She married Mathew F. WYMAN, in 1866. Born in 1838. Died in 1917. Occupation: Mill operator at Orford, NH.
Historic Mill Sites of Orford, New Hampshire - Under the supervision of Alice Doan Hodgson, Chairman, Orford Committee of the American Revolution Bicentennial - 1975
(This booklet contains photos, maps, diagrams, descriptions, and historical information on 27 mills in and around Orford, NH. Many of these mills were built, owned and/or operated by persons related to the Morey family. The following description of No. 6 is typical of the detail provided.)
No. 6 Gristmill built in 1831 by James Dayton on Dublin (Mill) Road was north of the brook, opposite the site of Israel Morey's old sawmill. When Dayton died in 1854, his son, Henry, ran the mill which was valued at $800. In 1879 the mill was bought by Mathew Wyman, husband of James Dayton's granddaughter, Catherine. He is described as "a warm hearted man with a free and easy, go-as-you-please style." In 1886 the mill had three runs of stones and ground 36,000 bushels of grain a year. In 1895 it was reported that not much flour had been made there in the last twenty years, but there was a steady increase of custom grinding. Western feed was handled to the amount of twenty carloads a year. A creamery had been built in Orford in 1892 causing farmers to buy more feed which, Mr. Wyman noted, they paid for "more prompt," and they were raising more corn of their own for custom grinding. The mill had good facilities for elevating and storing corn. The old mill frame was at that time strong and in good repair. Mr. Wyman retired from business because of old age in 1913. The wheels of the mill ceased to turn and the frame is now gone. The stone foundations remain and within them can be seen a turbine boiler installed during the last years of the mill's operation.