabeth (Elwyn) Langdon (1871-1945) whom he married in September 1896. (Elizabeth (Elwyn) Langdon (1871-1945) was the great granddaughter of John Langdon (1741-1819)). Upon her husband's death, Elizabeth (Elwyn) Langdon (1871-1945) deeded the house to the Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities, now Historic New England. Historic New England acquired the house in 1947, although, Elizabeth (Elwyn) Langdon's (1871-1945) sister, Helen Kremer (dates unknown), maintained life rights to the house until her death in 1955.
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