CLASS QE 1882 • YALE • THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY Presented by President Kinley C YI£U I88£Q3 Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign http://archive.org/details/vicennialrecordc1882yale VICENNIAL RECORD CLASS OF 1882 YALE THE UBR5.RV jUN 1 8 1930 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS printed for ttjc ClaftS THE WINTHROP PRESS NEW YORK PREFACE It is with much misgiving that this — the Vicennial record of '82 — is presented to the class. The compiler is %' aware of its shortcomings and he especially regrets the VJack of the personal element. The men have been over- modest and have refrained from giving details and inci- dents connected with their lives which would have added to the interest and value of the record. Twenty years out of college ! The class almost to a man is settled and hard at work. Encouraging if not brilliant success has attended most. If there are few shining lights the average is good. Linked with the pleasure in recording the honors is the sorrow in noting the death of nine who since Sexen- nial have been taken from us, and in this record an aster- isk has been placed before their names. Among the four- teen whom we have lost from the living members of our class are some who would surely have attained great honor and the recording of their death has been a sad task. New York. January, 1903. 726719 1902-1907 PRESIDENT HOWARD HOYT KNAPP 1094 Main Street, Bridgeport, Conn. Committees : {with president ex-officio a member of each) CLASS DINNERS AND 25™ REUNION WILLIAM HENRY PARSONS, Jr. CHESTER WOLCOTT LYMAN JOHN PRESCOTT KELLOGG WILLIAM SCRANTON PARDEE CLASS BOOK AND RECORDS EDWIN LYNDE DILLINGHAM JAMES QUACKENBUSH RICE JOSIAH CULBERT PALMER CLASS FINANCE ARCHIBALD ASHLEY WELCH WILLIAM PHELPS ENO FRANCIS COOLEY FARWELL Secretary Arthur Sherwood Osborne P. O. BOX No. 164 New Kaven, Conn. VICENNIAL MEETING Tuesday, June 24th, 1902. Thirty-one members of the class attended the business meeting which was held at Fi Osborn, at 11.30 a. m. Parsons called the meeting to order and it was moved, seconded and carried, that Badger act as chairman. He thereupon took the chair. In the absence of the secre- tary, Palmer was elected secretary pro tern. It was moved by Parsons that there be elected at this and each succeeding meeting one to serve as president of the class who shall preside at all meetings of the class, appoint committees and act with the secretary in furthering the interests of the class. The motion being duly seconded and carried, Knapp was put in nomination and unani- mously elected. He then took the chair and on motion of Badger, the thanks of the class were unanimously extended to Osborne, the class secretary, for his many services to the class. Parsons then moved that the presi- dent appoint the following committees: 1st. Class Book. 2d. Class Dinners in New Haven and elsewhere. 3d. Class Finance. The motion was seconded and carried. 5 VICENNIAL MEETING In the afternoon the class attended the Yale-Harvard base ball game, accompanied by the Waterbury Military Band, and upon their return the class picture was taken from the steps of the Library. The class dinner was held at the Anderson Gymnasium on York street, at 7 p. m., forty-one members and three non-graduates being present. It was served by Maresi of New York. Piatt acted as toastmaster; there were no regular toasts responded to but impromptu speeches were made by many of the men present all resounding with the praise of Yale and '82. The Waterbury Military Band was in attendance and the speeches were interspersed with songs and music. During the dinner Knapp an- nounced the committees which he had appointed in ac- cordance with Parsons' resolution — the following (with the president ex-officio, a member of each committee) to serve from 1902-1907: Dinners and 25th Reunion — Parsons, Lyman, J. P. Kellogg, Pardee. Class Book — Dillingham, Rice, Palmer. Finance — Welch, Eno, Farwell. There were present at the dinner the following : Allen, J. F. Bate. Brinton. Allen, M. S. Bates. Bronson. Atterbury. Bentley. Dillingham. Badger. Billings. Eno. VICENNIAL MEETING Farwell. Loomis. Rice. Foote. Lyman. Richardson. Graves, G. H. McBride. Schuyler. Griggs, C. M. Moodey. Shoemaker. Haskell. Osborne. Snell. Hawkes. Palmer. Stillman. Hopkins. Pardee. Sweetser. Jefferds. Parsons. Welch. Kellogg, J. P. Pember. Wells. Kingman. Pierce. Williams. Knapp. Piatt. BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Frank Frost Abbot after graduation continued in New Haven as a graduate student on the Clark and Larned scholarships for two years. In the autumn of 1884 he went to Washington as a private tutor, but returned to New Haven in the following autumn to accept a tutor- ship in Latin. This position he held until June, 1891, with the exception of one year (winter of 1888-9 t0 autumn of 1890) which was spent abroad mainly in study at Berlin and Bonn. In September, 1891, he went to Chicago and spent a year in helping President Harper organize the University, which opened in October, 1892. During that time he was the only member of the faculty there except the President. His health was somewhat impaired by the strain of the first few years, and he spent 1894-5 in Colorado. He resumed work in the summer of 1895 and with the exception of the year spent in Rome has been actively engaged since that time as Professor of Latin in the University of Chicago. He is the author of Selected Letters of Cicero in the College Series of Latin Authors: Ginn & Co., 1897, and of Roman Political In- 9 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD stitutions: Ginn & Co., 1901. He has also contributed to many of the educational magazines. During the year 1901-2 he was appointed the Annual Professor of Latin in the School of Classical Studies at Rome and he spent the year in Rome carrying on that work. He married Miss Jane Harrison at New Haven, June 21st, 1888. Address — The Quadrangle Club, Chicago, 111. James Ferguson Allen was for some time connected with the Meriden Bronze Co. In 1886 he went to Mon- tana, and engaged in ranching near Musselshell, Mea- gher County, for some years being a partner in the firm of Allen & Schuyler. Later he returned east and re- sumed his connection with the Meriden Bronze Co., at Meriden, Conn., retaining his interest in the ranching business which was managed by his partner. He is at the present time President of the Meriden Gravure Co. He married Miss Cornelia Parker Breese, at Meriden, Conn., November 2d, 1893, and has two children: Par- ker Breese, born October 31st, 1895, and Theodore Ferguson, born October 29th, 1897. Address — Meriden, Conn. Martin Smith Allen since graduation has been a mem- ber of the firm of William L. Allen & Co., Commission Merchants, 19 Jay Street, New York. Just prior to en- tering into active business, he traveled through the Holy Land, Italy and Turkey, and since then has taken a trip 10 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD through Norway, Sweden and Russia. His home is in Brooklyn : 52 South Oxford Street. He is unmarried. Address — 19 Jay Street, New York. Albert Hoffman Atterbury studied in the Columbia Law School, and received the degree of LL.B. in June, 1884. He was admitted to the New York bar in No- vember, 1884, an d is a member of the firm of Leavitt, Wood and Keith, Counsellors at Law, 11 1 Broadway, New York. He married Miss Emma H. Baker, at East Orange, N. J., November 17th, 1892. Address — 315 West Seventh Street, Plainfield, N. J. Walter Irving Badger, on the 21st of September, 1882, entered the office of Solomon Lincoln for the pur- pose of studying law. In the following month of Octo- ber he registered at the Boston University Law School, from which university he was graduated in June, 1885, receiving the degree of LL. B. cum laude. He then spent three months in Europe, and upon his return was ad- mitted to the bar in Massachusetts. Since 1882 he has been associated with Mr. Lincoln, and in August, 1896, was made a partner. During the last fifteen years he has been very much engaged in the trial of tort cases in behalf of railroads and other corpora- tions. He was for several years President of the Everett National Bank of Boston. He married Miss Elizabeth Hand Wilcox, at New Haven, Conn., October 6th, 1887, 11 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD and has two children : Walter Irving, Jr., born September 1 6th, 1 89 1 ; Grace Ansley, born July 13th, 1893. Address — 126 Brattle Street, Cambridge, Mass. William Elder Bailey is in the iron business at Harris- burgh, Pa. He is Treasurer of the Charles L. Bailey & Co., incorporated, and Secretary of the Central Iron Works. [From the Sexennial Record.] f Harry Rudolph Baltz was abroad for a year and a half. After his return he studied law in the office of George W. Biddle, in Philadelphia, and was admitted to the bar, May 1st, 1886, but was soon compelled to give up practice on account of weakness of the eyes. Since 1886 he has been engaged in the manufacturing business, in Philadelphia. He married Miss Mary Hart Welling, at New York, April 23d, 1901. Address — 181 3 Pine Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Erwin Hinckley Barbour, on commencement day, was appointed an Assistant Paleontologist in the U. S. Geo- logical Survey, being located at Peabody Museum, New Haven. This position was held until 1888. In June, 1887, he received the degree of Ph.D. from Yale. In June, 1889, he was called to Iowa College, to the Stone professorship of Natural History and Geology, a position held until July 1st, 1891, when he was called to the pro- fessorship of Geology in the State University of Ne- t No response to repeated communications asking for information. 12 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD braska, at Lincoln. He was appointed Acting State Geologist by Governor Thayer in the fall of 1891, and successively reappointed by Governors Crounse and Boyd ; appointed Curator of the State Museum, spring of 1892, and Geologist of the State Board of Agriculture, February, 1893; permanently appointed Acting State Geologist by the Legislature, February, 1893; in 1894 appointed a member of U. S. Agricultural Experiment Station staff. He is a member of several scientific societies, among which may be mentioned the Microscopi- cal Club, Nebraska Academy of Science, The Ornithol- ogists' Union, The American Association for the Ad- vancement of Science, and he has a life membership in the Geological Society of America. In addition to scien- tific papers, he has contributed cartoons, drawings and articles for various newspapers and magazines, including "Texas Sittings," " Photographic Times," "Outing," "St. Nicholas," " Scribner's," "Rural New Yorker," etc. He married Miss Margaret Roxanna Lamson, of New Haven (daughter of Wm. Lamson, Yale, '56), December 6th, 1887, and has a daughter, Eleanor, born February 22d, 1889. Address — University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb. Floyd Julius Bartlett was Vice-Principal of a school at Warsaw, N. Y., from 1882 to 1886; Principal at Fair- port, N. Y., from 1886 to 1891 ; Head of the Department of Latin and Greek at the State Normal College, Albany, 13 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD N. Y., from 1891 to 1896. He is now Principal of the Academic High School at Auburn, N. Y., which position he has held since 1896. He married Miss Mary Kate Hayward, at Warsaw, N. Y., December 25th, 1883. They have had five children, of whom three are living: Ruth Hayward, born in 1884; Loyd Hayward, born in 1888, and Robert Milne, in 1892. Address — Auburn, N. Y. Mortimer Stratton Bate was in the warehousing busi- ness, in Brooklyn, until September 1st, 1886. After that date he became salesman for West & Melchers, Rice Merchants, 126 Front Street, New York. July 1st, 1888, he became a member of that firm. In April, 1888, he and three others organized " The Continental Press " for the purpose of carrying on a stereotype-plate busi- ness at 194 Water Street, New York. He, with his part- ner, in 1 89 1, organized the Consolidated Rice Co., of New Orleans, since sold out. In 1895 the firm of West & Melchers, Rice and Coffee Merchants, of which he had been a member for nine years, was dissolved, and the firm of Melchers & Bate was formed. The latter firm was three years later dissolved, and now he con- ducts alone a commission house in sugar, rice, molasses, etc. He married Miss Irene Sharp, of Brooklyn, Decem- ber, 7th, 1887. They have one son: Rutledge, born February 2d, 1891. Address — 100 Wall Street, New York. 14 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Robert Parker Bates studied law in Chicago, and was admitted to practice March 7th, 1883, being the first member of the class to enter a profession. He practiced in Chicago in partnership with Page, until the fall of 1885, when he was compelled to go south on account of his health. He lived in Florida for a year and, as he says, " practiced law and a good many other things." He returned to the north in September, 1886, and for sev- eral years practiced law in Chicago as a member of the firm of Mason, Ennis & Bates, 79 Dearborn Street. He is at present alone, with offices at 120 Randolph Street. He married Miss Minnie L. Couch, of Gaylordsville, Conn., September 21st, 1886, and has two children, Alice Melissa, born September 12th, 1887, and Winifred, born July 14th, 1889. Address — 120 Randolph Street, Chicago. Morgan Hawley Beach studied law in the University of Virginia, and received the degree of B.L. in June, 1884. He was admitted to the bar September, 1884, but owing to ill health did not begin active practice until January, 1885, when he opened an office on Washington Street, Alexandria, Va. January 1st, 1886, he became a member of the firm of Beach & Page, Washington, D. C, still retaining his office in Alexandria. His offices are now in the Fendall Building, 344 D Street N. W. He married Miss Elizabeth Grayson Carter, at Oak- lands, Va., December 25th, 1893. They have three daughters, Katherine Elizabeth, born April, 1895; Grace 15 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Carter, born September, 1896, and Elizabeth Morgan, born May, 1898. Address— 344 D Street N. W., Washington, D. C. John Fred Beede was at his home in Meredith Village, N. H., for several months after graduation, and in the following winter went into a bank in Boston. He re- mained there nearly a year, and was then for some months in a bank in New York City. In July, 1884, he entered the Marine Bank, in Buffalo, where he held the position of receiving teller. In 1885, owing to the ill health of his father, he returned to Meredith Village, and at his father's death he was obliged to assume the man- agement of his business, which was a general merchan- dise store. He is also Treasurer of a hosiery manufac- turing company, at Laconia, N. H., where he spends a portion of his time, but continues to reside at his old home in Meredith. He was married April 15th, 1901, to Miss Martha B. Melcher, of Laconia, N. H. Address — Meredith, N. H. Samuel Bennett, Jr., was for some time after gradua- tion engaged in farming, at Richmond, Ky. He was Deputy Collector of Internal Revenue from 1889 to 1893, Cashier L. & N. Railroad from 1894 to 1895 and is now Corporation Clerk in office of State Auditor, Frankfort, Ky. He married Miss Mary Winston War- field, at Lexington, Ky., February 18th, 1886. Chil- dren: Benjamin Warneld, born December 6th, 1886; 16 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Waller, December 13th, 1888; Sara McChesney, March 6th, 1890; Susan Anne, May 15th, 1892; Samuel, Jr., March 10th, 1895 (died, 1900); William Dudley, July 9th, 1896. Address — Frankfort, Ky. Cyrus Bently studied law and received the degree of LL.B. at the N. W. University. He has since prac- ticed in Chicago, with offices in Borden Block. He married Miss Elizabeth King, at Chicago, January 8th, 1889. They have two children, Margaret, born August 28th, 1892, and Richard, born June 5th, 1894. Address — 35 Borden Block, Chicago, 111. Charles Kingsbury Billings was traveling part of the time and was engaged in no regular occupation the first two years after graduation. He married Miss Mary Elizabeth Alden, of New Haven, March 27th, 1884. In the fall of the same year he entered the Yale Law School, from which he was graduated in June, 1886. A year later he took a special course in electricity in the Sheffield Scientific School. Since his marriage he has made his home in New Haven, but has not been in active business. He has six children: Charles Kingsbury, Jr., born November 21st, 1885; Margaret Louise, November 10th, 1886; Mabel Frances, May 3d, 1888; Julia Holmes, January 17th, 1890; Mary Eliza- beth, February 7th, 1892; John Alden, October nth, 1898. Address — 67 Trumbull Street, New Haven, Conn. 17 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Charles Edward Blumley taught in the Free Acad- emy, at Norwich, Conn., for four years. He also studied law and was admitted to practice in September, 1884. Since July 1st, 1886, he has been actively engaged in the practice of his profession in Norwich. [From the Sex- ennial Record. ]f George Shepard Boltwood was for one year an As- bistant on the U. S. Geological Survey, and was em- ployed in the Peabody Museum. The following year he entered the Yale Law School. He received the degree of LL.B., and was admitted to the bar in June, 1885. He removed to Grand Rapids, Mich., in November, 1885, and is now senior member of the firm of Boltwood & Boltwood, Attorneys at Law. He is a Trustee of the Park Congregational Church, of Grand Rapids, and was President of the Board of Trustees from 1899 to 1901. He Was President of Western Michigan Congregational Club in 1900 and 1901. He married Miss Mary Gernon Rice, at Grand Rapids, Mich., September 1st, 1891. They have one daughter, Ruth Gernon, born April 1 5th, 1894. Address — 601-607 Michigan Trust Co. Building, Grand Rapids, Mich. Benjamin Brewster, after graduation, spent a few months in New Haven pursuing a graduate course in ethics and philosophy, under President Porter. In t No response to repeated communications asking for information. 18 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD January, 1883, he accepted a position as instructor in Mr. Bridgeman's Preparatory School, in Cleveland, Ohio, which he held for six months. Having decided to study for the ministry, he entered, in the fall of 1883, the General Theological Seminary of the Protestant Epis- copal Church, in New York, where he was graduated at the head of his class in June, 1886, and immediately or- dained. Through the never-to-be-forgotten kindness of his classmate, since deceased, James A. Campbell, he traveled abroad for four months, visiting Great Britain, France, Germany, Switzerland and North Italy. Re- turning to New York, he accepted a position as Assistant Minister in Calvary Parish, November, 1886, and re- mained in this parish five years, being in charge of Cal- vary Chapel, on East Twenty-third Street, during the last four years of that period. June 10th, 1891, he mar- ried Miss Stella Yates, a cousin of his rector, Dr. Satter- lee. In November, 1891, he accepted a call to the rec- torship of the Church of the Holy Communion, South Orange, N. J., where he continued for four years. Being run down, and showing some tendencies toward lung trouble, by the advice of physicians, he went to Col- orado, in November, 1895, accepting the rectorship of Grace Church, Colorado Springs, which position he now holds. He has completely recovered his health, is able to do better and harder work than ever before, and is very happy in his Colorado life. He writes : "It is pleas- ant, if sad, to hear on every side in Colorado Springs of the love and respect entertained for our talented, honored 19 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD and beloved classmate, the late Ernest Whitney." He has two children: Katrina Mynderse, born May ioth, 1894, and Benjamin Yates, born December 28th, 1897. Address — 329 North Nevada Avenue, Colorado Springs, Colo. Ferree Brinton was abroad for six months after graduation and upon his return entered the Law School of the University of Pennsylvania. He was graduated in June, 1885, receiving the degree of LL.B. and the prize for the best final examination and was admitted to the bar a month later. While a student he was in the office of E. Coppee Mitchell, the Dean of the Law School. He remained with Mr. Mitchell until the latter's death in the early part of 1886, and for several years afterwards practiced law on his own account in the same office, 518 Walnut Street, Philadelphia. For the past eleven years he has been associated with P. O. Rothermel, Jr., having general charge of that gentleman's large and diversified practice of a desirable kind. He married Miss Lina S. Ives (daughter of Dr. Robt. S. Ives, Yale, '56), at New Haven, April 25th, 1893. They have three children: Anna Binney, born January 21st, 1896; Caroline Ives, born March 25th, 1898, and Ferree, Jr., born August 9th, 1900. Address — 804 Land Title Building, Philadelphia, Pa. *Fred John Brockway taught for two years at the King School, Stamford, Conn. In the fall of 1884 he en- 20 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD tered the College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, graduating in 1887, near the head of his class, and holding the office of Class President. He then entered the Roosevelt Hospital, on the surgical service, and there remained until May, 1889, when he removed to Baltimore to take the position of first Resident Sur- geon of the Johns Hopkins Hospital, then newly opened. There he remained until the fall of 1890. Shortly after, he returned to New York to take up the practice of medicine, in which he continued up to his death. He