He was the son of Artemas S. Atherton and Sarah Ann Morse. His father was a shoe manufacturer.[3]
Atherton was educated in public schools and Lynn high school. In 1865 he became a clerk at Oliver Breed, a lumber business, which evolved into S.A. Guilford & Co, soon after becoming a junior partner at the firm.
Career
His civic roles prior to being a state representative were as town auditor, and then as selectman. Atherton was elected as a Republican candidate at a state level. As an elected member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives, he was appointed to the committee on banks and banking; on prisons; and also as a special committee to represent the state at the Ohio centennial in Columbus, Ohio.
He was a Member of the Republican State Committee during 1893 and 1894; thereafter becoming elected as chairman of the committee on towns; on parishes and religious societies, and then for street railways.[4]
Other interests
He was a director of the Saugus Mutual Fire Insurance Company. Atherton was an author of historical articles. An avid historian of Massachusetts and New England, in 1916 he wrote the “History of Saugus, Massachusetts”, which included a biographical entry on Joseph Roby.[5] He was a member of the Massachusetts Historical Society for many years and became president of its Lynn chapter.[6][7] He was a Mason and published a book on Freemasonry titled ”A half century of William Sutton Lodge F. & A.M:1867-1917”.[8] As a historian in 1915, and perhaps lack of foresight, he questioned the cost of maintenance of the U.S. Route 1 turnpike, proclaiming that Saugus did not at all reap the benefit, and that it was an unnecessary expense on the town.[9]
Personal
Atherton married Hannah Preston Oliver (1851-1913) on May 15, 1870, in Lynn, Massachusetts.[10] They had 7 children. His son Horace Jr, married Edith Hall,[11] and followed his fathers footsteps as a local historian.[12]