Same, p. 99.

Same, p. 118.

New Hampshire Gazeteer, 1833, p. 121.

Historical Collections, by Farmer and Moore, vol. 1, p. 240.

The Great Meadow and the site of the elder Rogers’ house is easily accessible to any person possessed of a curiosity to visit them. They are in the South-Easterly section of Dunbarton, some six or seven miles only from Concord. The whole town is of very uneven surface, and the visitor will smile when he reads upon the ground, in Farmer and Moore’s New Hampshire Gazeteer, that he will find there but "few hills, nor any mountains." He soon learns that the declaration of its people is more correct when they assure him that its surface is a "pimply" one.

Bancroft’s History of the United States, vol. 4, p. 127.

Encyclopedia Brittanica.

New Hampshire Adjutant General’s Report, vol. 2, 1866, p. 129.

"An engraved full-length portrait of Rogers was published in London in 1776. He is represented as a tall, strong man, dressed in the costume of a Ranger, with a powder-horn strung at his side, a gun resting in the hollow of his arm, and a countenance by no means prepossessing. Behind him, at a little distance, stand his Indian followers."—[Parkman’s Conspiracy of Pontiach, vol. I, p. 164.

Roger’s Journal (Hough’s edition), p. 46.