died on the 21st of April, 1901, of meningitis, at Brattle- boro, Vt. For ten years he held the position of Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy in the College of Physicians and Surgeons, and at the time of his death he was Secre- tary of the Faculty. On November 25th, 1891, he mar- ried Miss Marian L. Turner, of Mt. Savage, Md. Two daughters were born to him: Marian, born May 13th, 1896, and Dorothy, born February 27th, 1898. He was a member of the American Museum of Natural History, New York Academy of Sciences, the New York Acad- emy of Medicine, the Alumni Association of Roosevelt Hospital, the Johns Hopkins Residents' Association, American Association of Anatomists, Omega Society of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, the New Eng- land Society and the New York Athletic Club. He was the author of several Monographs on Anatomical Sub- jects. He was quiet in manner, thoughtful and conscientious in all his conduct. Enthusiastically devoted to his pro- 21 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD fessional work, he found little time for recreation, yet his sense of humor was such that he made a most con- genial companion and was greatly beloved and respected by all who knew him. Nathaniel Richardson Bronson was graduated from the Yale Law School with the degree of LL.B. in June, 1884. He has since practiced his profession in Water- bury ; for a number of years being a member of the firm of Terry & Bronson, and since January, 1901, the senior member of the firm of Bronson & Minor. He was Clerk of the City Court of Waterbury from May 1st, 1895, to March 1st, 1896, and for a number of years Prosecuting Attorney, District Court of Waterbury. He married Miss Helen Adams Norton, at Brooklyn, N. Y., March 26th, 1889, and has two children, Norton, born Feb- ruary 28th, 1894, and Richardson, born October 12th, 1896. Address — 144 Bank Street, Waterbury, Conn. Wayland Irving Bruce was connected with the Bryant Literary Union of New York City the first year after graduation. He married Miss Mary Emily Skin- ner, at New Haven, April 3d, 1883. The following year he traveled and studied in Europe. During the year 1884-5 he taught in the Albany Academy, at Albany N. Y. Since 1885 he has taught at Williston Seminary, Easthampton, Mass. He has a son, Donald Bruce, born 22 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD at Newtonville, Mass., July 23d, 1884. He received the degree of M.A. from Yale in 1888. Address — Easthampton, Mass. * James Alexander Campbell after graduation remained a year taking a post graduate course, and then went abroad, visiting Norway, Sweden, Russia, Turkey, Greece, Spain, Palestine and Egypt. In 1885 he re- turned to America and entered the Harvard Law School, where he remained for three years completing his course and graduating with honor. Both of his parents having died (his mother during commencement week) he with his brothers returned to Europe, and selected as a tem- porary residence a beautiful home at No. 21 Place Ven- dome, Paris, where he lived until his death, with the ex- ception of a short visit to London. His time was occu- pied in visiting the art galleries and other places of inter- est in Paris and in the study of architecture. He was taken with a slight cold, which he thought too trivial to require attention, but which resulted in a serious attack of la grippe and in an illness which, at the end of seven months, ended fatally, although attended by the best medical talent of England and France. Notwith- standing this long illness with all its pain, he maintained throughout the utmost patience and bravery i and forget- ting himself endeavored to do for those about him. He died July 13th, 1890. The burial service was read by the clergyman of the British Embassy Chapel, and his re- mains, after resting temporarily in the vault of the chapel, 23 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD were conveyed finally to St. Louis, his old home. He was never married. His life was conspicuous for its modesty, its tender- ness and gentleness, for its chivalry and integrity; in- deed, for all that makes up the true gentleman. Princely generosity, a sympathetic heart, unaffected modesty, painstaking consideration for the feelings of others, loy- alty to truth, and self-sacrificing fidelity to hard duties — these were some of the characteristics that won for him our love and our respect. David Anderson Chenault was for two years a mem- ber of the firm of Isaac Brinker & Co., Commission Merchants and Wholesale Fruit and Produce Dealers, at Denver, Colo. He was afterwards at his home, at White Hall, Ky., for a year, engaged in farming, and for three years was in the live stock business, together with farming, at De Graff, Kansas. He returned to Ken- tucky in 1 89 1 and established the University School of Kentucky, at Louisville, of which institution he has since been President. He married Miss Bettie Baker Brons- ton, July 17th, 1883, at Richmond, Ky., and has two children, Nettie Bronston, born December 12th, 1884, and Walter Scott, born July 22d, 1888. Address — 908 Second Street, Louisville, Ky. William Churchill taught school for a year in In- dianapolis and then went to England. The London Geographical Society sent him to the South Sea Islands; 24 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD he had his own yacht, and during his absence he made a long stay in Samoa, where he acquired the language of the Samoans. Upon his return to America he entered journalism in San Francisco. For two years he was Li- brarian in the Academy of Sciences in that city and while holding this position he delivered a course of twelve lec- tures on the people of the South Pacific, their languages, customs, etc. He then came east and contributed to various magazines. For a time he was in the Signal Service Bureau, in Washington. In 1891 he became literary editor of " The Brooklyn Times," occupying this position until June, 1896, when President Cleveland appointed him Consul General to Samoa. When Presi- dent McKinley appointed his successor in 1898, he re- turned to this country. He is the author of " A Princess of Fiji," many scientific documents for the Government, magazine articles and reviews, as well as a great quantity of editorials. He married Miss Llewella Pierce, at New York, August 14th, 1889. Address — 14 Harrison Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Stephen Merrill Clement traveled abroad for nine months after graduation. He entered the Marine Bank, Buffalo, April 1st, 1883; was appointed Assistant Cash- ier, December, 1883, and Cashier, December, 1884. After serving in the latter capacity for ten years he was elected President, and still occupies that po- sition, being one of the leading bankers of Western New York. He was Chairman of the Buffalo Clearing 25 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD House for four years ; is a Trustee of the Buffalo Board of Trade, Buffalo Library, Buffalo Seminary, Buffalo State Normal School, Buffalo Hospital and Buffalo Or- phan Asylum. He married Miss Caroline Jewett Tripp, of Buffalo, March 27th, 1884, and has six children: Norman P., born April 12th, 1885; Edith C, April 22d, 1886; Stephen M., Jr., November 10th, 1887; Harold T., August 19th, 1889; Marion, March 26th, 1891 ; Stewart H., April 2d, 1895. Address — Marine Bank, Buffalo, N. Y. Edwin Bradford Cragin was graduated from the Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, in the spring of 1886, and took the first Harsen prize ($500) for proficiency at examination. He spent a year and a half as an Interne at Roosevelt Hospital, and for a num- ber of years had charge of the Department of Gynecol- ogy at Roosevelt Hospital, Out Patient Department. Since December, 1887, he has been practicing in New York. He is Attending Physician to the Sloane Mater- nity Hospital, Secretary of the Medical Board of the Roosevelt Hospital, Lecturer in Obstetrics, and Secre- tary of the Faculty, College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York City. He is author of " Essentials of Gynecol- ogy," and one of the authors of " The American Text Book of Gynecology." He stands at the head of his pro- fession, and in his specialty few equal him in the coun- try. That his work has been appreciated by the Trustees 26 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD of Columbia is evident from the following extract from President Low's annual report for 1898: *' Dr. Edwin B. Cragin, a graduate of the College of Physicians and Surgeons in the Class of 1886, in view of the resignation of Dr. McLane as Professor of Obstetrics, has been appointed, according to the custom of the School, Lecturer in Obstetrics for the next academic year. It is naturally hoped that Dr. Cragin, in due course, will be promoted to the chair vacated by Dr. McLane. Dr. Cragin for sev- eral years has been the Secretary of the Medical Faculty, and in this position has acquired an intimate acquaintance with the School which is likely to serve him in good stead in many ways. His effi- cient service in that not altogether easy position merits the thanks of the Trustees ; and it also increases the expectation that he will be suc- cessful in the new position for which his professional acquirements are believed to equip him thoroughly." He married Miss Mary R. Willard, at Colchester, Conn., May 23d, 1889, and has two daughters: Miriam Willard, born September 30th, 1890, and Alice Gregory, born November 18th, 1893. Address — 62 West Fiftieth Street, New York City. Bryan Cumming shortly after leaving college re- turned to Augusta, Ga., and entered the office of his father, Joseph B. Cumming, and under his instruction took up the study of law. He was admitted to practice in the State Courts in January, 1884. He at once began the practice of his profession, and has followed it with increasing success ever since. In addition to a good general practice, he represents several corporate and rail- road interests as general or local counsel. His place of business is in the City of Augusta, but he lives in one of the suburbs, known as Summerville, about three miles distant, on an elevation of several hundred feet above 27 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD the city on premises that have been the home of mem- bers of his family for something over a century. He be- gan a short career in politics by serving several years as Intendant (or Mayor) of Summerville. In 1892-3 he was a member of the Georgia House of Representatives, and in 1894-5 a member of the Georgia Senate. He found it impossible to deal with both politics and law, so gave up the former in order to give all his attention to his profession. He married Miss Mary G. Smith, at Summerville, Ga., November 29th, 1889. He has two children: Mary Shaler, born December 3d, 1891, and Joseph Bryan, born August 10th, 1893. Address — Augusta, Ga. ♦George Edward Curtis, for a few months after re- ceiving his degree of Bachelor of Arts, remained at his home in Birmingham, Conn., prosecuting his studies in his chosen work of mathematics. In the spring of 1883 he received an appointment under the Chief Signal Officer in the Weather Bureau at Washington. The acuteness and accuracy of his intellectual faculties at once attracted attention and soon secured promotion. He continued his work in Meteorology and Atmos- pheric Physics until 1887, when he accepted the pro- fessorship of Mathematics in Washburn College, To- peka, Kansas. Although successful as a teacher and popular with his students, he found the conditions of life uncongenial, and longed for the companionship and in- terchange of ideas with the scientists and philosophers 28 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD of Washington, whither he returned. For several years he labored here, connected with the Smithsonian Insti- tution, always finding time for some special work in the field of his choice. His health was never robust; he now perceived that the harsh climate of the east was not suited to his delicate physique. He had already visited Arizona, in the employ of the Government, preparing a Geo- logical Survey and again as the Meteorologist of the Dyrenforth rain-making expedition, and thither he went once more, hoping that the dry and bracing air of this region would restore his failing health. Here for many months he fought with heroic and uncomplaining forti- tude against the all-conquering enemy — all alone, fearing to distress those who loved him by sad tidings. Finally, realizing that the battle must be lost, but not yet know- ing how near he was to the last surrender, he determined to return to his home, by way of New Orleans, where he stopped to pay a long-promised visit to his college chum, Bernard Titche. The fatigue of his journey told upon him and, feeling his strength deserting him after a few days' stay, he hastened on, and about the middle of Janu- ary, 1895, reached Washington. His mother came to meet him, but his physical powers, despite all that tender love could do, rapidly waned, and within a week his bright spirit passed away. He received the degree of M.A. from Yale in June. 1887. He was an active member of the Philosophical Society of Washington, D. C, and wrote a number 29 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD of articles on scientific subjects. Numerous articles by him relating to meteorology have been pub- lished by the Signal Office, " The American Journal of Science," " The American Meteorological Journal " and ether scientific periodicals. The Century Co. paid a high tribute to his attainments by engaging him to write the definitions of the Meteorological terms in all but the first volume of the Century Dictionary, a work for which he was well qualified by reason of his special training and the conciseness and accuracy of his style of thought and language. Short as was his career (he was but thirty-three years of age when he died), his achievements were consider- able, and gave great promise of distinction. *Theodore DeWitt Cuyler traveled abroad for six months and returned late in the fall of 1882. Not long afterwards he was attacked with malignant scarlet fever, and on January 1st, 1883, he died, having been ill but a very few days. Stricken down so suddenly while in the enjoyment of perfect health and strength, his death came as a great shock to all his friends. He was one of the most conspicuous figures in our class both in athletics and socially, and all who knew him will deeply mourn his loss. A tablet in his memory has been placed by some of his classmates in the vestibule of Battell Chapel, and 30 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD bears the inscription " Brave and Beloved." — [From the Triennial Record.] Frederick Orren Darling was engaged in ranching in Montana until the spring of 1884. He was then a com- mission agent for hydraulic elevators and brick at Minneapolis, Minn. He afterwards engaged in some mining enterprises in the west. For several years he lived in New York, being connected with the firm of Belding Bros. Later he moved to Center Moriches, Long Island, and is at present engaged in active busi- ness as a member of the Moriches Fuel Co. He is un- married. Address — Center Moriches, N. Y. Edwin Lynde Dillingham in October, 1882, entered the banking house of R. H. Parks & Co., 13 New Street, New York, where he remained until June 19, 1883. He was then a partner in the firm of Currie & Dillingham, Brokers, until March 1st, 1885, when the partnership was dissolved and he entered the employ of his uncle, Charles T. Dillingham, Publisher and Wholesale Book- seller, New York. From November, 1886, to February, 1892, he was in Boston, first with Ticknor & Co., Pub- lishers, 211 Tremont Street — until they retired from business in May, 1889 — and then with Lee & Shepard, Publishers, at 10 Milk Street. February 1st, 1892, he returned to New York, becoming junior partner in the firm of Charles T. Dillingham & Co., Wholesale Book- 3i BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD sellers, 718 and 720 Broadway. May 1st, 1893, they moved to 764 and 766 Broadway, and on March 25th, 1896, they retired from business disposing of their stock and good-will to the Baker & Taylor Co. The October following he accepted a position with Charles Scribner's Sons, Publishers, 153-157 Fifth Avenue, New York, since which time he has been with them and is at present at the head of their Subscription Book Department. He is unmarried. Address — 153 Fifth Avenue, New York. Franklin Maynard Eaton was graduated from the Harvard Medical School in 1885. He was House Offi- cer in the City Hospital, Worcester, Mass., from April 15th to November 15th, 1885. During the winter of 1885 and spring of 1886 he studied in Vienna. In No- vember, 1886, he settled in Providence, R. I., and for a number of years practiced at 336 Benefit Street. He was Surgical Externe to the City Hospital from March to December, 1885; Surgeon Q. P. D., R. I. Hospital, 1887-1896; Physician Prov. Disp., 1886-1889; Physician Home for Aged Women, 1890- 1896, and Physician to Society P. C. C, 1889-1896. He has written a number of medical papers and has translated many articles from German medical periodicals. He was a member of the Rhode Island Medical Society Examining Board, 1890- 1895; Anniversary Chairman, 1894, and President D. K. E. Alumni Assoc, of R. I., 1888-1890. November 25th, 1885, he married Miss Emily T. 32 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Parks, at Medford, Mass., and has a daughter, Irene Helen, born August ioth, 1887. Just as he was well established in a pleasant home, with a good practice and well on the top in hospital appointments, he lost both parents suddenly, and found his daughter fast yielding to that terrible disease, asthma, so he gave up work to seek health for his only child. Address — Box 630, Providence, R. I. James Richard Ely entered Columbia Law School, class of 1884, and remained during junior year. During that time he studied in the office of the then firm of Dunning, Edsall, Hart & Fowler, at No. 67 Wall Street, New York City. Subsequently, from May, 1884, until August, 1 2th, 1885, he served a clerkship in the office of Roger Foster, Yale '78. In December, 1885, he was admitted to the New York bar, and on the 1st of Janu- ary, 1886, he opened an office for the general practice of the law, and he has since been actively engaged at his profession. He is now located at 15 Wall Street. He has taken some interest in politics, havingbelonged to the old County Democracy and subsequently, to its successor, the State Democracy. Later he was a member of the National Democratic Party, in which he was on the Executive Committee of the County Organization. In April, 1895, ne was appointed Assistant United States Attorney and served until February, 1898, when his resignation tendered in December, 1897, was ac- cepted. The same year (1895) he was a delegate to the 33 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Syracuse Convention of the National Democratic Party, and he was a delegate to the National Convention of the National Democratic Party, which was held at Indian- apolis, where Palmer and Buckner were nominated. In the fall of 1898 he was made a member of the Committee of One Hundred in the movement in behalf of an Inde- pendent judiciary. In January, 1902, he was appointed Assistant Dis- trict Attorney under William Travers Jerome, and he is now serving as such. In addition he continues his private practice. Since his admission to the bar he has been a member of the law firms of Ely & Walker and Ely & McBride. The Walker of his first firm was Eugene W. Walker, of Yale '80, and the Mc- Bride of his second firm was Wilber McBride, of the Class of '82. At present he is alone. He is a member of the Union League, University, Manhattan, Reform, N. Y. Athletic and Seawanhaka Corinthian Yacht Clubs. June 8th, 1886, he married Miss Emma Stotsen- burg, of New Albany, Ind. He has two children: a son, David Jay, born in New York City, June 30th, 1888, and a daughter, Alice Anne, born in New York City, May 4th, 1892. Address — 15 Wall Street, New York. William Phelps Eno left the class at the beginning of senior year, but later received his degree with name entered in Class of '82. He has been engaged in the management of real estate in New York City and in 34 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Hartford, Conn. For a number of years he has been in no active business, but has devoted such time as he could spare from the management of his property to yachting, coaching and other sports in which he is interested. A few years ago he had an article in the " Rider and Driver " which caused much comment and was widely copied throughout the country. His plan provides for the regulation of street traffic of New York, and has met with general approval. He has studied the whole ques- tion and makes suggestions covering the entire ground — from the advisability of equipping horseback riders at night with lanterns and bells to a plan for regulating the movements of carriages on Broadway on the occa- sions of opera performances. He advocates the creation of a new municipal bureau to have control of street traf- fic, over which a " Manager of Street Traffic " is to pre- side. This official is to be second in authority to the Chief of Police alone and his subordinates are to have police authority. If his plans can be put into execution a veritable revolution in the methods of regulating ve- hicles in New York will be effected. He is a member of the University, N. Y. Athletic, Seawanhaka Corinthian and N. Y. Yacht Clubs. He married Miss Alice Rath- bone, at New Orleans, April 4th, 1883. Address — Saugatuck, Conn. Francis Cooley Farwell traveled abroad for some months after graduation. Since his return he has been with the firm of J. V. Farwell & Co., Wholesale Dry 35 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Goods, 148 Market Street, Chicago, 111. He married Miss Fanny N. Day, of Chicago, May 19th, 1887, and has three children: Albert Day, born May 28th, 1888; Marion, born January 13th, 1892, and Elizabeth Cooley, born June 12th, 1895. His home is at Lake Forest, 111. Address — 148 Market Street, Chicago, 111. Augustine FitzGerald has lived abroad most of the time since leaving college, and has devoted himself to the study of art. He was for some time in London, but is now in Paris, and has a studio at 11 Avenue Hoche. His masters in painting have been Mm. Boulanger and Lefebure, and he has also worked at the Cours d'Yvon at the Ecole des Beaux Arts. He spends his time be- tween Paris, London and various points of Italy. Re- cently he took an extended painting tour in Egypt, and he has devoted some years to landscape work at Bar- bizon in the forest of Fontainebleau. In March, 1894, he married at Florence — ceremony being performed at the British Consulate, the English Church, and the Ital- ian Municipality — Sybil Mary Winifred Wyndham, daughter of Major Charles Wyndham, formerly of the Ninth Bengal Cavalry. He has two children: Alida Cecilia Winifred, seven years of age, and Edward Gal- braith Augustine, two years younger. Address — 11 Avenue Hoche, Paris, France. Carlton Alexander Foote taught school for two years in the Bishop Scott Academy, Portland, Oregon. From 36 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD September, 1884, until June, 1886, he held the Larned Scholarship, and pursued a course of non-professional studies in the graduate department of Yale University, receiving the degree of M.A. in June, 1902. He had charge of the Atchison Latin School, Atchison, Kansas, for eight years, and for several years taught Latin and French in the Irving School, 54 West Eighty-fourth Street, New York City. At present he is teaching in the DeWitt Clinton High School. He is unmarried. Address — 41 West Twelfth Street, New York. Wilbur Harvey Nash Ford taught school in Pough- keepsie, N. Y., until 1885. He then taught for a year at the Park Institute, Rye, N. Y. In 1886 he became connected with Porter Academy, at Charleston, S. C, and for some time was its Principal. He is at the pres- ent time teaching in Chicago. He married Hattie W. Downs, at Milford, Conn., September 18th, 1889. Address — 3351 Calumet Avenue, Chicago, 111. Burnside Foster studied for three years in the Har- vard Medical School. In June, 1885, he received the de- gree of M.D., and the highest hospital appointment in his class. On August 1st, 1885, he began a term of eighteen months' service in the Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston. After leaving the hospital in Feb- ruary, 1887, he spent the remainder of that year in study and practice at the hospitals of Vienna and Dublin. Upon his return to this country he went at once to 37 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Minneapolis, where he is now settled in the practice of medicine. During the winter of 1887-8 he lectured on Physiology to the students in the Minnesota Hospital College. He is Professor of Dermatology and Lecturer on the History of Medicine in the University of Minne- sota, Editor of the " St. Paul Medical Journal," a Di- rector of the St. Paul Public Library and Secretary of the Ramsey County Medical Society. He is the author of " A Course of Lectures on the History of Medicine and of the Medical Profession " ; and he has also written nu- merous articles in the various medical journals of the country. The following, from a St. Paul paper, gives a vivid account of his thrilling experience in the summer of 1896: " Dr. Burnside Foster played a brave but decidedly unpleasant part last week in what was the nearest approach to old-time frontier out- lawry that has for a score of years occurred in Minnesota. Dr. Foster lives in St. Paul. His wife is spending the summer at Os- ceola Mills, a few miles from the city. Not being in good health she wired Dr. Foster to come to her, he not knowing how urgent the call might be, provided himself with funds — about $80 — and left by a late train, so that when he arrived at Wyoming station, about thirty miles out of St. Paul, he found everything dark. The conductor shouted to him to awaken men at a small restaurant across the way and they would find some one to drive him to the mills. In response to continued knocking Edward Paul opened the restaurant door and the doctor said that he wanted to be driven to Osceola and would pay liberally for it. His remark was overheard by three men who had alighted from the train with him. Dr. Foster went in while Paul lighted a lamp. Jacob Hayes sat on the foot of a bed. Wilson Lyle was asleep in the room and in an adjoining room were sleeping Mrs. Paul and child. Dr. Foster had left the outside door slightly ajar. Suddenly it was thrown violently open and three men, armed with heavy revolvers, and faces masked with bandanas, burst into the 38 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD room. At the moment Hayes was on the bed, Paul with the lighted lamp behind the lunch counter and Dr. Foster in the middle of the room. The ruffians promptly covered the men and one guarded the door. One of the thugs began searching, at revolver's point, Dr. Fester, who offered no resistance, though his wallet went, until the robber made a grab for the doctor's watch, which was a highly prized heirloom. This made the doctor desperate; he decided to fight, and turning suddenly around, grabbed a flatiron from a shelf and dealt the assailant a blow in the face. His resistance proved contagious, for Hayes rose from the bed and rushed to the doctor's rescue, but the desperado at the door shot him through the head and he fell dead. Paul had ducked behind the counter. The assassin, his taste whetted, walked deliberately over to the counter and leaning over shot the shivering Paul through the head — dead. * Meanwhile Foster was in a life and death struggle with the man who had been going through his pockets. The third desperado joined the fray, firing several shots at the doctor, one narrowly miss- ing Lyle on the bed and the infant in the next room. Soon all three villains went at Dr. Foster, and with their revolvers beating down his hands knocked him to the floor insensible, and as they supposed dead. They fled, alarm was given by Mrs. Paul, who, finding Dr. Foster lying in a pool of blood and the two others dead, rushed in her nightclothes to a neighbor's. Meanwhile Section Foreman Stear had been roused by the firing, and learning of the dual tragedy, roused the town. It was at first thought by the townsmen that Dr. Foster, who was unknown to them, was the guilty man, but he presently re- turned to consciousness and explained. His wounds dressed he was taken on a special train to St. Paul, where in St. Joseph's hospital he is now convalescent. The desperadoes were tracked and surrounded by a posse of citizens and officers. Some fifty shots were exchanged in fierce and close fight, which resulted in the killing of Bob Wilson, the assassin, and the capture of his two accomplices, George Kelly and Arthur Johnson, who are now in prison." He married Miss Sophie Vernon Hammond, at St. Paul, January ist, 1894, and has three children: Harriet Burnside, born February 3d, 1895; Elizabeth Ham- mond, born March 5th, 1899, and Roger Sherman, born December 13th, 1900. Address — Lowry Arcade, St. Paul, Minn. 39 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Asa Palmer French was instructor in Latin and French in the Thayer Academy, Braintree, Mass., for one year after graduation. He then entered the Law School of the Boston University. In December, 1884, he was offered the position of Law Clerk to the Judges of the Court of Commissioners of Alabama Claims, at Washington, D. C. He accepted the appointment, but before entering upon the duties of his office he com- pleted the required amount of law reading and was ad- mitted to practice in the Supreme Court of Massachu- setts. He remained in Washington until January, 1886, when he returned to Boston, and at once began the practice of the law. He has gained for himself an enviable reputation as an advocate, on account of his remarkable manage- ment, in association with the Hon. James E. Cot- ter, his senior, of the defence of Thomas M. Bram, mate of the barkentine Herbert Fuller, tried for murder on the high seas in October, 1896, before the Supreme Court of the United States, when the judgment of the Circuit Court against Bram was reversed. This cele- brated case brought him into national prominence and won for him a place in the front rank of criminal lawyers. The strength of his convincing power in addressing jurors was made manifest when he secured the acquittal of Joseph E. Gerry, indicted for murder, in December, 1899, at Dedham. In civil cases he has also figured in many important cases, and two years ago he won ad- ditional prominence by his able presentation of the cause 40 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD of the anti-vivisectionists before the Committee on Chan- cery at the State House. This service was given for practically no remuneration, and as a contribution to the cause of humanity. In November, 1891, he was the nominee of both the Republican and Democratic parties for District Attor- ney for the Southeastern District of Massachusetts, com- prising the counties of Norfolk and Plymouth, and was elected for a term of three years. He married Miss Elizabeth Ambrose Wales, of Randolph, Mass., Decem- ber 13th, 1887, and has two children: Jonathan Wales, born April 26th, 1891, and Constance, born April 13th, 1896. He lives in Randolph, Mass. His office is in the New England Mutual Life Insurance Building, 87 Milk Street, Boston. Address — 87 Milk Street, Boston, Mass. Joseph Emanuel Friend was for the two years fol- lowing graduation engaged in mercantile business in New York. At the end of that time he moved to Chi- cago, and there opened an office representing a cotton goods house of New York. After remaining in Chi- cago seven years he, in 1890, severed his connection with the New York firm and removed to New Orleans, where he has since resided. He is now engaged in the cotton factor and commission business, being a member of the firm of Julius Weis & Co. He married Miss Ida Weis, at New Orleans, March 19th, 1890. They have two 41 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD children: Lillian Frances, born January 15th, 1891, and Julius Weis, born August 20th, 1894. Address — 817 Gravier Street, New Orleans, La. *Harry Chambers Fries studied law in the office of George W. Biddle, at Philadelphia, and was admitted to the bar in December, 1884. On January 1st, 1885, he became a member of the firm of Prevost & Fries, Attor- neys at Law, 629 Walnut Street, Philadelphia. He practiced as a member of that firm until his death, which occurred July 14th, 1886. He had long been a sufferer from acute dyspepsia, but he had no knowledge of any weakness of his lungs until a few weeks before his death, when he had a severe hemorrhage, from the shock of which he did not rally, but rapidly declined until his death. , He was of a quiet, earnest disposition, commanding the respect of all, and the love of those who knew him best. His strength of character and his natural abilities were such that had they been coupled with a strong physique, he would surely have attained a position in the world that would have been an honor to the class. — [From the Sexennial Record.] Frank Runyon Gallaher after graduation entered the employ of Otis Bros. & Co., of New York, Boston and Chicago. He left them to assume charge of a large cop- per mine in Arizona, where the heat and lack of " crea- ture comforts " made life such a burden that he returned 42 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD to Otis Bros. He left them a second time, to become partner in a coal company, but his partner dying, the firm was dissolved, and he again returned to Otis Bros. In 1892 he retired from active busi- ness, and since then he has lived the life of a " country gentleman " at Essex, Conn. He is chief executive of his local town government, which includes three separate villages, and makes politics his amusement, being the local " boss " and run- ning the caucus to suit himself. As a member of the Connecticut State Legislature he was exceedingly prominent both in debate and as a leader on the Democratic side. A Hartford daily, in de- scribing the members of the Legislature, published the following : " Frank R. Gallaher — the world goes well with him — at thirty-nine he is ' retired ' — and he goes well with the world. His grace of manner and felicitous speech have become familiar. His remarks are short, but always pithy, and frequently witty. By the record he has assisted in making for it, no man need ever hesitate to say that he was a member on the minority side of the House at this session." As a member of the Connecticut State Sewerage Com- mission he made an extended tour of Europe (his third trip since graduation) in 1900. He is President of the Essex Light and Power Co., whose territory comprises a large part of Middlesex County, Conn. He says he spends most of his time playing golf, yachting, fishing and shooting, as he has neither wife nor children to say him nay. Address — Essex, Conn. 43 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Henry Washburn Gardes is with the firm of Hollo- way & Gardes, Wholesale Hardware, New Orleans, La. He married Miss Lucie Wiltz, daughter of ex-Governor Wiltz, at New Orleans, November 7th, 1888. — [From the Sexennial Record.] f Charles Burr Graves, the fall after graduation, en- tered the medical department of Harvard University, where he continued as a student of medicine for three years. This was followed by a term of service of eight- een months at the Boston City Hospital. On account of a hospital regulation, which forbade house officers to take their degrees till near the end of the hospital term of service, he did not get his degree of M.D, till June, 1886, though his course at the medical school had been ended a year before. Associated with him in the medi- cal school were Foster, Lowe, Eaton and Scudder. In January, 1887, upon the completion of his hospital ser- vice, he settled in New London, where he has remained ever since, engaged in the general practice of medicine. He was for a number of years City Physician, has been Clerk of New London County Medical Association, Sec- retary of New London Medical Society and later Presi- dent of same society; also Secretary of Medical Board, New London Memorial Hospital. He says : " The vaca- tion times of a busy physician are few and far between, but I have taken a few trips to the mountains of New England and have managed to attend most of the class t No response to repeated communications asking for information. 44 - BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD reunions. My interest in outdoor studies, especially field botany and ornithology, continues, and in the way of recreation much of my leisure time is devoted to these sciences." He married Miss Frances M. Miner, at New London, Conn., September ioth, 1891. His son, Addi- son Miner, born July 8th, 1894, died April 12, 1902. He has a daughter, Elizabeth, born November 16th, 1898. Address — 22 Franklin Street, New London, Conn. George Heber Graves spent a year in the lumber business at Stetsonville, Wisconsin. He then studied chemistry for two years in the Sheffield Scientific School. He was Assistant Chemist in the Fairfield Chemical Co., Bridgeport, Conn., from July, 1885, to September, 1886. He was then Superintendent and Chemist of the Fairfield Chemical Co., at New Haven, until August, 1888, when he became Chemist and Director of the Fair- field Chemical Works, at Bridgeport, Conn. He mar- ried Miss Mary Caroline Goodsell, at Bridgeport, Conn., January 17th, 1901. Address — The Fairfield Chemical Works, Bridgeport, Conn. Herbert Stanton Griggs was graduated from the Yale Law School in June, 1884. He then practiced in St. Paul, in the office of ex-Governor C. K. Davis. In June, 1885, he was appointed Assistant City Attorney, and served as such until February, 1886, when he was obliged by ill health to give up all work. In the fall of 1886 he 45 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD went abroad, where he remained for a year, and returned with health entirely restored. He again practiced in St. Paul until the fall of 1888, when he removed to Tacoma, Washington, where he is now located. He is the author of various historical articles and occasional rhymes. He writes : " Have acquired a comfortable fortune and have not missed any of the pleasures that society, athletics and professional success have always in reserve for Yale graduates — except matrimony." Address — Tacoma, Wash. *Alfred Chapman Hand spent the first year after graduation at Chicago and Marquette, at the latter place as a private tutor. For two years he was an instructor at Williston Seminary. The summer of 1885 was spent in Europe tramping Wales and Switzerland. That fall he entered Union Theological Seminary, New York, and was graduated in 1888. He married Sara Lord Avery, June 27th, 1888. He was licensed to preach by the Presbytery of Lackawanna, at Honesdale, Pa., and although urged to accept a pastorate in New York City he chose to accept a less conspicuous position, and ac- cepted a call to the Church of the Covenant, in Buffalo. A Buffalo paper said of him : " He at once endeared him- self to his people and the community at large by his singular graces of mind and manner." He had scarcely begun his work when he was sudden- ly confronted with alarming symptoms of a dread malady — a disease so relentless in its sure and steady progress 46 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD as to bring despair to the most courageous heart. To him the scaling of the mountain peak and the long " car- ries " of the North Woods had been a pastime, but the old strength slowly but surely ebbed away. During these days his heart was strong, and brave and hopeful. What anguish and sorrow he may have had ere he said: " God's will be done," no one but his Maker knows. He hastened to Carlsbad, and then went to Cannes for the winter with his wife, where Avery Chapman Hand was born, April 27th, 1889. The boy is now thirteen years of age, and in many respects wonderfully like his father. In April, 1890, he returned to the home land and was welcomed back by some of the boys resident in and about New York. For some months he traveled much, hoping to find a congenial spot where pure air and healthful sur- roundings might stay the progress of the fatal malady. Hope alternated with anxious fear, but all the time he was working as his strength would permit in the old familiar way of helping others. A sturdy Canadian far- mer who heard him preach one Sabbath in a pastorless country church said : " You should not be preachin' here, you ought to have a cathedral." And his cathedral was fast building. His last public address was made Feb- ruary 1 6th, 1892. Among other things, he said: "The ■first thought of the day should be of Heaven." That was the secret of his peace. His physician had felt those ties of friendship which still bind his classmates in lov- ing memory, and remained by his bedside all of the night of March 12th, and on the morrow, a beautiful Sabbath 47 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD day, March 13th, 1892, " Duke " went home. His last act of consciousness was a smile and one of those happy- remarks so characteristic of the dear fellow, and ad- dressed to his loving and devoted wife. Ten years have passed — we have not forgotten him — and we will not, for quite unconsciously his influence for good was stamped on our lives and in so far he lives in us. His body was laid at rest at Mansfield, Ohio. " O noble Soul ! O gentle heart ! Hail! and farewell!" Charles Burnell Hawkes was graduated at the Yale Law School in June, 1883. He practiced in Topeka, Kansas, until the fall of 1886, when he returned to New Haven, and took the graduate course at the Yale Law School, receiving the degree of M.L., in June, 1887. He is now practicing in New York City, at 51 Chambers Street. He married Miss Julia A. Burrell, at New York, January 21st, 1890. Address — 51 Chambers Street, New York. Charles Samuel Hebard is engaged in the lumber manufacturing business as a member of the firm of Charles Hebard & Son, Pequaming, Mich. He, how- ever, spends a good part of each year in the east, having winter residences in Thomasville, Ga., and Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia. He married Miss Hannah J. Morgan, of Cleveland, Ohio, September 30th, 1885, and has a son, Morgan, born February 23d, 1887. Address — Pequaming, Baraga County, Mich. 48 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Theodore Holland was graduated at the Columbia Law School, and admitted to the New York bar in 1884. He then became interested in, and was for a while Secretary of the United Coal and Oil Gas Co., of New York. In the spring of 1888 he removed to Denver, Col., becoming Vice-President and Treasurer of the Buena Vista Improvement Co. He is at present practic- ing law in Denver. He married Miss Florence Olm- stead Ward, at Denver, Col., June 3d, 1891, and has two daughters, Barbara and Elizabeth, born April 15th, 1892. Address — 13 19 Williams Street, Denver, Col. Samuel Cornell Hopkins the first three years after graduation was in Texas, ranching. He then entered the Catskill National Bank, Catskill, N. Y., and has been connected with that institution since 1885. He has spent a good deal of time in travel, and April 21st, 1897, mar- ried Miss Mary Howland Pell, at New York. He is a member of the New York University Club. Address — Catskill, N. Y. Henry Clarke Jefferds studied medicine in Philadel- phia, graduating with honors April 3d, 1885. He then served for eighteen months in the Homeopathic Hospi- tal, on Ward's Island, New York, at the same time tak- ing a post-graduate course in the Polyclinic. From Au- gust, 1886, to November, 1889, he practiced medicine in Bangor, Maine, then moved to Portland, Oregon, where he is now engaged in his profession, with offices 49 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD in the Dekum Building. He is Surgeon to Portland Hospital, Physician in Charge of Children's Home and Assistant Surgeon First Regiment, O. N. G. He is un- married. Address — 603 Dekum Building, Portland, Oregon. *Barclay Johnson held the Larned Scholarship for a year and pursued a course of non-professional studies in the graduate department of the college. He was also, during this period, connected for a short time with the Yale Law School. The following year he entered the Columbia Law School and the law office of Alexander & Green, New York. For nearly two years he devoted himself with the closest application to his studies, allow- ing himself but very little recreation. He lived at his home in Greenwich, Conn., and was compelled to make a fatiguing trip to and from New York each day. His evenings were largely spent in a wide course of reading in mental and moral philosophy, and in thinking and writing upon deep and difficult metaphysical problems. Under this terrible strain his strong body and brilliant mind at last gave way. He died at Greenwich, April 21st, 1885. Our foremost scholar, a true gentleman, with so many noble and endearing characteristics, beloved by us all, so full of great promise — it is hard, very hard to think that in this our first record, must terminate so sadly his his- tory as a member of our class. — [From the Triennial Record.] 50 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Frank Albert Kellogg studied dynamic engineering for a short time in the Sheffield Scientific School, and in the fall of 1883 entered the Yale Law School from which he was graduated in June, 1885. He practiced in the office of Doolittle & Bennett, at New Haven, until Octo- ber, 1887. In April, 1888, he became manager of the Lawn Tennis Department of D. W. Granbery & Co., at 20 John Street, New York. For two years he was with A. G Spaulding & Co,, four years with " Outing" Maga- zine and one year with " Bachelor of Arts." Since 1898 he has been with the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Co., with the exception of one year spent in Darien, Conn. He was married June 4th, 1900, at Church of St. Mary the Virgin, New York, to Miss Carolyn F. Kilbourne. His daughter, Helen Kilbourne, born March 1st, 1902, died August 5th, 1902. Address — 280 Fifty-eighth Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. John Prescott Kellogg was graduated from the Yale Law School in June, 1884. Since then he has practiced law as a member of the firm of Kellogg & Kellogg, Waterbury, Conn. He was Assistant City Attorney of Waterbury from 1891 to 1893 and Prosecuting Attorney of District Court 1893 to 1896. Since January 1st, 1896, he has been City Attorney, and since February, 1897, Assistant State's Attorney. He was Captain and A. D. C. Brigade Staff, C. N. G., 1890-1892, and Captain commanding Co. A, Second Regiment, C. N. G., 1892- 1893. He married Miss Clara Mason, at Bridgeport, 5i BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Conn., June ist, 1892, and has three children: Fredrika Mason, born January 23d, 1894; Elizabeth Hosmer, February 23d, 1899, and Rosemary, February 16th, 1902. Address — 56 Church Street, Waterbury, Conn. James Henry Kingman studied medicine in the Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, receiving the degree of M.D., June 28th, 1885. He served as House Physician in Bellevue Hospital, New York, until October ist, 1886. During 1887 and 1888 he practiced at New Bedford, Mass., and was City Physician. Since then he has resided in Pawtucket, R. I., practicing his profession there. He was Secretary of the Providence Medical Association for two years, and is now a member of the Rhode Island Medical Society, Providence Medi- cal Association and Pawtucket Medical Association. He has prepared and read before different medical societies various papers on medical subjects. He married Miss Fanny A. Terry, at New Bedford, Mass., November 19th, 1889. She died December 29th of the same year of typhoid fever and July 6th, 1898, he married Miss Mary T. Cheever, of Portsmouth, N. H. Address — Pawtucket, R. I. Alfred Beard Kittredge studied law for a year in an office in Keene, N. H., and then entered the senior class of the Yale Law School in September, 1884, being grad- uated in June, 1885. Always taking an active interest in 52 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD politics he has for a number of years been the Republican leader in South Dakota and a member of the Republican National Committee. He was State Senator twice and is now the first and only representative of '82 in the U ; . S. Senate, his term expiring in 1903. He is unmarried. Address — Sioux Falls, South Dakota. Howard Hoyt Knapp after graduation studied law at the Yale Law School. He was admitted to the bar in June, 1884, and in September went into the office of Seymour & Seymour, Attorneys, Bridgeport, Conn. (Edward W. Seymour, Yale, '53, and Morris W. Sey- mour, Yale, '66.) On January 1st, 1887, he became a partner of Morris W. Seymour, under name of Seymour & Knapp, and he is still practicing law as member of that firm at 1094 Main Street. From his admission to the bar until he was married he lived at his old home in South Norwalk, and during the winter of '84 and '85 had some thrilling experiences in' connection with labor troubles. For several months, both by day and night, he assisted in guarding property and men, and had many exciting times, having, among other experiences, the pleasure (?) of a dynamite explosion, which blew out the end of the building where he slept. He was Corporation Counsel for the City of Bridge- port in 1892-3 and is now counsel to the Commis- sioners of Fairfield County. He was Treasurer of Fairfield County Law Library Association from 1894- 1900. He is on the Board of Directors of the 53 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Boys' Club, Bridgeport, member of the Grievance Committee of Fairfield County Bar, and Instructor in Connecticut Practice at Yale Law School. Recently he was made a member of the Executive Committee of the Connecticut Civil Service Reform Association. He was for three years a member of the Board of Apportion- ment and Taxation of Bridgeport, and in December, '99, was unanimously elected president of the board. The following editorial appeared in the Bridgeport " Evening Post " the day after his election : The selection of Howard H. Knapp for president of the board of apportionment is a distinct compliment to that shrewd and con- servative lawyer. Mr. Knapp has been a member of the board for some time, and understands the needs and requirements of the city probably as well as anyone in the city. He will be fearless, earnest and impartial in managing the affairs of this important board. He married Miss Emily Perkins, at Hartford, Conn., February 9th, 1888, and has a son, Farwell, born No- vember 28th, 1893. Another son, born April 19th, 1891, died in infancy. Through athletics and his position as instructor in Yale Law School, he has kept in close touch with Yale life, and by his coaching has contributed in no small part to her victories on the football field. Address — 1094 Main Street, Bridgeport, Conn. George William Lay pursued a three years' course at the General Theological Seminary of the Episcopal Church, New York. During that time he was engaged in church work, especially in Calvary Parish, where he had charge of a choir and assisted in mission work. He 54 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD spent the summer of 1884 in traveling abroad. He was ordained Deacon of the Protestant Episcopal Church, by Bishop Lee, of Delaware, in St. Paul's Church, Cen- terville, Md., on June 5th, 1885, and became Assistant Minister of St. Paul's Church, Erie, Pa., in July of that year. He was ordained Priest, by Bishop Whitehead, of Pittsburg, on April 27th, 1886. On July 1st, 1887, he resigned his position in Erie, to become Assistant Minis- ter of St. George's Church, Newburgh, N. Y. He had charge of this parish for four months, during the Rec- tor's absence, and was afterwards in charge of its Mission Chapel. He remained there until September, 1888, when he became a Master in St. Paul's School, Concord, N. H., where he is still. He says : " My duties here are such as one would expect of a clerical master in a church school. I assist in the services of the two chapels, preaching with toler- able frequency to the boys and to those from the neigh- borhood. I am a member of our choir and have one of the Forms each Sunday in Sacred Studies. I have taught other subjects, but have finally settled down to Greek and Mathematics; and, in addition to my teaching I have a part in the supervisory work." More than half of his vacations have been taken up with clerical duties in churches in New Hampshire or in other States. As a clergyman of his diocese he has been for ten years one of the three clerical members of the Board of Managers of Diocesan Missions, and for the last eight he has served as its Secretary. 55 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD In the summer of 1891 he took a trip to San Francisco, Salt Lake City and different parts of Colorado, and in that of 1894 he visited the southern part of England, Bel- gium and France. He married Miss Anna Booth Balch, daughter of Rear Admiral George B. Balch, U. S. N., at Baltimore, Md., June 26th, 1894. He has three children: George Balch, born May 4th, 1895; Elizabeth Atkin- son, born April 6th, 1897, and Ellen Booth, born March 17th, 1899. Address — St. Paul's School, Concord, N. H. Charles Henry Lewis studied in the Bellevue Hos- pital Medical College, New York, and received the de- gree of M.D., in April, 1884. He was House Physician and Surgeon to St. Vincent's Hospital for eighteen months and Attending Physician, Out Patient Depart- ment, to the same institution for three years. For five years he was Assistant Physician, Out Patient Depart- ment, Roosevelt Hospital. He is at the present time Visiting Physician to Columbus Hospital and Assistant Visiting Physician to St. Vincent's Hospital, also Clini- cal Lecturer on Medicine at the University and Bellevue Hospital Medical College. With the exception of one year abroad, devoted to medical study, he has been since graduation from the medical college engaged in the prac- tice of his profession in New York City. He has con- tributed a number of articles to the " Medical Record " 56 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD and other medical journals. He is a member of the Uni- versity and N. Y. Athletic Clubs, and is unmarried. Address — 51 West Fifth-eighth Street, New York City. Charles Jonas Long is in the dry goods business at Wilkes-Barre, Pa. He is a Trustee of the Wilkes-Barre Board of Trade, a member of the Wyoming Historical Society and is connected with many other local institu- tions. — [From the Sexennial Record.] f Seymour Crane Loomis was graduated at the Yale Law School in 1884, and has since practiced in New Haven. He was in the office of Ailing & Webb until October, 1886, when he became a member of the firm of Stoddard, Thompson & Loomis. During the years 1885-6 he was Assistant City Clerk of New Haven, and in 1886 Acting City Clerk, elected by City Council. He was Executive Secretary of the State of Connecticut for 1893-4, appointed by Governor Morris. He married Miss Catherine Canfield Northrop, at New Haven, April 20th, 1892. Address — 81 Church Street, New Haven, Conn. Martin Lovering has taught every year since gradua- tion except one, when he had to give up on account of ill health. He is now teaching at Tuckahoe, N. Y. He married Miss Eva A. Archer, at New Rochelle, N. Y., August 5th, 1885. He has two children: Charlotte Eliza- t No response to repeated communications asking for information. 57 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD beth, born January 14th, 1887, and James Howe, born September 12th, 1890. Address — Tuckahoe, N. Y. Fred Messenger Lowe was graduated from the Har- vard Medical School in June, 1885. He practiced for a number of years at 36 Hancock Street, Boston, and is now located in West Newton, Mass. He married Miss Amelia F. Robbins, at Arlington, Mass., December 16th, 1887, and has one daughter, Gwendolen. Address — 1354 Washington Street, West Newton, Mass. Chester Wolcott Lyman spent the summer of 1882 at Machiasport, Maine, in the employ of the U. S. Coast Survey. In November of the same year he went abroad as a private tutor, and spent the winter in Rome. He returned to this country in August, 1883, and during the following academic year studied in the Sheffield Scien- tific School. In December, 1884, he went to Asheville, N. C, where he remained until November, 1885. For the past seventeen years he has been in the paper busi- ness, for a number of years being connected with the firm of W. H. Parsons & Co., in charge of their western business, with office in Chicago. He was for a while lo- cated at West Newton, Pa. Leaving there in December, 1890, he went to Herkimer, N. Y., and in time became Manager and a Director of the Herkimer Paper Com- pany. He resided in Herkimer until the spring of 1898. 58 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD While in Herkimer he was a member of the Fort Schuy- ler Club, of Utica, and various local societies. He is also an associate member of the American Institute of Elec- trical Engineers, a member of the University Club in New York, of the Yale Club, of the Sons of the Ameri- can Revolution and other organizations — social and scientific. In 1895 he received the degree of M.A. at Yale for a course of study in electricity. Upon leaving Herkimer in 1898 he went to New York and associated himself with the International Paper Company, at 30 Broad Street. Since its organization he has held the office of Assistant to the President, and for the past two years the additional position of Manager of one of its de- partments. In February, 1897, he was elected Secretary and Treasurer of the American Paper & Pulp Associa- tion, and was re-elected in 1898. He is unmarried. Address — 30 Broad Street, New York. Wilber McBride spent the year following graduation at the Sheffield Scientific School studying mining en- gineering. In 1883 he went to Marquette, Mich., and was interested there in lumber and in the cattle business at Miles City, Mont., until 1890. He then went to New York and has been continuously in the practice of the law since that time. He is a member of the Uni- versity and Manhattan Clubs. He married Mrs. Anna Truax Thurber, at New York, November 24th, 1896. Address — 16 Exchange Place, New York. 59 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Harry Chapman McKnight was graduated from the Yale Theological Seminary in May, 1885. He was or- dained to the ministry, and installed as pastor of the First Congregational Church, Falmouth, Me., October 7th, 1885. He resigned his pastorate September 13th, 1888, to become pastor of the Congregational Church at North Guilford, Conn., and for several years he has been located at East Longmeadow, Mass. He has served for a number of years on school boards in Con- necticut, and is the author of several historical sermons, which have been published. He married Miss Jennie Louisa Weed, at New Haven, Conn., May 19th, 1886. They have one child: Wallace, born May 2d, 1890; Ray Weed, born May nth, 1892, died August 20th, 1892, and Theodore Weed, born May 30th, 1896, died August 6th, 1896. Address — East Longmeadow, Mass. Daniel Walton Macmillan was for several years con- nected with the Dixon Fire Clay Co., St. Louis, Mo. In 1888 he was admitted to the firm and made Secretary and Treasurer. He is now living in Cincinnati, Ohio, where he is manager of the Cincinnati branch of The Hammond Typewriter Co. He married Miss Alice Rob- inson, at Brooklyn, N. Y., September 16th, 1899. Address — 137 East Fourth Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. Herbert Lyman Moodey was in Minneapolis until 1885, where he was a member of the firm of Moodey 60 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Bros., and was engaged in the wholesale fruit and fancy groceries business, and also in real estate and loans. In 1885 he removed to Painesville, Ohio, where he was a member of the firm of Moodey & Co., proprietors of The City Mills, and of the firm of H. L. Moodey & Co., Druggists and Grocers. In 1892 he engaged in the real estate business in New York City, in which he remained until 1897. He is at present a manufacturer of hard- ware specialties, with office at 150 Nassau Street. His home is in Plainfield, N. J. He married Miss Helen An- toinette Paine, at Painesville, Ohio, July 12th, 1883. They have four children: Antoinette Paine, born May 15th, 1884; Helen Chapin, October 26th, 1886; Ger- trude, September 28th, 1888; Harriette, October 13th, 1890. Address — 603 Watchung Avenue, Plainfield, N. J. Charles Newton Morris was for two years after grad- uation a Paymaster's Clerk in the U. S. Army. During the year 1884-5 ne pursued a course of study in history and politics in the graduate department of Johns Hop- kins University, and was also during part of that year an Instructor in History in the Washington High School, Washington, D. C. In the fall of 1885 he was a graduate student in political science at Yale. He spent the winter of 1886 as a private tutor in Chicago, and in May and June of that year he taught in the High School at Mont- clair, N. J. The following academic year he was again a graduate student in political science at Yale. In Sep- 61 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD tember, 1887, he entered the Berkeley Divinity School, Middletown, Conn., and read for orders in the Protestant Episcopal Church during 1887 and 1888. He was or- dained Deacon in 1889, Priest in 1890, by Bishop Wil- liams, of Connecticut, and has been engaged in church work at various places and in various capacities ever since. He received the degree of M.A. from Yale in 1887 and from Trinity College, Toronto, Canada, in 1893. He is at present located at Laurel, Del., but his permanent address is West Hartford, Conn. He is un- married. Address — West Hartford, Conn. *Walter Murphy was graduated from the Law School of the University of Pennsylvania in June, 1884. He published in that year an essay entitled " Remainders to Children as a Class," for which he was awarded the Sharswood Prize at the University Law School ; also " A Digest of the Partnership Law of Pennsylvania," and " A Digest of the Corporation Law of Pennsylvania." He practiced in Philadelphia until the fall of 1888, when he removed to Salt Lake City, Utah, where he was for many years the associate and later the partner of Hon. J. G. Sutherland, the well-known author of legal text- books. He died February 5th, 1897, having gone down under an attack of typhoid-pneumonia after a week's ill- ness. For two terms he was County Attorney of Salt Lake County and was one of the founders of the University 62 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Club, being at the time of his death its President. He married at Philadelphia, September 20th, 1889, Miss Emma Benson Purves and they had three children: Harold Purves, born July 9th, 1890, Helen Benson, April 9th, 1893, and Emma Maxwell, January 12th, 1895. He was kind, sympathetic, loving, manly, courageous and true. An old and close friend (his roommate at Princeton, and after he moved to Salt Lake City in 1888 his constant companion and neighbor) writes: " His profession had not as yet brought him either wealth or fame — perhaps they never would have come to him through the law, for Murphy was speculative rather than practical. But his was an intellectual life. He was fond of philosophizing upon the deeper problems of life — most of all upon that great mystery whose solution comes at last to all. Surely if there be in the silent halls of Death one cheerful sunny chamber where boundless outlook on the sea of Eternity is bright and peaceful, that must be his whose untimely death I mourn with you." John Russell O'Hanlon since graduation has been an Instructor in Pennington (N. J.) Seminary, of which institution his father has been President for the past thirty-three years. He has been Vice-President of the Seminary for eighteen years, his department being that of Higher Mathematics. He married Miss Lida Lilla- gore, at Ocean Grove, N. J., December 27th, 1882. They have five children: Russell Yale (class boy), born 63 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD October 24th, 1883; John Nelson, March 3d, 1887; Marguerite H., August 9th, 1890; Marie M., December 6th, 1893, and Laura, March 26th, 1898. Address — Pennington, N. J. Arthur Sherwood Osborne was graduated from the Yale Law School and admitted to the bar in June, 1884. In January, 1885, he was appointed Executive Secre- tary by Governor Harrison, of Connecticut, for a term of two years. Since January, 1887, he has practiced law in New Haven. He is unmarried. Address — P. O. Box 164, New Haven, Conn. Frank Edward Page studied law and practiced in Chi- cago in partnership with Bates until November, 1885, when the firm was dissolved. Since that time he has practiced alone. He has been more or less active for the past six years in reform municipal movements, not- ably the Municipal Voters' League, which has materially elevated the standard of the City Council of Chicago. An active practice has absorbed his time and attention, but he has found outside occupation in connection with his church and sundry religious and benevolent move- ments, notably the city, national and State work of the Christian Endeavor Society. He married Miss Gertrude M. Swenson, at Chicago, July 2d, 1895. Address — Ashland Block, Chicago, 111. Josiah Culbert Palmer was graduated at the Colum- bia Law School in 1884, and has been actively engaged 64 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD in the practice of his profession in New York ever since. He is a member of the firm of Lindsay, Kremer, Kalish & Palmer, with offices at 27 William Street. December 4th, 1889, he married Miss Mary Eagle, at Brooklyn, N. Y., and has two children: William Eagle, born De- cember 6th, 1890, and J. Culbert, Jr., born August nth, 1896. He is a member of the University Club and of the Sons of the Revolution. Address — 27 William Street, New York. William Scranton Pardee was graduated at the Yale Law School in 1884, and has since practiced in New Haven. He writes " Pardee is still Pardee, and there is nothing to add that I know of." He is unmarried. Address — 581 George Street, New Haven, Conn. Samuel Maxwell Parke studied law in the office of George R. Bedford, Wilkes-Barre, Pa., and was ad- mitted to the bar in June, 1885. He is now practicing at Pittston,Pa. He has been since January, 1887, a Director in the First National Bank of Pittston and in the Pittston Gas Light Co. In February, 1888, he was elected a member of the West Pittston Town Council and he is also a member of the Board of Health. He is unmarried. Address — Pittston, Pa. William Henry Parsons, Jr., traveled abroad for six months after graduation. On January 1st, 1883, he en- tered the business house of W. H. Parsons & Co., 65 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Manufacturers of and Dealers in Paper, New York City. On January ist, 1884, he became junior partner in that firm and stockholder in their mills at Brunswick, Me., West Newton, Pa., and Saugerties, N. Y. He was Treasurer of W. H. Parsons & Co. and an officer and director in their manufacturing companies. On April ist, 1900, he withdrew from W. H. Parsons & Co., and with his brother, organized the firm of Parsons Brothers, Paper Merchants and Exporters, taking over the mer- chandising and general commission business formerly done by W. H. Parsons & Co. His firm have offices at 257 Broadway, and in London and Sydney, Australia, and are export agents for some of the largest paper mill com- panies. He has always been prominent in religious and philanthropic work, devoting to it much of his time. He is a member of the University, N. Y. Athletic and American Yacht Clubs. He married Miss Laura Wol- cott Collins, at Rye, N. Y., June 26th, 1884. Children: Annie Rankin, born August 8th, 1885, died October 5th, 1886; William Henry, third, born may 29th, 1888; John Palmer, born April 16th, 1890; Oliver Wolcott, born September 12th, 1892; Laura Cecelia, born No- vember 6th, 1893; Mary Marselis, born October 8th, 1894. He resides in New York City. Address — 257 Broadway, New York. Chauncey Howard Pember was for two years in the custom tailoring and ready-made clothing business. For twelve years he was junior partner in the firm of E. 66 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Tolles & Co., Wholesale Woolens and Tailors' Trim- mings, and since 1896 has been associated with his brother in the same line of business, under the firm name of M. W. Pember's Sons, at 292 Asylum Street, Hart- ford. He is unmarried. Address — 292 Asylum Street, Hartford, Conn. Richard Henry Pierce taught for a year in the Co- lumbia City High School, Columbia City, Ind. He then spent two years as a student of electrical engineering in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, and received the degree of Bachelor of Science. He was then for a time Assistant County Engineer of Middlesex County, Mass. He afterwards became an Inspector for the Western Edison Light Co., at Chicago, and was with that company through various changes of organization from 1885 to 1890. In November, 1891, he was made Assistant Electrical Engineer and later Chief Electrical Engineer of the World's Columbian Exposition. In 1894 he formed the firm of Pierce & Richardson, which is engaged in mechanical, electrical, sanitary, heating and ventilating engineering in a purely professional way. He is now President of this company, which was incor- porated in 1897. He is the author of a book, entitled " The National Electrical Code," also of numerous ar- ticles on electrical subjects. He married Miss Carrie de Zeng Morrow, at Green Bay, Wis., April 15th, 1891, and has one son, Richard de Zeng, born April 20th, 1892. Address — Manhattan Building, Chicago, 111. 6 7 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Henry Barstow Piatt traveled abroad for about six months, and after his return was for some time Superin- tendent of the Gaines Coal & Coke Co., Addison, N. Y. He was then with the firm of Gere, Truman, Piatt & Co., Manufacturers of Agricultural Implements, Owego, N. Y., until May ist, 1887. For several years he was Superintendent of the Money Order Department of the United States Express Company, at 49 Broadway, New York City, and is now General Superintendent. He is also Vice-President of the Fidelity and Deposit Com- pany of Maryland. He is a member of the University, Colonial, Lawyers' and American Yacht Clubs. He mar- ried Miss Grace Lee Phelps, at Wilkes-Barre, Pa., No- vember 9th, 1887. They have three children: Sherman Phelps, born June 2d, 1890; Charlotte, born December 6th, 1896, and Thomas Collier, 2d, born May 3d, 1898. Address — 49 Broadway, New York. William Pollock in the fall of 1882 became a member of the New York Stock Exchange, and engaged in the banking and brokerage business at 25 Nassau Street, New York City, the firm name being Pollock & Bixby. The firm was dissolved in the spring of 1883, and Pol- lock continued the business for about a year. He then retired from the Stock Exchange, and was without ac- tive business until 1887, when he removed to Bridge- port, Conn., where he was for some time connected with the Housatonic R. R. Co. During the past few years he has been living in New York City. He married Mrs. 68 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Fannie Dawson Greenough, of Wilmington, N. C, Au- gust 9th, 1882. He has a daughter, Margaret, born June 27th, 1883. — [From the Sexennial Record.] f Julius Howard Pratt, Jr., after graduation was for two years an Instructor in Montclair (N. J.) High School, and for three years held the Silliman Fellowship in Yale University, while pursuing a course in the study of Physics. He received the degree of Ph.D. in 1887, and the following year he was Instructor in Physics at Cornell University. From 1888 to 1890 he was Instruc- tor in Physics and Mathematics at Illinois College, Jack- sonville, 111., and since 1890 he has been Principal of Milwaukee Academy, Milwaukee, Wis. He was a mem- ber of the Board of Visitors, University of Wisconsin, 1894-96, and a member of the Committee Auxiliary to Committee of Ten on Study of Greek in Secondary Schools. He married Miss Annie Barclay, at Washing- ton, D. C, December 27th, 1892. Address — Milwaukee Academy, Milwaukee, Wis. James Quackenbush Rice entered the U. S. Patent Office, Washington, D. C, as Assistant Examiner early in 1883. He was promoted through the various grades of Assistant Examiner and was appointed Principal Ex- aminer of the Patent Office in 1889, all of his promotions having been obtained by competitive examinations. He at the same time studied law, taking the degree of LL.B. t No response to repeated communications asking for information. 69 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD at the Columbian University Law School, and was ad- mitted to the Bar of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia in 1884. He remained in the Patent Office until 1898, and during most of his term as Principal Ex- aminer was in charge of the class of inventions relating more particularly to printing machinery and machinery for producing paper products. It is in connection with this class of machinery, therefore, that he is best known to the patent profession. He was also at various times, however, in charge of classes of invention relating to tobacco machinery, sewing machines and applied elec- tricity. He resigned from the Patent Office in Feb- ruary, 1898, to become a member of the firm of Philipp, Phelps & Sawyer, 220 Broadway, New York. In 1900 the firm name was changed to Philipp, Sawyer, Rice & Kennedy. The firm makes a specialty of patent and trade-mark law. He married Miss Helen Eggleston Howd, at Pleasant Valley, Conn., September 18th, 1883, and has two children : a son, Welles Kennon, born Janu- ary 1st, 1887, and a daughter, Dorothy Lee, born Au- gust 1 6th, 1888. Address — 220 Broadway, New York. Charles Edward Richards was for some time a mem- ber of the firm of George H. Richards, Jr., & Co., Jewelers, 383 Washington Street, Boston, Mass. Ten years ago he moved to California and was for a number of years engaged in the cultivation of trees, shrubs and plants at Moreno, Riverside County. He recently in- 70 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD vented some new methods in the way of treating and handling cement and plaster, and he is now manager of the Pacific Cement Water-Proofing Co., at Los An- geles. He married Miss Bertha W. Gray, at New Ha- ven, Conn., June 5th, 1889, and has a son, Philip Hand, eight years old. Address — 331 Douglas Building, Los Angeles, Cal. George Parker Richardson was with the Boston & Maine R. R. for eight years as Chief Clerk of Passenger Accounts and then became connected with the Atlas National Bank of Boston, where he is now Paying Tel- ler. He married Miss Elizabeth Whittaker Decker, at Boston, September 16th, 1896. She died June 29th, 1899. Address — Atlas National Bank, Boston, Mass. Robert Mayo Rolfe taught for a number of years in Memphis, Term. He is now Principal of Trinidad High School, Trinidad, Colo. He married Miss Mattie Kerr, at Memphis, Tenn., December 24th, 1886. Their son, Robert Lawrence, was born December 6th, 1887. Address — Trinidad, Colo. John Rossiter, in the fall of 1882, began teaching in Williston Seminary, Easthampton, Mass., where he re- mained till May, 1883. Then he went to Windsor, Conn., where he had charge of the High School till the last of June of the next year, 1884. From there he went to Norwich, Conn., to become Principal of the Broadway 7i BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Grammar School of that city, and is still holding that position. He married Miss Eleanor G. Brown, at New Canaan, Conn., August 22d, 1883, an< ^ has two children: Ruth Frances, born March 28th, 1886, and John Harold, born October 30, 1896. Address — JJ Union Street, Norwich, Conn. Benjamin Huger Rutledge studied law and was ad- mitted to the bar in May, 1884, and entered upon the practice of his profession in the office of Rutledge & Young, Charleston, S. C. In 1884 he was appointed Electoral Messenger of the State of South Carolina. In January, 1885, he was elected Captain of the Carolina Rifles. In September, 1887, he was elected Major com- manding 2d Battalion, 4th Brigade, S. C. V. T. On November 1st, 1887, he formed a partnership with his father for the practice of the law under the firm name of Rutledge & Rutledge, 45 and 47 Broad Street, Charleston, S. C. Since his father's death he has prac- ticed alone at the same address. He was President of the City Democratic Convention, 1889. Member of Legislature till Tillman came to the front, when he re- fused a renomination, which was practically re-election. He says, " I have had some successes and some failures — experience teaches me that even in the profession the element of luck enters largely into the calculation. Ber- tie's expedient (in the " Henrietta ") of tossing up the dollar applies equally to the law as to the stock ex- change. I have won where least I expected, and lost 72 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD when certain." He married Miss Emma Craig Blake, at Fletcher, N. C, October 5th, 1892, and has four chil- dren: Eleanor Middleton, born March 23d, 1894; Emma Blake, August 23d, 1897; Alice Weston, January 1st, 1899, and Benjamin Huger, Jr., January nth, 1902. Address — Charleston, S. C. Daniel Sammis Sanford was for the first year after graduation Principal of the High School, at Oil City, Pa. The next year he was Mathematical Master at St. John's Military Academy, Sing Sing, N. Y. He was Principal of the High and Central Grammar Schools, at Stamford, Conn., from 1884 to 1891, and for the past eleven years has been Principal of the High School, at Brookline, Mass. He received the degree of M.A. from Yale in June, 1885. He spent the summer of 1885 in Germany, and the Sabbatical Year (1898- 1899) was de- voted to observation and study of foreign schools in Germany, France and England. He married Miss Annie Bennet Tomlinson (Wellesley, '93), at Shelton, Conn., July 7th, 1898, and has two children: Joseph Hudson, born June 28th, 1900, and Daniel Sammis, Jr., born April 4th, 1902. Address — Brookline, Mass. Arthur Scranton was for a number of years Assistant Superintendent of the Bessemer Steel Works, Scranton, Pa. Resigning his position, he spent several years in Europe, and is now connected with the Lackawanna 73 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Steel Co., Buffalo, N. Y. He married Miss Mary D. Mcllvaine, at St. Albans, Vt, October 15th, 1884, and has two children: John Walworth, born July 27th, 1885, and Marian, born July 4th, 1889. Address — Care Lackawanna Steel Company, Buffalo, N. Y. Charles Locke Scudder studied for a year in the Shef- field Scientific School, and received the degree of Ph.B. in June, 1883. He then studied at the Harvard Medical School, receiving the degree of M.D. in June, 1888. He served one year and a half as House Surgeon at the Chil- dren's Hospital, Boston, and is now Senior Surgeon to Massachusettts General Hospital, Out Patient De- partment, and Assistant in Clinical and Operative Sur- gery in Harvard Medical School. He is also in private practice, at 189 Beacon Street, Boston. He is the author of " The Treatment of Fractures," a work published by W. B. Saunders & Co., Philadelphia, which is already (three years since publication) in its third edition, and he has also written various monographs upon medical and surgical subjects. In 1887 he received Boylston Prize of the Boylston Medical Society of Harvard University. He married Miss Abigail Taylor Seelye (daughter of President L. C. Seelye, of Smith College), at Northamp- ton, Mass., September 5th, 1895, and has two children: Evarts Seelye, born September 5th, 1896, and Hilda, born February 7th, 1899. Address — 189 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass. 74 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Caleb Wright Shipley was for a while in the dry goods business with Shipley, Dorsey & Co., Cincinnati. He is now Vice-President and Secretary of Sechler & Co. (incorporated), Wholesale Carriage Builders, 538- 544 East Fifth Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. He married Miss Charlotte H. Goshorn, at Cincinnati, June 22d, 1887, and has two daughters: Marguerita, born June 13th, 1888, and Alfreda, born August 27th, 1893. Address — Risor Avenue, Clifton, Cincinnati, Ohio. Levi Ives Shoemaker studied medicine at the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania, and received the degree of M.D. in May, 1886. He was then for a year Resident Physi- cian at the City Hospital, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. From Oc- tober 1st, 1887, to May 1st, 1888, he served as Substi- tute in the Pennsylvania and University Hospitals, at Philadelphia. In May, 1888, he opened an office in Wilkes-Barre for the practice of his profession. He is Attending Physician to Wilkes-Barre City Hospital and to The Home for Friendless Children; also Consulting Physician to Mercy Hospital. He is a Director of the Second National Bank and of the Wilkes-Barre Lace Manufacturing Co. He married Miss Cornelia W. Scranton, at Scranton, Pa., November 27th, 1889. Address — 31 S. Franklin Street, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. *Charles Mather Sholes was a Loan Broker and Notary Public at Oswego, Kansas; also a Director in the First National Bank of Oswego. He married Miss Anna 75 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Electa Tucker, at Oswego, December 25th, 1884, an d had two sons, Hiram 2d, born October 3d, 1885, an ^ William Mather, born June 1st, 1888. He died August 7th, 1889, at Oswego, Kans., from heart disease. This was brought on just after he left college when he, with a friend, tramped through the White Mountains. In as- cending Mt. Washington he fainted when near the sum- mit and was carried to the hotel where he lay for several days, weak and exhausted with an overtaxed heart. He never fully regained his strength although during his last illness he was confined to his bed only ten days. Although he did not join the class until the beginning of Sophomore year, he at once took a prominent place, and was held in the very highest regard by all. Edward Vernon Silver, after graduation, entered the Sheffield Scientific School, taking the course in Physi- ological Chemistry, under Prof. Chittenden. The next fall he entered the College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York City, Medical Department of Columbia Uni- versity. He was graduated in 1885, and passing the ex- aminations into Roosevelt Hospital, began service there January, 1886. He says, " The work at the hospital was interesting, and the experience obtained very serviceable. Cragin and Brockway also did work in the hospital, the former being House Physician while I was House Sur- geon." In November, 1888, he went abroad, going to Vienna and studying at that medical center for nearly a year. After traveling for some two months, he re- 76 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD turned to New York and began practicing- his profession at 103 West Seventy-second Street. The positions of Assistant Surgeon at Roosevelt Hospital, Out-Door De- partment, and Assistant Physician at the Vanderbilt Clinic were offered him and accepted. After practicing two years an attack of la grippe" obliged him to go south. The winter of 1890-91 he spent in Asheville, N. C, and the following summer in the Adirondacks, at Raquette Lake. In November, 1891, he turned his face westward, and settled in Salt Lake City, Utah, where he has prac- ticed medicine ever since. In 1894 he was elected State President of the Utah Sunday School Association, and in 1895 was elected President of the Y. M. C. A., of Salt Lake City. During two years of this time he was a member of the Board of Health. At present he is a member of the State Medical Association, The Academy of Medicine, the Salt Lake County Medical Association and the Intermountain Medical Association. In connec- tion with his professional work he is examiner for eight life insurance companies. He married Miss Bessie Lar- sen, April 3d, 1901, and has a son, Charles Alexander, born January 29th, 1902. Address — Salt Lake City, Utah. Lewis Mann Silver having determined, during his Senior year, to enter upon the study and practice of medi- cine, in the September following graduation matriculated at the Bellevue Hospital Medical College in New York, 77 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD and on October ist began the three years' course of pre- scribed study. In the first week of November he was taken ill with typhoid fever and was not able to resume his studies till the middle of January, 1883. He says : " The years passed rapidly in close applica- tion to my work, and in March, 1885, I passed the exam- ination for the degree of Doctor of Medicine, and a suc- cessful examination into Bellevue Hospital, choosing the medical side; I served in the position of Junior, Senior and House Physician (3rd medical). Having finished my hospital service of eighteen months on April ist, 1887, on May 2d I sailed on the North German Lloyd line for Ger- many with the intention of studying in some of the medi- cal centers of that country. My objective point was the German University at Freiberg. After a stay of two months I went to Munich and received the appointment of Resident Assistant to Professor Winckle in his Frauen- klinik on the obstetrical side. After a five months' resi- dence, I left Munich for Vienna where I spent the winter of 1887 in company with my brother, Edward V. Silver. Six months were spent in taking general courses in the hospital, which is one of the largest in Europe. From Vienna I went, April, 1888, to Frankfort to study Path- ology with Professor Weigert. After visiting Berlin, Paris and London, I sailed for home, reaching New York in July, 1888. For the following six months I took the practice of my brother, Dr. Henry M. Silver, who went abroad for that period." Early in 1889 he started out for himself in private 78 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD practice and in the same year received the ap- pointment of Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy in the Bellevue Hospital Medical College, this he held until 1894. In 1891 he received the appointment of Attending Physician to Demilt Dispensary, Depart- ment of General Medicine, and of Attending Physician to the Vanderbilt Clinic, Department of Children, which position he still holds. October 25th, 1894, he married at Philadelphia Miss Roberta Shoemaker and has two daughters, Helen Mann, born September 28th, 1895, and Margaret Bird, born March 25th, 1897. Address — 103 West Seventy-second Street, New York City. Clarence Austin Smith taught school for two years at the Cayuga Lake Military Acadamy, Aurora, N. Y. He then entered the College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York City, from which he was graduated in the spring of 1887. After competitive examination he received an ap- pointment on the staff of Bellevue Hospital, remaining there till April, 1889. In that year he moved to Seattle, Wash., arriving six weeks before the great fire which de- stroyed the business portion of the city. From 1895 to 1898 he was a member of the Medical Examining Board for the State of Washington; for two years, Health Of- ficer of Seattle, President of King County Medical Soci- ety and Attending Physician to Seattle General Hos- pital. In October, 1899, he moved to Elizabeth, N. J., practicing medicine there for six months. After another 79 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD six months devoted to study he moved to Washington, D. C, where he practiced till March, 1902. A few months later he returned to Seattle and it is his intention to spend the remainder of his days there. Recently he was ap- pointed editor of a new medical journal, " Northwest Medicine,'' published in Seattle. He was married July 2d, 1890, at Geneseo, N. Y., to Miss Susan C. Chiches- ter. Children: Eunice Wakeley, born April 13th, 1891 ; Austin Chichester, April 22nd, 1893; Harriet Holbrook, May 17th, 1897, and D wight Chichester, October 31st, 1900. Address — 120 Washington Bldg., Seattle, Wash. Frank Hiram Snell was for a number of years a mem- ber of the firm of Albright & Co., Western and Southern Sales Agents of the Philadelphia & Reading Coal and Iron Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Upon retiring from the firm he lived for a time in Washington, D. C. ; was graduated from Columbian Law School in 1900 and admitted to the bar of the District of Columbia. He has, however, never practiced, and is now in active business in New Haven, being President of the Hygienic Ice Company. He mar- ried Miss Isabel Cromwell, October 16th, 1900. Address — 881 State Street, New Haven, Conn. Henry Speke Snyder was graduated at the Yale Theological Seminary in May, 1885. He was pastor of a church in Northford, Conn., until April, 1888, when he was called to the Congregational Church of Wil- liamsburgh, Mass., where he remained nine years. He 80 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD was for a number of years in charge of the Union Church of Weymouth and Braintree, Mass., and is now pastor of the Congregational Church at Gilbertville, Mass. He married Miss Maria Louise Bradley, at New Haven, Conn., July 9th, 1883, and has four children: Elizabeth Glenn, born April 24th, 1884; Marian Louise, born June 14th, 1886; Henry Rossiter, born December 17th, 1888, and Justine Pratt, born March 12th, 1892. Address — Gilbertville, Mass. Charles Stillman traveled abroad for a while after graduation, and in January, 1883, started in business with Woodward & Stillman, General Commission Mer- chants, New York City, being admitted to the firm in 1889. He is a member of the University, N. Y. Yacht, Seawanhaka Corinthian Yacht and Metropolitan Clubs. He is unmarried. Address — 16-22 William Street, New York. Charles Bigelow Storrs during the year following graduation taught Latin and Greek in a private school on West Forty-third Street, New York City, pursuing at the same time the prescribed course of law studies at the Law School of Columbia College. The ensuing year he carried on the further study of law, and served a clerk- ship in the offices of Macfarland, Reynolds & Lowry. He was graduated from the Law School and admitted to the New York bar in 1884, and then became a clerk in the offices of Chamberlain, Carter & Hornblower. He 81 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD stayed there till late in the year 1885, when he was en- gaged by the Japanese Government as Professor of Anglo-American Law in the Imperial University, at Tokyo. He remained at Tokyo till the year 1889, and then resumed the practice of law in New York City. He was elected a member of the New Jersey Legislature, and served in the sessions of 1894 and 1895, acting as leader of the Republican majority in the House of As- sembly throughout the latter session. He was nomi- nated by the Governor, and confirmed by the Senate, to be District Court Judge of Orange for five years, from April 1st, 1896, having been previously, in June, 1894, admitted as an Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law in New Jersey. He married Miss Gertrude Cleveland, at Orange, N. J., December 15th, 1897. Address — 333 Lincoln Avenue, Orange, N. J. Howard Peck Sweetser is a member of the firm of Sweetser, Pembroke & Co., Wholesale Dry Goods, 374- 378 Broadway, New York City. He resides at 37 West Fifty-eighth Street, and is a member of the University, N. Y. Athletic and Lotus Clubs. He is unmarried. Address — 374-378 Broadway, New York. Bernard Titche studied law in the office of Gibson & Hall, New Orleans, La., the senior member of the firm being the Hon. Randall L. Gibson, U. S. Senator from Louisiana, and a graduate of the Class of '53, Yale. He was admitted to the bar in January, 1884, and has prac- 82 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD ticed continuously since that time in New Orleans, his offices being at present at 326-328 Hennen Building. He writes : " I have never taken any active part in poli- tics, and consequently, have held no office; but have established a good practice, which has increased as the years rolled by." He married Miss Fanny Kaufman, at New Orleans, June 18th, 1890, and has one son, Ber- nard, Jr., born January 17th, 1895. Address — 326 and 328 Hennen Building, New Or- leans. William Grandin Vought is in the Manufacturers' and Traders' Bank, Buffalo, N. Y. He married Miss Natalie Blaekmarr Sternberg, at Buffalo, June 19th, 1888. — [From the Sexennial Record.] f Tracy Waller studied law in his father's office in New London, and became a member of the firm of T. M. & T. Waller. During his father's absence as U. S. Consul, at London, England, he was in partnership with John A. Tibbits, and later became senior member of the firm of Waller & Waller, with offices at 61 State Street, New London. He was for one term Prosecuting Attorney and for one term Corporation Counsel of the City of New London. He writes : " Since graduation I have been a resident of New London, Conn., except for a lit- tle more than a year, when I was in the wild west and on the high seas, engaged in various pursuits. I have been t No response to repeated communications asking for information. 83 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Major, Brigade Judge Advocate, C. N. G., but the coun- try conducted the late war to a successful issue without my active services in the field. I am unmarried and with- out children." Address — New London, Conn. *Daniel B. Weaver was graduated from the Medical School of the University of Pennsylvania, and received the degree of M.D. in 1885. He practiced at Lancaster. Pa., until the spring of 1890, when he removed to Salida, Colo., for his health. He died there of pulmonary tuber- culosis, September 17th, 1891. He was Visiting Phy- sician and Microscopist to St. Joseph's Hospital, and Lecturer on Anatomy, Physiology and Histology, in Franklin and Marshall College, Lancaster, Pa. He mar- ried Miss Elizabeth A. White, at Philadelphia, October 20th, 1885, and had a daughter, Rebecca W., born July 28th, 1886. Although, during his college days, his intimate friend- ships were limited in number, those who knew him well appreciated his sterling qualities. Though undemon- strative, he entertained strong convictions on whatever subject occupied his mind. His opinion having been formed on a matter of principle, it was useless to expect to alter his view. While not a brilliant scholar he was one of those per- sistent students who could always be relied upon to pre- sent a high average in all that he undertook. This trait served to make him a success in his professional studies 84 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD and later in the practice of medicine. His ambition to excel in many phases of medical life led to the too com- mon practice of overwork that prepared the field for the entrance of tuberculosis. After transferring his home to Colorado he continued doggedly at his work, with the expressed determination to fight to the end whether he or the enemy won. With this spirit he performed his daily duties regularly to the day before his death. He possessed qualities that make men valuable in whatever community their life work may be placed and we cannot but regret that his was thus early ended when it had scarcely begun. Edward Odell Weed was for some time Secretary of the Crescent Watch Case Co., and was located first in Chicago, and afterwards in Brooklyn. From 1887 to 1894 he was Treasurer of the Silver Creek and Morris Coal Co., 170 Dearborn Street, Chicago, 111. In 1894 he moved to Gardena, Cal., and is now engaged in growing flower seeds. He writes : " Have chased no degrees and inflicted nothing in the literary line on the public." He married Miss Emma Cristie Ramsey, at Chicago, Sep- tember 27th, 1884, and he has a daughter, Helen Brooks, born October 26th, 1886. Address — Gardena, Los Angeles County, Cal. Archibald Ashley Welch left college at end of Junior year and took a position with the Travelers' Insurance 85 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD Company, at Hartford, Conn. In 1890-91 he studied at home by permission of the Faculty, and in June, 1891, passed the examinations, receiving the degree of A.B., with name entered in Class of '82. He is and has been for several years Actuary of the Phoenix Mutual Life In- surance Company, of Hartford, Conn. He has been elected annually a member of the Hartford High School Committee since 1898, and has been Chairman of that committee since 1900. He was made Director in the American School for the Deaf in 1890, and since 1894 has served as Secretary of the school. In 1890 he be- came a member of the Actuarial Society of America, and has served as Treasurer of the society since 1901. He married Miss Ellen Bunce, at Hartford, Conn., October 24th, 1889. Address — 21 Woodland Street, Hartford, Conn. Martin Welles was for three years an Examiner in the U. S. Pension Office, Washington, D. C. He studied law at the same time, and received the degrees of LL.B. and M.L. at the Columbian Law School, Washington. For several years he was with the Title Guarantee and Trust Co., 55 Liberty Street, New York City. He is at the present time Treasurer of the Bond & Mortgage Guarantee Company, with offices at 146 Broadway, New York City, and 175 Remsen Street, Brooklyn. His resi- dence is at Westfield, N. J., of which town he was the Treasurer for one year and a School Trustee for three years. He married Miss Mary Amelia Patton, at Wash- 86 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD ington, D. C, June 12th, 1888. Children: Martin Rice, born March 2d, 1889, died August 5th, 1895; Carolyn Aiken, born January 22d, 1892; Margaret Stanley, born June 9th, 1894; Mary Patton, born November 29th, 1897; Roger Patton, born June 1st, 1901. Address — 146 Broadway, New York. John Lewis Wells studied for a short time in the Yale Law School. In the winter of 1882-3 he removed to Aberdeen, Dak., where he engaged in the real estate and loan business. In 1884 he settled at Ipswich, Dak., where he was President of the Edmunds County Bank until October, 1887, when he removed to Kansas City, Mo. He there resumed the study of law, and was admitted to the bar of the State of Missouri in March, 1888. He practiced in Kansas City for a few months, and then returned to Ipswich, Dak. Several years ago he returned East, and is now practicing law in New York, at $2 Nassau Street, a member of the firm of Sheehan & Collin. He married Miss Eleanore B. Fitch, at Free- port, 111., November 14th, 1884, and he has a daughter: Marguerite F., born September 30th, 1885. Address — ^2 Nassau Street, New York. *Thomas McDowell Wentworth died at his home in Racine, Wis., April 30th, 1882. He had battled with ill health all through his college course, and had reached the middle of Senior year before he was compelled to give up the struggle. The degree which he had made 87 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD such a noble effort to obtain, but which he did not live to receive himself, was sent to his family after his death. [From the Triennial Record.] *Joseph Ernest Whitney had charge of a small private school for boys at Elmira, N. Y., from September, 1882, until January, 1884. He then went to Albany, where he was professor of English and Rhetoric in the Albany Academy until July, 1884. In September, 1884, he be- came an instructor in English Literature at Yale. Four years later he was granted a leave of absence on account of his health, and he made his home in Colorado Springs, Colo. It was, however, too late, and although he strug- gled hard and patiently he was unable to regain the strength necessary for a return to his college work. Besides teaching he devoted himself to the study of English Literature and to writing. He was a contribu- tor to " The Century," " The American Magazine,"" St. Nicholas," " Harper's Young People," " Wide Awake," " Critic," " New Englander," and many other periodicals. He married Miss Sadie Prince Turner, at Syracuse, N. Y., November 15th, 1883, and died of tuberculosis in Colorado Springs, Colo., on February 25th, 1893, leaving a daughter, Margaret, born April 13th, 1886. He was buried on his thirty-third birthday, February 27th, 1893. During the last four years of his life, under infirmities of body to which most men would have succumbed in absolute idleness, he kept on heroically at his literary work, and the poems he wrote then, as well as the un- 88 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD failing brightness of his conversation and his letters, have been, for many, an inspiration to better living. His struggle with disease did not make him bitter, and his cheerfulness and wit never deserted him. He interested himself in social betterment, and a Boys' Club, named after him, still exists in Colorado Springs, as a memorial. But more enduring than any such institution, is the memorial which lives in the hearts of the many, East and West, who came under the influence of his rich and ever ripening personality. Charles Albert Wight studied theology at the Yale Theological Seminary, and was ordained pastor of the Harper Avenue Congregational Church, Detroit, Mich., May 19th, 1885. Since that time he has held several important pastorates, and is now in charge of one of the leading Congregational churches in Wisconsin — the Con- gregational Church, of Platteville. He is the Vice-Presi- dent of the Wisconsin Home Missionary Society and a member of its Executive Committee. He married Miss Charlotte M. Burgis, at Detroit, Mich., June 1st, 1886. They have had two children: Winifred, born July 28th, 1894, died June 4th, 1898, and Elliott Leland, born March 8th, 1897. Address — Platteville, Wis. Harry Lucien Williams is with the Williams Manu- facturing Co., Makers of Baskets, Northampton, Mass. He is a Director in the Northampton National Bank and 89 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD President of Nonotuck Savings Bank. He is a veteran of the Spanish War, having served throughout with great credit to himself and to the class. Unfortunately, he was the only representative of '82. His war record is as follows: Enlisted May 3d, 1898, as Captain of Com- pany I, Second Regiment, Massachusetts Volunteers, left camp at South Framingham, Mass., May 12th. Went by rail from New York to Lakeland, Fla., May 14th; from Lakeland to Tampa, May 31st. Sailed from Tam- pa, June 14th. Landed at Baiquiria, June 22d. In bat- tle of El Caney, July 1st, but took no active part, as the regiment was ordered to stop firing, owing to smoke from black powder used in rifles. Under fire nearly all day. To San Juan, but took no active part, as the Bri- gade acted as support. No fighting after San Juan. Camped for five weeks within 500 yards of the city. Taken ill with Cuban fever, July 27th. Broke camp, August 1 2th. Sailed for home on the " Mobile," Au- gust 13th; landed at Montauk Point, August 20th. Given sick leave of ten days. Mustered out of the ser- vice of the United States, November 3d, 1898. Previous to the war was elected Captain of Company I, Massa- chusetts Volunteer Militia, December 13th, 1892. Served continuously until December 14th, 1898, when he re- signed, and was discharged from Massachusetts State Militia. He was appointed Lieutenant-Colonel and Assistant Inspector-General on Staff of Governor Crane in January, 1900, and is still serving in that capacity. 90 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD He married Miss Isabella Hall Dewey, of Boston, May 28th, 1884. Address — Northampton, Mass. *Emmet Smith Williams was with the Travelers' In- surance Co., at Hartford, Conn., until shortly before his death, which occurred January 13th, 1886. In the Octo- ber previous, while at Hartford, he had a hemorrhage of the lungs, but in November he had recovered sufficient- ly to return to his home in Meriden, where he was thought to be gaining, until very shortly before his death, which was sudden and at the time unexpected. His death was a great shock to his classmates, among whom he was a universal favorite. He had a happy faculty of making everybody his friend, and his cheerful disposition and genial manner made him thoroughly popular with all who knew him, both in college and after- wards in business. He was so prominent in the social life of the class, that he will be very greatly missed at all the future reunions. — [From the Sexennial Record.] *Franklin Eldred Worcester studied engineering in the Sheffield Scientific School, and received the degrees of Ph.B., June, 1884, and of M.E., June, 1886. In July, 1883, he went abroad and traveled for six months. In 1885 he entered the shops of the Michigan Central K. R., at Jackson, Mich., where he remained for two years; then for a short time he was fireman on the Michigan Central, and also on the New York Central R. R. In Febru- ary, 1888, he became Assistant Superintendent of motive 9i BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD power of the Duluth, South Shore and Atlantic Rail- road Company, in the northern peninsula of Michigan. His office was at Marquette, Mich., and he resided in that city for nearly two years, until January 24, 1890. His place with the railroad company proved to be un- promising, and in July, 1889, he resigned it; and, until such time as he should fix himself elsewhere, he accepted the position, under the Federal Government, of inspector of breakwaters, his residence being still at Marquette. He made a long visit to his home in New York (to which city his father's family had removed in 1883), an d was there from October 12, to December 6, 1889. During this visit, he went more than once to New Haven, and had what proved to be his last look, save for a brief call in the succeeding summer, at Yale and his college friends in the East. He returned to Marquette in December, 1889. He had formed a connection with the Iron Bay Company, manufacturers of mining machinery, which had at that time its office in Marquette. This company engaged Worcester to act as its general sales-agent. In January, 1890, it moved its offices to Duluth, whither he accom- panied them. He lived in Duluth until the end of June, 1 890, and during this time he traveled extensively in Wis- consin, Minnesota and that general region. He paid an- other visit to his home in New York for about five days, from June 20 to June 26, 1890. At that time the Iron Bay Company made him their general agent for the Mon- tana region, with headquarters at Helena, Montana ; and 92 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD he accepted, at the same time, a similar agency for the Robinson & Cary Manufacturing Company, of St. Paul. He arrived in Helena August 4th, 1890, and soon after established his office at 3 Gold Block, in that city. There he lived until the time of his death, in the succeeding March. He was very actively engaged in his business, and had occasion to travel as far as the Pacific Coast, where he made an extensive visit in January, 1891. In December, 1890, he sent to his family a small photo- graph of himself, the last which he ever had taken. He had relatives who lived in Helena, in whose company he found great comfort, and at whose house he spent much of his leisure time. Among other places which he had fre- quent occasion to visit, was Butte City, Mont. He went there, on some call of business, in the latter part of Feb- ruary, 1 89 1. The weather was inclement, and he, who had always been of a robust constitution which mocked at exposure, incurred a severe chill. As was afterwards learned by his family, a genuine epidemic of pneumonia, of a peculiarly virulent type, was then prevalent at Butte City. He returned to Helena with a cold, to which he paid little attention at first. Pneumonia appeared almost at once. The case was probably beyond hope from the beginning. He put himself under medical treatment, but, with strong confidence in his physical force, he refused to permit any word of his condition to be sent to his parents. He was ill only a few days. On the 3rd day of March, 1891, his relatives in Helena telegraphed to his parents that he was very ill of pneumonia. This was the 93 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD first word which had reached them that gave any notice that he was in other than his usual vigorous health. About four hours later came a second telegram saying he was dead. He died at Helena, Mont., March 3rd, 1891, at 5.30 in the afternoon. He had reached the age of 30 years, 5 months, and 19 days. His remains were brought east to New York, and there, at his father's house, 23 East Thirty-ninth Street, his funeral was held on the 14th of March, 1891. It was attended by a large number of his classmates and the religious services were conducted by Brewster. The body was interred in the Albany Rural Cemetery, Albany, N. Y., in his father's lot, and its resting place is marked by a tomb- stone. Throughout these closing years of his life, his general health was of the best, and he had every reason to look forward to a long and active life. He retained to the end his love for the East and its associations; and amid the hard and practical work of his Western experience, he continued his own intellectual life, building as best he might on the foundation of his university days. He had no premonition of his untimely cutting-off, and he worked cheerfully and heartily until the call of death. He was a member of the University Club of New York City, and of the American Society of Mechanical Engi- neers ; and also of the Masonic fraternity. He was never married. His career was full of promise, and his death was a shock to all who knew and loved him. There was a singu- 94 BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD lar charm about him which will ever linger in the mem- ory. The keenness of his intellect was matched by the directness of his purpose. When a decision was made he did not swerve from his aim. The depth of his inner life was hidden under an easy grace of manner. No one was more free from cant, more straightforward in speech, nor more ready with the tactful, kindly word in season. Arthur Bethuel Wright was graduated from the Yale Law School, and admitted to the bar in June, 1884. He was junior member of the firm of Wright, Stoddard, Thompson & Wright, until 1886, when the firm was dis- solved, owing to the death of his father, the Hon. Dexter R. Wright. He was for some time in the office of Hon. Lynde Harrison, New Haven, Conn., and he is now practicing his profession in Chicago, as a member of the firm of Steere & Furber, with offices in " The Rookery." He is unmarried. Address — The Rookery, Chicago, 111. 95 NON-GRADUATES. In accordance with the plan adopted for the Sexennial Record only those are included who were members of the class for more than one year: John Lanson Adams left the class in Sophomore year, and afterwards was graduated with the class of 1883. He then entered the College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, from which he was graduated with the degree of M.D., in 1886. He is Attending Surgeon to the New York Eye and Ear Infirmary, Founder and Executive Surgeon to the St. Bartholomew's Night Clinic for Dis- eases of the Ear, Eye, Nose and Throat, Ophthalmologist to the Society of the New York Lying-in Asylum. He married Miss Elizabeth Ellerslie Wallace at New York, June 4th, 1895, and has a son, Frank Lanson, born April 25th, 1896. Address — 24 East Forty-sixth Street, New York. *Henry Weldon Barnes left college during Senior year on account of ill health, hoping to rejoin his class and re- ceive his degree with them — a hope destined never to be 97 NON-GRADUATES fulfilled. He failed rapidly for some months and, as a last resort, was taken to Colorado. Gaining nothing by the change he returned to his home in Pittsburgh, where he died of consumption on December 4th, 1882. He was so prominent among us throughout our col- lege course, and bound to so many of us by such strong ties of friendship, that his death, the first since graduation to be placed upon the records of the class, has been very deeply felt. [From the Triennial Record.] John Remsen Bishop entered the class at the beginning of Sophomore year, and left at the end of Junior year to enter the Senior class at Harvard, where he was gradu- ated in 1882. He then taught for a year at St. Paul's School, at Concord, N. H. In 1883 ne accepted a posi- tion in the New Jersey State Bureau of Statistics, at Tren- ton, N. J., where he remained for one year. He then at the solicitation of Dr. McCosh, took hold of the defunct Princeton Preparatory School, with a view to resusci- tation. The trustees deeded the school property to him, and he met with great success in his attempt to revive the institution. The school grew and prospered until he found the management of it too burdensome, so he sold out his title and good will, and bought one-half of an established Day School in Cincinnati, O., to which place he removed in the summer of 1888. He is now principal of Walnut Hills High School, Cincinnati. He married Miss Anna Bartram Newbold, at Trenton, N. J., July 9th, 1885, and has five children, Newbold and Mildred Rem- 98 NON-GRADUATES sen (twins), born April 8th, 1888; Remsen and Bartram (twins), born July nth, 1890, and Francis, Born Septem- ber 20th, 1896. Address — 117 Huntington Place, Cincinnati, O. Charles Winslow Burpee left the class in Sophomore year. He afterwards was graduated with the class of 1883, and became city editor of the Waterbury (Conn.) American. After eight years he became associate editor of the Bridgeport (Conn.) Standard. He filled that posi- tion for four years and since that time has been State Editor of the Hartford Courant. He has held five com- missions at different times in three different regiments, Connecticut National Guard, retiring in June, 1897, with rank of Captain. November 5th, 1885, he married Miss Bertha Stiles at Bridgeport, Conn. Address — 19 Forest Street, Hartford, Conn. Robert Camp left college on account of ill health early in Sophomore year. He then engaged at first in stock raising on a small scale, near Peabody, Kansas. In 1882 he purchased a large ranch about twelve miles from Peabody. He lived on his ranch and devoted himself exclusively to sheep and cattle raising and wool growing, until February, 1886, when he removed to Peabody, and there with W. H. Ellett organized the Stockmen's Ex- change Bank. He is now living in Milwaukee, Wis., and is Secretary and Treasurer of The Milwaukee Trust Company at 404 East Water Street. He married Miss 99 NON-GRADUATES Mary Cobb Ball, at Milwaukee, Wis., August 5th, 1886, and has two children, Carolyn Mary, born January 10th, 1889, an d Marion Merrill, born June 30th, 1892. Address — 684 Franklin Place, Milwaukee, Wis. Charles Blackwell Case left college at the close of Junior year and spent the next three years in the study of law with Ex-Judge James Buchanan in Trenton, N. J. He then formed a partnership with Samuel Walker, Jr., the firm being known as Case & Walker, Law and Real Estate Brokers. In 1886 the firm was dissolved and a new one created, Gardner H. Cain becoming associated with him in the business. The firm name is now Case & Cain, Law and Real Estate, corner State and Warren Streets, Trenton, N. J. As a side issue the firm gives considerable attention to a large farm just outside the city, paying particular attention to the breeding of thoroughbred Guernsey cattle. He married Miss Flor- ence N. Case, at Trenton, April 9th, 1890. They have two sons, Charles Blackwell, Jr., born March 26th, 1892, and Arthur Ellicott, born April II, 1894. Address — Trenton, N. J. Robert Browning Corey left college in Sophomore year. The year following he was associated with his father in the banking business, at Bradford, Pa. He was then for three years an oil producer and speculator. The next year he traveled for U. H. Dudley & Co., Wholesale Grocery and Commission Merchants, New 100 NON-GRADUATES York City. After that he was for two years Secretary of Schools, at the Elmira State Reformatory. In 1887 he went into the electrical business as General Manager of a company manufacturing arc lamps and other electrical specialties, and he held that position for eight years. Since 1895 he has been the New York representative of a number of electrical manufacturing companies, the lines consisting of wire and cable for electrical purposes, incan- descent lamps, arc lamps and conduits. He is unmar- ried. Address — 26 Cortlandt Street, New York. Charles Gibbons Douw left college early in Junior year. Since then he has engaged in civil engineering, and has been employed on the West Shore R. R., the New York State Canals, and the New Croton Aqueduct. In 1887 he suffered a stroke of paralysis, from the effects of which he did not recover for several years. In 1892, for the first time since his illness, he did a little superintending of paving and other matters in the line of his profession. For several years he has been at work on the Erie Canal Improvement. He has never married. Address — Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Chauncey Milton Griggs left the class in Junior year. He afterwards was graduated with the class of 1883. He then became a member of the firm of Glidden, Griggs & Co., Wholesale Grocers, St. Paul, Minn. In 1884, on 101 NON-GRADUATES account of ill health, he traveled in the South and in Europe for some time. On April ist, 1885, tne & rm name was changed to Yanz, Griggs & Howes, and in 1890 the present firm of Griggs, Cooper & Co. was formed. They are doing business at the old stand, but have expanded considerably, occupying now the whole of the block, of which they occupied formerly about one- third. Their store is 175 feet front by 180 deep and six stories in capacity, all of which is devoted to their busi- ness. They have 30 salesmen on the road and a house force of about 100, including 30 employees in their man- ufacturing department. They cover the northwestern half of Wisconsin, northern part of Iowa, all of Minne- sota, the two Dakotas, Montana and the eastern part of Washington, and claim to be doing the largest business in their line west of Chicago. He writes : "In a social way I have done my share, having been connected with all the local clubs. I am a member of the Minnesota Club, the Town and Country Club, the Driving Club, White Bear Yacht Club, Com- mercial Club, Chamber of Commerce and the Jobbers Union. The last three, of course, are purely commercial institutions, the others being social bodies, although I might class the White Bear Yacht Club under the head of a sporting organization. In that line I have not only been a yachtsman, but am an active member of the St. Paul Curling Club, St. Paul Gun Club and the Minne- sota Boat Club, a very strong social organization as well as a fine athletic club. As an oarsman I have never been 102 NON-GRADUATES a distinct success, as you can well imagine, but as a yachtsman I have perhaps achieved more distinction than as a business man I would wish for. I have sailed the Champion Yacht on White Bear Lake for about six seasons during the last ten." He married Miss Mary Chaffee Wells at Pittsburgh, Pa., October 15th, 1885. They have five children: Cal- vin Wells, born November 15th, 1886; Milton Wright, born November 13th, 1888; Mary Wells, born April 22nd, 1892; Everett Billings, born October 17th, 1895; Benjamin Glyden, born January 1st, 1898. Address — Care Griggs, Cooper & Co., St. Paul, Minn. George Edward Haskell left college at the end of Junior year and entered the establishment of Abram French & Co., Importers of Crockery, China and Glass- ware, 89, 91 and 93 Franklin Street, Boston, Mass. He was a member of that firm and afterwards a director in the stock company of Abram French & Co., for thirteen years until January 1st, 1893. He was for a short time connected with a trade journal published in Boston, but is now living in New Bedford not engaged in active business. He spent several years in Europe with head- quarters at Dresden, Germany, traveling in England, Belgium, Germany, France, Austria and Italy. He married Miss Blanche Lindamon Jones, at Chicago, De- cember 31st, 1885, and has three children: Margaret, born in Brookline, Mass., July 6th, 1887; Helen Louisa, born in Brookline, Mass., July 9th, 1891, and George 103 NON-GRADUATES Starkweather, born in Dresden (Saxony), Jan. 31, 1897. Address — Wamsutta Club, New Bedford, Mass. James Smith Havens left the class on account of ill health in the middle of Sophomore year. He spent the following summer in Colorado, and was then for a year in business at Weedsport, N. Y. In January, 1882, he entered the class of 1884, at Yale, with which he was graduated. He afterwards studied law in Rochester, N. Y., and was admitted to the bar in October, 1886, and became a member of the law firm of Foote & Havens of that city. He married Miss Caroline Prindle Sam- mons at Rochester, January 16th, 1894. They have two children, Lucy Prindle, born October 21st, 1894, and Mary Eleanor, born January 30th, 1897. Address — 12 Rochester Savings Bank Bldg., Roches- ter, N. Y. David Kinley left the class in Junior year, and after the lapse of a year went to Louisiana as a private tutor. In 1882 he joined the class of 1884, Yale, and was gradu- ated with it. He was for several years principal of the High School at North Andover, Mass., and is now Pro- fessor of Economics and Dean of College of Literature and Arts, University of Illinois. He is the author of " The Independent Treasury of the United States," and sundry magazine articles. He married Miss Kate R. Neal, at Mount Vernon, Ohio, June 22nd, 1897, and has one child, Harriet, born October 3rd, 1898. Address — University of Illinois, Urbana, 111. 104 NON-GRADUATES Tun Yen Liang was recalled by the Chinese Govern- ment in Junior year. He was then sent to the Govern- ment School of Telegraphy, at Tientsin. He has since been in the Government service. He is at present with His Excellency Chang Chih-tung, Viceroy of Hu- Kwang, at Wuchang. Address — Viceroy's Yamen, Care of China Mer- chants' Steam Navigation Co., Hankow, China. George Brooke Miller left college on account of ill health in the early part of Sophomore year. He was at his home in Sandy Spring, Md., until 1882, when he ac- cepted a position in the St. Louis branch house of Hull, Clarke & Co., of Boston, Manufacturers of Iron and Wood-working Machinery, and Steam and Gas Engines. He had attained the position of Manager of the house when in July, 1885, he was stricken with paralysis, which was caused by getting overheated at tennis. The two years following he spent at Sandy Spring, Md., and at Clifton Springs, N. Y., in an effort to regain his health. In June, 1887, he resumed his former position in St. Louis, with Hull, Clarke & Co., where he remained until March, 1888, when he accepted the position of Principal of Sherwood Academy, at Sandy Spring, Md., where he now is. [From Sexennial Record.]! *George Wells Morrison left the class in Sophomore year. He was then connected with the Conn. Mutual t No response to repeated communications asking for information. i°5 NON-GRADUATES Life Ins. Co., in their office at Hartford, for five years. He severed his connection with that company, and was for some time at his home in Thompsonville, Conn., contemplating engaging in some other business. He was married on February 21st, 1888, and shortly after- wards contracted a severe cold, from which he never re- covered, but rapidly declined, and died July 17th, 1888. His former classmates will hear of his death with great regret, for although he was with us but a portion of our college course, he was a member of the class long enough to make many friends among its members. [From the Sexennial Record.] *Walter Gillespie Phelps left the class at the end of Sophomore year. In the spring of 1881 he entered the service of the Burlington & Missouri River R. R. Co., in Nebraska, as civil engineer. He continued in the em- ploy of that company until a short time before his death, which occurred at Hartford, Conn., November 18th, 1887, and was caused by a severe cold contracted while at field work, and terminated in consumption. He mar- ried Miss Grace H. Goodell, of Hartford, December 9th, 1885, and he had a son, D wight G. Phelps, born June 8th, 1887. His early death will be hard for his classmates to re- alize. They remember him as a man of strong physique, an athlete and a member of the class crew. At the time of leaving college he had attained a prominent position in the class, and all of its members will hear of his death with sorrow. [From the Sexennial Record.] 106 NON-GRADUATES Edward Pascal Pratt left the class in Sophomore year. He was in the hardware business in Des Moines, Iowa, for several years, and is now in business in Kansas City, Mo., dealing in Commercial Paper, Stocks, Bonds and Real Estate Loans. Address — New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. Henry Byron Sanderson left the class in Sophomore year, and immediately engaged in the milling business in Milwaukee, going into the Phoenix Mills, E. Sanderson & Co., Proprietors. He began, he says, by " sweeping out the mill," and worked his way up to the position of head miller, and was then taken into the firm. He is still in the Phoenix Mills, and they are turning out seven- teen hundred and fifty barrels of flour a day. He mar- ried Miss Alice Bartel Kane, at Milwaukee, January 5th, 1 88 1. On January 19th, 1882, his wife died, leaving him with a daughter, Alice Kane Sanderson. From that time until 1887 ne traveled a good deal in this country and in Europe. On September 8th, 1887, he married Miss Clarice Follansbee. [From Sexennial Record.]! William Seymour left college in the latter part of Junior year. He was then for a time cashier in the office of Henry M. Cowles, Banker and Broker. Wall Street, New York City. In December, 1882, he accepted a position as traveling salesman for Hincks & Johnson, Manufacturers of Carriages, at Bridgeport, Conn. He t No response to repeated communications asking for information. I07 NON-GRADUATES remained with that firm until January ist, 1887, when he became General Western Selling Agent for Cruttenden & Co., of New Haven, Conn., Manufacturers of Car- riages, and assumed charge of their western establish- ment at 341 to 345 Wabash Avenue, Chicago, 111. He married Miss Katherine W. Camp, at Newington, Conn., November 17th, 1887. [From the Sexennial Record. ]f Edward Eugene Smith left the class in Junior year. Not long afterwards he was stricken with chronic mental derangement, for which he has since been under treat- ment. [From the Sexennial Record.] Will Loujeay Van Kirk left college early in Junior year. He then engaged in business with Long & Co., Iron Manufacturers, Pittsburgh, Pa. At the expira- tion of two years he severed his connection with that firm and established himself as an oil broker. He re- mained in that business for two years and then retired. He has since devoted himself to his investments and the care of his property. He married Miss Elizabeth V. Long, at Allegheny City, June 16th, 1887, and after- wards traveled abroad for some time. [From the Sexen- nial Record.]! t No response to repeated communications asking for information. 108 Resolutions on the death of Fred J. Brockway, passed by the Class of '82, Yale University, at the meeting held in New Haven, Conn., during the Bicentennial celebration. Whereas, It has pleased Almighty God, in His omnipotent wis- dom, to remove from among us on the twenty-first day of April, 1901, our beloved classmate, Dr. Fred J. Brockway, now, be it Resolved, That we recognize in him the highest type of man, as husband, father and comrade, and that we further recognize in his sterling worth and ability the bright prospects of a successful pro- fessional life now ended, as the result of his devotion to duty; and be it further Resolved, That a copy of this resolution, with the expression of our deep sympathy, be sent by the Secretary to our classmate's family. Howard H. Knapp, Lewis M. Silver, Henry B. Platt. IO9 STATISTICS OCCUPATIONS. Clergymen — Brewster, *Hand, Lay, McKnight, Morris, Snyder, Wight— 7. Lawyers — Atterbury, Badger, Bates, Beach, Bentley, Blumley, Bolt- wood, Brinton, Bronson, *Campbell, Cumming, Ely, French, *Fries, Griggs, Hawkes, Holland, J. P. Kellogg, Kittredge, Knapp, Loomis, McBride, *Murphy, Osborne, Page, Palmer, Pardee, Parke, Rice, Rutledge, Storrs, Titche, Waller, Wells, Wright— 35. Physicians — *Brockway, Cragin, Eaton, Foster, C. B. Graves, Jef- ferds, Kingman, Lewis, Lowe, Scudder, Shoemaker, E. V. Silver, L. M. Silver, Smith, *Weaver — 15. Teachers — Abbott, Barbour, Bartlett, Bruce, Chenault, Foote, Ford, Lovering, O'Hanlon, Pratt, Rolfe, Rossiter, Sanford, *Whit- ney — 14. Business (Manufacturing and Mercantile) — J. F. Allen, M. S. Allen, Bailey, Baltz, Bate, Beede, Darling, Dillingham, Farwell, Friend, Gallaher, Gardes, Hebard, F. A. Kellogg, Long, Ly- man, Macmillan, Moodey, Parsons, Pember, Piatt, Richards, Scranton, Shipley, Snell, Stillman, Sweetser, *Worcester, H. L. Williams — 29. Banking — Clement, Hopkins, Richardson, Vought, Welles — 5. Insurance — Welch, *E. S. Williams — 2. Art—Fitz Gerald— 1. Broker — *Sholes — I. Ill STATISTICS Chemist — G. H. Graves — i. Electrical Engineer — Pierce — i. Horticulture — Weed — I. Journalism — Churchill — i. Meteorology — *Curtis — i. Public Service — Bennett — I. None — Billings, *Cuyler, Eno, *Johnson, Pollock, *Wentworth — 6. COMPARATIVE TABLE OF OCCUPATIONS SINCE GRADUATION. Class Statistics. Theology 4 Lav/ 38 Medicine 17 Teaching 8 Business 29 Ranching Farming Civil Engineering 1 Mechanical Engineering 1 Electrical Engineering Chemistry 1 Art Paleontology Meteorology Journalism U. S. Patent Office U. S. Pension Office Travel and Study Student of Theology Student of Electricity Public Service Horticulture Undecided 20 None Triennial. Sexennial. Vicennial. 6 34 15 13 33 3 2 5 32 15 13 38 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 7 35 15 14 37 119 112 119 119 STATISTICS RESIDENCES. New York City and Vicinity — M. S. Allen, Atterbury, Bate, Churchill, Cragin, Dillingham, Ely, Foote, Hawkes, F. A. Kellogg, Lewis, Lyman, McBride, Moodey, Palmer, Parsons, Piatt, Pollock, Rice, L. M. Silver, Stillman, Storrs, Sweetser, Welles, Wells— 25. New Haven, Conn. — Billings, Loomis, Osborne, Pardee, Snell — 5. Chicago, 111. — Abbott, Bates, Bentley, Farwell, Ford, Page, Pierce, Wright— 8. Boston, Mass. — Badger, French, Richardson, Scudder — 4. Buffalo, N. Y. — Clement, Scranton, Vought — 3. New Orleans, La. — Friend, Gardes, Titche — 3. Philadelphia, Pa. — Baltz, Brinton— 2. Wilkes-Barre, Pa. — Long, Shoemaker — 2. Cincinnati, O. — Macmillan, Shipley — 2. Bridgeport, Conn. — G. H. Graves, Knapp — 2. Hartford, Conn. — Pember, Welch — 2. Norwich, Conn. — Blumley, Rossiter — 2. New London, Conn. — C. B. Graves, Waller — 2. Waterbury, Conn. — Bronson, J. P. Kellogg — 2. The above are the cities in which two or more members of the class reside. The others are distributed as follows : Massachusetts — Bruce, Lowe, McKnight, Sanford, Snyder, H. L. Williams — 6. Connecticut — J. F. Allen, Eno, Gallaher, Morris — 4. New York — Bartlett, Darling, Hopkins, Lovering — 4. Colorado — Brewster, Holland, Rolfe — 3. California — Richards, Weed — 2. Kentucky — Bennett, Chenault — 2. Michigan — Boltwood, Hebard — 2. Nebraska — Barbour — t. New Hampshire — Beede, Lay — 2. New Jersey — O'Hanlon — 1. Pennsylvania— Bailey, Parke — 2. Oregon — Jefferds— 1. Rhode Island — Eaton, Kingman — 2. South Carolina — Rutledge — 1. Washington— Griggs, Smith— 2. South Dakota— Kittredge—i. Wisconsin— Pratt, Wight— 2. Utah— E. V. Silver— 1. Georgia— dimming— 1. Washington, D. C. — Beach — I. Minnesota— Foster— 1. Paris, France— Fitzgerald— 1. 113 STATISTICS DEATHS. Thomas McDowell Wentworth April 30, 1882 Theodore De Witt Cuyler January 1, 1883 Barclay Johnson April 21, 1885 Emmett Smith Williams January 13, 1886 Harry Chambers Fries July 14, 1886 Charles Mather Sholes August 7, 1889 James Alexander Campbell July 13, 1890 Franklin Eldred Worcester March 3, 1891 Daniel B. Weaver September 17, 1891 Alfred Chapman Hand March 13, 1892 Joseph Ernest Whitney February 25, 1893 George Edward Curtis February 3, 1895 Walter Murphy February 5, 1897 Fred John Brockway April 21, 1901 Non-Graduates. Henry Weldon Barnes December 4, 1882 Walter Gillespie Phelps November 18, 1887 George Wells Morrison July 17, 1888 Graduates — 14. Non-Graduates — 3. 114 STATISTICS MARRIAGES. Abbott — Jane Harrison, New Haven, Conn June 21, 1888 Allen, J F. — Cornelia Parker Breese, Meriden, Conn., November 2, 1893 Atterbury — Emma H. Baker, East Orange, N. J.. .November 17, 1892 Badger — Elizabeth Hand Wilcox, New Haven, Conn., October 6, 1887 Baltz — Mary Hart Welling, New York April 23, 1901 Barbour — Margaret Roxanna Lamson, New Haven, Conn., December 6, 1887 Bartlett — Mary Kate Hayward, Warsaw, N. Y December 25, 1883 Bate — Irene Sharp, Brooklyn, N. Y December 7, 1887 Bates — Minnie L. Couch, Gaylordsville, Conn September 21, 1886 Beach — Elizabeth Grayson Carter, Oaklands, Va.. December 25, 1893 Beede — Martha B. Melcher, Laconia, N. H April 15, 1901 Bennett — Mary Winston Warfield, Lexington, Ky.. .February 18, 1886 Bentley — Elizabeth King, Chicago, 111 January 8, 1889 Billings — Mary Elizabeth Alden, New Haven, Conn., March 27, 1884 Boltwood — Mary Gernon Rice, Grand Rapids, Mich., September 1, 1891 Brewster — Stella Yates, New York City June 10, 1891 Brinton — Lina S. Ives, New Haven, Conn April 25, 1893 *Brockway — Marian L. Turner, Mt. Savage, Md. .November 25, 1891 Bronson— Helen Adams Norton, Brooklyn, N. Y March 26, 1889 Bruce — Mary Emily Skinner, New Haven, Conn April 3, 1883 Chenault— Bettie Baker Bronston, Richmond, Ky July 17, 1883 Churchill— Llewella Pierce, New York August 14, 1889 Clement— Caroline Jewett Tripp, Buffalo, N. Y March 27, 1884 Cragin— Mary R. Willard, Colchester, Conn May 23, 1889 Cumming— Mary G. Smith, Summerville, Ga November 29, 1889 Eaton— Emily Tirzah Parks, Medford, Mass November 25, 1885 Ely— Emma Stotsenburg, New Albany, Ind June 8, 1886 Eno— Alice Rathbone, New Orleans, La April 4, 1883 Farwell— Fanny N. Day, Chicago, 111 May 19, 1887 Fitzgerald— Sybil Mary Winifred Wyndham, Florence, Italy, March, 1894 Ford— Hattie W. Downs, Milford, Conn September 18, 1889 Foster— Sophie Vernon Hammond, St. Paul, Minn. . January 1, 1894 French— Elizabeth Ambrose Wales, Randolph, Mass., December 13, 1887 115 STATISTICS Friend — Ida Weis, New Orleans, La March 19, 1890 Gardes — Lucie Wiltz, New Orleans, La November 7, 1888 Graves, C. B. — Frances Manwaring Miner, New London, Conn., September 10, 1891 Graves, G. H. — Mary Caroline Goodsell, Bridgeport, Conn., January 17, 1901 *Hand — Sara Lord Avery, Mansfield, Ohio June 27, 1888 Hawkes — Julia A. Burrell, New York January 21, 1890 Hebard — Hannah J. Morgan, Cleveland, Ohio. .. .September 30, 1885 Holland — Florence Olmstead Ward, Denver, Colo June 3, 1891 Hopkins — Mary Howland Pell, New York April 21, 1887 Kellogg, F. A. — Carolyn F. Kilbourne, New York June 4, 1900 Kellogg, J. P. — Clara Mason, Bridgeport, Conn June 1, 1892 Kingman — Fanny A. Terry, New Bedford, Mass. .November 19, 1889 (Died December 29, 1889.) ! Mary T. Cheever, Portsmouth, N. H July 6, 1898 Knapp — Emily Hale Perkins, Hartford, Conn February 9, 1888 Lay — Anna Booth Balch, Baltimore, Md June 26, 1894 Loomis — Catharine Canfield Northrop, New Haven, Conn., April 20, 1892 Lovering — Eva Augusta Archer, New Rochelle, N. Y. .August 5, 1885 Lowe — Amelia F. Robbins, Arlington, Mass December 16, 1887 McBride — Anna Truax Thurber, New York November 24, 1896 McKnight — Jennie Louisa Weed, New Haven, Conn May 19, 1886 Macmillan — Alice Robinson, Brooklyn, N. Y September 16, 1899 Moodey — Helen Antoinette Paine, Painesville, Ohio.... July 12, 1883 *Murphy — Emma Benson Purves, Philadelphia, Pa., September 20, 1889 O'Hanlon — Lida Lillagore, Ocean Grove, N. J December 27, 1882 Page — Gertrude M. Swenson, Chicago, 111 July 2, 1895 Palmer — Mary Eagle, Brooklyn, N. Y December 4, 1889 Parsons — Laura Wolcott Collins, Rye, N. Y June 26, 1884 Pierce — Carrie de Zeng Morrow, Green Bay, Wis April 15, 1891 Piatt — Grace Lee Phelps, Wilkes-Barre, Pa November 9, 1887 Pollock — Fannie Dawson Greenough, Wilmington, N. C, August 9, 1882 Pratt — Annie Barclay, Washington, D. C December 27, 1892 Rice — Helen Eggleston Howd, Pleasant Valley, Conn., September 18, 1883 Il6 STATISTICS Richards — Bertha W. Gray, New Haven, Conn June 5, 1889 Richardson — Elizabeth Whittaker Decker, Boston, Mass., (Died June 24, 1899.) September 16, 1896 Rolfe— Mattie Kerr, Memphis, Tenn December 24, 1886 Rossiter — Eleanor Genevieve Brown, New Canaan, Conn., August 22, 1883 Rutledge — Emma Craig Blake, Fletcher, N. C October 5, 1892 Sanford — Annie Bennet Tomlinson, Shelton, Conn July 7, 1898 Scranton — Mary Dumesnil Mcllvaine, St. Albans, Vt, October 15, 1884 Scudder — Abigail Taylor Seelye, Northampton, Mass., September 5, 1895 Shipley — Charlotte H. Goshorn, Cincinnati, Ohio June 22, 1887 Shoemaker — Cornelia W. Scranton, Scranton Pa. .November 27, 1889 *Sholes — Anna Electa Tucker, Oswego, Kan December 25, 1884 Silver, E. V. — Bessie Larsen, Salt Lake City, Utah April 3, 1901 Silver, L. M. — Roberta Shoemaker, Philadelphia, Pa. . October 25, 1894 Smith — Susan C. Chichester, Geneseo, N. Y July 2, 1890 Snell — Isabel Cromwell, New Haven, Conn October 16, 1900 Snyder — Maria Louise Bradley, New Haven, Conn July 9, 1883 Storrs — Gertrude Cleveland, Orange, N. J December 15, 1897 Titche — Fanny Kaufman, New Orleans, La June 18, 1890 Vought — Natalie Blackmarr Sternberg, Buffalo, N. Y...June 19, 1888 *Weaver— Elizabeth A. White, Philadelphia, Pa.. October 20, 1885 Weed — Emma Christy Ramsey, Chicago, 111 September 27, 1884 Welch— Ellen Bunce, Hartford, Conn October 24, 1889 Welles — Mary Amelia Patton, Washington, D. C June 12, 1888 Wells— Eleanore B. Fitch, Freeport, 111 November 14, 1884 ♦Whitney — Sadie Prince Turner, Syracuse, N. Y. .November 15, 1883 Wight— Charlotte M. Burgis, Detroit, Mich June 1, 1886 Williams, H. L.— Isabella Hall Dewey, Boston, Mass. .. .May 28, 1884 Non-Graduates. Adams— Elizabeth Ellerslie Wallace, New York June 4, 1895 Bishop— Anna Bartram Newbold, Trenton, N. J July 9, 1885 Burpee— Bertha Stiles, Bridgeport, Conn November 5, 1885 Camp— Mary Cobb Ball, Milwaukee, Wis August 5, 1886 Case— Florence N. Case, Trenton, N. J April 9, 1890 117 STATISTICS Griggs — Mary Chaffee Wells, Pittsburg, Pa October 15, 1885 Haskell — Blanche Lindamon Jones, Chicago, 111 .. December 31, 1885 Havens — Caroline Prindle Sammons January 16, 1894 Kinley — Kate R. Neal, Mount Vernon, Ohio June 22, 1897 ♦Phelps — Grace H. Goodell, Hartford, Conn December 9, 1885 Sanderson — Alice Bartel Kane, Milwaukee, Wis January 5, 1881 (Died January 19, 1882.) Clarice Follansbee September 8, 1887 Seymour — Katherine W. Camp, Newington, Conn..November 17, 1887 Van Kirk— Elizabeth V. Long, Allegheny City, Pa June 16, 1887 Graduates — 91. Non-Graduates — 13. CHILDREN. Allen (J. F.)— Parker Breese October 31, 1895 Theodore Ferguson October 29, 1897 Badger — Walter Irving, Jr September 16, 1891 Grace Ansley July 13, 1893 Barbour — Eleanor February 22, 1889 Bartlett— Ruth Hayward October 4, 1884 *Mary Dudley December 14, 1887 Loyd Hayward 1888 ♦Donald Tanner 1892 Robert Milne 1892 Bate — Rutledge February 2, 1891 Bates — Alice Melissa September 12, 1887 Winifred July 14, 1889 Beach— Katherine Elizabeth April, 1895 Grace Carter September, 1896 Elizabeth Morgan May, 1898 Bennett — Benjamin Warfield December 6, 1886 Waller December 13, 1888 Sara McChesney March 6, 1890 Susan Anne May 15, 1892 Samuel, Jr March 10, 1895 William Dudley July 9, 1896 Bentley— Margaret August 28, 1892 Richard June 5, 1894 Il8 STATISTICS Billings— Charles Kingsbury, Jr November 21, 1885 Margaret Louise March 10, 1886 Mabel Frances May 3, 1888 Julia Holmes January 7, 1890 Mary Elizabeth February 7, 1892 John Alden October 11, 1898 Boltwood— Ruth Gernon April 15, 1894 Brewster — Katrina Mynderse May 10, 1894 Benjamin Yates December 28, 1897 Brinton— Anna Binney January 21, 1896 Caroline Ives March 25, 1898 Ferree, Jr August 9, 1900 *Brockway — Marian May 13, 1896 Dorothy February 27, 1898 Bronson— Norton February 28, 1894 Richardson October 12, 1896 Bruce — Donald July 23, 1884 Chenault — Nettie Bronston December 12, 1884 Walter Scott July 22, 1888 Clement — Norman P April 12, 1885 Edith C April 22, 1886 Stephen Merrill, Jr November 10, 1887 Harold T August 19, 1889 Marion March 26, 1891 Stewart H April 2, 1895 Cragin — Miriam Willard September 30, 1890 Alice Gregory November 18, 1893 Cumming— Mary Shaler December 3, 1891 Joseph Bryan August 10, 1893 Eaton — Irene Helen August 10, 1887 Ely— David Jay June 30, 1888 Alice Anne May 4, 1892 Farwell— Albert Day May 28, 1888 Marion January 13, 1892 Elizabeth Cooley June 12, 1895 FitzGerald— Alida Cecilia Winifred 1895 Edward Galbraith Augustine 1897 II 9 STATISTICS Foster — Harriet Burnside February 3, 1895 Elizabeth Hammond March 5, 1899 Roger Sherman December 13, 1900 French — Jonathan Wales April 26, 1891 Constance April 13, 1896 Friend — Lillian Frances January 15, 1891 Julius Weis August 20, 1894 Graves, C. B. — Addison Miner July 8, 1894 (Died April 12, 1902.) Elizabeth Waterman November 16, 1898 *Hand — Avery Chapman April 27, 1889 Hebard — Morgan February 23, 1887 Holland — Barbara April 15, 1892 Elizabeth April 15, 1892 Kellogg, F. A. — Helen Kilbourne March 1, 1902 (Died August 5. 1902.) Kellogg (J. P.) — Fredrika Mason January 23, 1894 Elizabeth Hosmer February 23, 1899 Rosemary February 16, 1902 Knapp — A son April 19, 1891 (Died in infancy.) Farwell November 28, 1893 Lay — George Balch May 4, 1895 Elizabeth Atkinson April 6, 1897 Ellen Booth March 17, 1899 Lovering — Charlotte Elizabeth January 14, 1887 James Howe September 12, 1890 Lowe — Gwendolen R. McKnight— Wallace May 2, 1890 Ray Weed May 1 1, 1892 (Died August 20, 1892.) Theodore Weed May 30, 1896 (Died August 6, 1896.) Moodey — Antoinette Paine May 15, 1884 Helen Chapin October 26, 1886 Gertrude September 28, 1888 Harriette October 13, 1890 I20 STATISTICS *Murpny— Harold Purves July 9> I gg Helen Benson April 9, 1893 Emma Maxwell January 12, 1895 O'Hanlon— fRussell Yale October 24, 1883 John Nelson March 3, 1887 Marguerite H August 9, 1890 Marie Maps December 6, 1893 Laura March 26, 1898 Palmer— William Eagle December 6, 1890 Josiah Culbert, Jr August 11, 1896 Parsons — Annie Rankin August 8, 1885 (Died October 5, 1886.) William Henry, 3d May 29, 1888 John Palmer April 16, 1890 Oliver Wolcott September 12, 1892 Laura Cecilia November 6, 1893 Mary Marselis October 8, 1894 Pierce— Richard de Zeng April 20, 1892 Piatt — Sherman Phelps June 2, 1890 Charlotte December 6, 1896 Thos. Collier, 2d May 3, 1898 Pollock — Margaret June 27, 1883 Rice — Welles Kennon January 1, 1887 Dorothy Lee August 16, 1888 Richards — Philip Hand. Rolfe — Robert Laurence December 6, 1887 Rossiter— Ruth Frances March 28, 1886 John Harold October 30, 1896 Rutledge— Eleanor Middleton March 23, 1894 Emma Blake August 23, 1897 Alice Weston January 1, 1899 Benjamin Huger, Jr January 11, 1902 Sanford— Joseph Hudson June 28, 1900 Daniel Sammis, Jr April 4, 1902 t Class boy. 121 STATISTICS Scranton — John Walworth July 27, 1885 Marian July 4, 1889 Scudder — Evarts Seelye September 5, 1896 Hilda February 7, 1899 Shipley — Marguerita June 13, 1888 Alfreda August 27, 1893 *Sholes — Hiram, 2d October 3, 1885 William Mather June 1, 1888 Silver, E. V. — Charles Alexander January 29, 1902 Silver, L. M. — Helen Mann September 28, 1895 Margaret Bird March 25, 1897 Smith — Eunice Wakelee April 13, 1891 Austin Chichester April 22, 1893 Harriet Holbrook May 17, 1897 Snyder — Elizabeth Glenn April 24, 1884 Marian Louise June 14, 1886 Henry Rossiter December 17, 188S Justine Pratt March 12, 1892 Titche — Bernard, Jr January 17, 1895 *Weaver— Rebecca W July 28, 1886 Weed— Helen Brooks October 26, 1886 Wells — Marguerite F September 30, 1885 Welles— Martin Rice March 2, 1889 (Died August 5, 1895.) Carolyn Aiken January 22, 1892 Margaret Stanley June 9, 1894 May Patton November 29, 1897 Roger Patton June 1, 1901 ♦Whitney— Margaret April 13, 1886 Wight — Winifred Burgis July 18, 1894 (Died June 4, 1898.) Elliott Leland March 8, 1897 Non-Graduates. Adams — Frank Lanson April 25, 1896 Bishop— Newbold April 14, 1887 Mildred Remsen April 14, 1887 Remsen July 11, 1890 Austrios Bartram July 11, 1890 Francis September 20, 1896 122 STATISTICS Camp— Carolyn Mary January 10, 1889 Marion Merrill June 30, 1892 Case— Charles Blackwell, Jr March 26, 1892 Arthur Ellicott April n, 1894 Griggs— Calvin Wells November 15, 1886 Milton Wright November 13, 1888 Mary Wells April 22, 1892 Everett Billings December 17, 1895 Benjamin Glyde January 1, 1898 Haskell— Margaret July 6, 1887 Helen Louisa July 9, 1891 George Starkweather January 31, 1897 Havens — Lucy Prindle October 21, 1894 Mary Eleanor January 30, 1897 Kinley— Harriet October 3, 1898 *Phelps— Dwight G June 8, 1887 Of Graduates — Boys, 70. Girls, 86. Of Non-Graduates— Boys, 13. Girls, 9. UNMARRIED. M. S. Allen, Bailey, Blumley, *Campbell, *Curtis, *Cuyler, Dar- ling, Dillingham, Foote, *Fries, Gallagher, Griggs, Jefferds, *John- son, Kittredge, Lewis, Long, Lyman, Morris, Osborne, Pardee, Parke, Pember, Stillman, Sweetser, Waller, *Wentworth, *E. S. Williams, * Worcester, Wright. Living, 22; deceased, 8. 123 ADDRESSES. Prof. Frank Frost Abbott. . .University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. James Ferguson Allen Meriden, Conn. Martin Smith Allen 19 Jay St., New York City Albert Hoffman Atterbury 315 West 7th st, Plainfield, N. J. Walter Irving Badger 126 Brattle St., Cambridge, Mass. William Elder Bailey 30 South Front St., Harrisburg, Pa. Harry Rudolph Baltz 1813 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa. Prof. Erwin Hinckley Barbour, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb. Floyd Julius Bartlett Auburn, N. Y. Mortimer Stratton Bate 100 Wall St., New York City Robert Parker Bates 120 Randolph st., Chicago, 111. Morgan Hawley Beach 344 D st., N. W., Washington, D. C. John Fred Beede Meredith, N. H. Samuel Bennett Frankfort, Ky. Cyrus Bentley 35 Borden Block, Chicago, 111. Charles Kingsbury Billings 67 Trumbull st., New Haven, Conn. Charles Edward Blumley Norwich, Conn. George Shepard Boltwood, 601-607 Michigan Trust Co. Bldg., Grand Rapids, Mich. Rev. Benjamin Brewster Colorado Springs, Colo. Ferree Brinton 805 Land Title Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa. Nathaniel Richardson Bronson Waterbury, Conn. Wayland Irving Bruce Easthampton, Mass. David Anderson Chenault, University School of Kentucky, Louisville, Ky. William Churchill 14 Harrison ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Stephen Merrill Clement Marine Bank, Buffalo, N. Y. Edwin Bradford Cragin, M.D 62 West 50th St., New York City 125 ADDRESSES Bryan Cumming Augusta, Ga. Frederick Orren Darling Center Moriches, N. Y. Edwin Lynde Dillingham 153-157 5th ave., New York City. Franklin Maynard Eaton, M.D Box 630, Providence, R. I. James Richard Ely 15 Wall st, New York City William Phelps Eno Saugatuck, Conn. Francis Cooley Farwell. .Care of J. V. Far well & Co., Chicago, 111. Augustine FitzGerald 11 Avenue Hoche, Paris, France Carlton Alexander Foote 41 West 12th st, New York City Wilbur Harvey Nash Ford 3351 Calumet ave., Chicago Burnside Foster, M.D Lowry Bldg., St. Paul, Minn. Asa Palmer French 87 Milk st, Boston, Mass. Joseph Emanuel Friend 817 Gravier st, New Orleans, La. Frank Runyon Gallaher Essex, Conn. Henry Washburn Gardes Hollister, Tex. Charles Burr Graves, M.D New London, Conn. George Heber Graves Fairfield Chemical Co., Bridgeport, Conn. Herbert Stanton Griggs Fidelity Bldg., Tacoma, Wash. Charles Burnell Hawkes 51 Chambers st., New York City Charles Samuel Hebard Pequaming, Baraga Co., Mich. Theodore Holland 1319 William st, Denver, Colo. Samuel Cornell Hopkins Catskill, N. Y. Henry Clarke Jefferds, M.D 603 Dekum Bldg., Portland, Ore. Frank Albert Kellogg 280 58th st, Brooklyn, N. Y. John Prescott Kellogg Waterbury, Conn. James Henry Kingman, M.D Pawtucket, R. I. Hon. Alfred Beard Kittredge Sioux Falls, S. Dak. Howard Hoyt Knapp 1094 Main st, Bridgeport, Conn. Rev. George William Lay St. Paul's School, Concord, N. H. Charles Henry Lewis, M.D 51 West 58th st., New York City Charles Jonas Long 60 West Market st., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Seymour Crane Loomis 81 Church st, New Haven, Conn. Martin Lovering Tuckahoe, N. Y. Fred Messenger Lowe, M.D., 1354 Washington st., West Newton, Mass. 126 ADDRESSES Chester Wolcott Lyman 30 Broad st., New York City Wilbur McBride 16 Exchange pi., New York City Rev. Harry Chapman McKnight East Longmeadow, Mass. Daniel Walton Macmillan 137 East 4th St., Cincinnati, Ohio Herbert Lyman Moodey 150 Nassau st, New York City Rev. Charles Newton Morris West Hartford, Conn. John Russell O'Hanlon Pennington, N. J. Arthur Sherwood Osborne Box 164, New Haven, Conn. Frank Edward Page Ashland Block, Chicago, 111. Josiah Culbert Palmer 27 William St., New York City William Scranton Pardee 581 George st., New Haven, Conn. Samuel Maxwell Parke Pittston, Pa. William Henry Parsons, Jr 257 Broadway, New York City Chauncey Howard Pember 292 Asylum st., Hartford, Conn. Richard Henry Pierce Manhattan Bldg., Chicago, 111. Henry Barstow Platt 49 Broadway, New York City William Pollock 182 Madison ave., New York City Prof. Julius Howard Pratt, Jr., Milwaukee Academy, Milwaukee, Wis. James Quackenbush Rice 220 Broadway, New York City Charles Edward Richards 331 Douglas Bldg., Los Angeles, Cal. George Parker Richardson Atlas National Bank, Boston, Mass. Robert Mayo Rolfe Trinidad, Colo. John Rossiter jy Union st., Norwich, Conn Benjamin Huger Rutledge Charleston, S. C. Daniel Sammis Sanford Brookline, Mass. Arthur Scranton Lackawanna Steel Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Charles Locke Scudder, M.D 189 Beacon st., Boston, Mass. Caleb Wright Shipley Risor ave., Clifton, Cincinnati, Ohio Levi Ives Shoemaker, M.D. .31 South Franklin st., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Edward Vernon Silver, M.D Salt Lake City, Utah Lewis Mann Silver, M.D 103 West 72d st, New York City Clarence Austin Smith, M.D., 120 Washington Bldg., Seattle, Wash. 127 ADDRESSES Frank Hiram Snell 881 State St., New Haven, Conn. Rev. Henry Speke Snyder Gilbertville, Mass. Charles Stillman 22 William st, New York City Hon. Charles Bigelow Storrs 333 Lincoln ave., Orange, N. J. Howard Peck Sweetser 376 Broadway, New York City Bernard Titche Hennen Bldg., New Orleans, La. William Grandin Vought 48 Linwood ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Tracy Waller New London, Conn. Edward Odell Weed Gardena, Cal. Archibald Ashley Welch 21 Woodland st, Hartford, Conn. Martin Welles 146 Broadway, New York City John Lewis Wells 32 Nassau St., New York City Rev. Charles Albert Wight Platteville, Wis. Harry Lucien Williams Northampton, Mass. Arthur Bethuel Wright The Rookery, Chicago, 111. ADDRESSES OF NON-GRADUATES. John Lanson Adams, M.D 24 East 46th st., New York City John Remsen Bishop Huntington pi., Cincinnati, Ohio Charles Winslow Burpee Hartford, Conn. Robert Camp 684 Franklin pi., Milwaukee, Wis. Charles Blackwell Case, Cor. State and Warren sts., Trenton, N. J. Robert Browning Corey 26 Cortlandt St., New York City Charles Gibbons Douw Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Chauncey Milton Griggs... .Griggs Cooper & Co., St. Paul, Minn. George Edward Haskell Wamsutta Club, New Bedford, Mass. James Smith Havens, 12 Rochester Savings Bank Bldg., Rochester, N. Y. Prof. David Kinley Urbana, 111 Tun Yen Liang, Care China Merchants' Steam Navigation Co., Hankow, China George Brooke Miller Sandy Spring, Md. Edward Pascal Pratt New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. Henry Byron Sanderson Phoenix Mills, Milwaukee, Wis. William Seymour, Cruttenden & Co., 341 to 345 Wabash ave., Chicago, 111. Will Loujeay Van Kirk _> |ir. . Pittsburgh, Pa THE UB|| HT JUN 1 8 1930 UNIVERSITY Uf ili yS