1827. m JUBILEE MEMORIAL OF Shurtleff College. 1877 * f ' * V." JUBILEE MEMORIAL OF SIURTLEFF COLLEGE, UPPER ALTON, ILL. Consisting of Three Volumes in One: I. THE SEMI-CENTENNIAL AND GENERAL CATALOGUE. II. THE JUBILEE ANNIVERSARY, WITH ADDRESS AND POEM. III. THE CENTENNIAL-JUBILEE MEMORIAL ROLL- BOOK. ALTON, ILL.: DAILY TELEGRAPH 8TBAM PRINT. 1877. This Building was erected at Rock Spring, Illinois, under direction of ELD. JOHN M. PECK, in 1827, and destroyed by fire in 1862. ROCK SPRING SEMINARY, ILLINOIS, ''The first Institution of Learning, above the grade of a common, primary School, established in the West." "In 1831, the School closed with the view of its removal to Upper Alton, as the commencement of a College, and opened again, in 1832, under th<- name of Alton Seminary," (now Shur- tleff College.) John M. Peck, D. D. < *. SEMI-CENTENNIAL AND GENERAL CATALOGUE OF THE OFFICERS AND STUDENTS OF FOR 50 YEARs-1827-^ / 1 , EMBRACING THE ENTIRE HISTORY OF THE COLLEGE, FROM ITS BEGINNING IN THE ESTABLISHMENT OF ROCK SPRING SEM- INARY IN 1827, AND INCLUDING ALTON SEMINARY, ORGANIZED IN 1832, ALTON COLLEGE, CHAR- TERED IN 1835, AND SHURTLEFF COL- LEGE, SO NAMED IN 1836. UPPER ALTON, ILL 1877. HISTORICAL SKETCH. SHURTLEFF COLLEGE had Its origin in a "Theological and High School" known as Rock Spring Seminary, established in 1827, under the labors of Rev. John M. Peck, D. D., and through the help of contributions received from a few friends in New York and New England. In THE BAPTIST MEMORIAL for 1842, Vol. 1, page 205, Dr. Peck says : "In 1827 the Rock Spring The- ological High School was opened. Rock Spring is a country situation, 18 miles East of St. Louis, and on the great stage road to Vincennes and Louis- ville. The Seminary commenced with 25 students of both sexes, which number was increased in a few weeks to 100. At that period no school for boarders, under Protestant direction, existed in Illinois or Missouri. In 1831 the school closed with the view of its removal to Upper Alton, as the commencement of a College. The Institution opened again in 1832, under the name of Alton Seminary." Dr. B. F. Edwards, now resident in Kirkwood, Mo.,- the sole survivor of the Rock Spring Board, a member of the Alton Seminary Board, and chairman of the meeting in which this new organization (rendered necessary by the change of location) was effected, says : "Rock Spring Seminary was removed to Upper Alton and there continued as Alton Seminary, and it was definitely understood because of a previous agreement to remove that this was to be done when the new location at Upper Alton was decided upon, and the new organization there was formed." This statement of facts occurring in the early history of this College, and which at last definitely fixed its present location, is confirmed by abundant materials found in the published works and letters of Dr. Peck still extant; in a memorial volume inscribed to Dr. Peck and prepared by Hon. John Reynolds, Ex-Governor of Illinois, and in the opinions of many other living witnesses whose testimony might be added to that already given, In pursuance of the plan of removal there was an early transfer of the movable property of Rock Spring Seminary to Alton Seminary, consisting, as we are told, of "some $300 or $400 worth of property," embracing, among other things, the library of the Rock Spring Seminary, most of which is still in the possession of the College. One teacher also, John Russell LL. D., who was Principal at Rock Spring after the first year, followed the school to its new location, and was appointed to the position of Principal also in SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. Alton Seminary, during a temporary absence in the interests of the school, of Rev. Hubbel Loomis, Principal de facto. The deep interest in the educational affairs of the West felt at that time by Eastern Baptists is strikingly exemplified by the fact that while this sub- ject of removal was being agitated, Rev. Jonathan Going. D.D., of Massa- chusetts, was sent as a Special Adviser, to Illinois. He carefully examined the field and gave his voice and influence in favor of the new location, which was also heartily accepted by the Western friends of the enterprise. The new organization rendered necessary by this change of location was effected at Upper Alton, June 4th, 1832, under the name of the "The Board of Trustees of Alton Seminary." Its object was declared to be "to take into consideration the establishment of a Seminary as the foundation of a College." The school was put in operation and Rev. Hubbel Loomis was elected Principal, to whose wise plans and efficient labors, is, undoubt- edly, to be attributed much of what Shurtleff College has since become. The next chapter in this history, prepared for use in another connection by Prof. Washington Leverett, LL. D., and based upon the official records of the new Board, is here inserted in his words : "Of the seven original Trustees," i. e. composing the new Board, "five were members of Baptist churches, and all agreed that a prominent object of the Association was and ever should be the elevation of the Christian Ministry in general learning and theology in the Valley of the Mississippi, and that always at least two- thirds of the Trustees should be members of good standing in the Baptist Communion. "In March, 1833, the State Legislature granted a charter incorporating the seven gentlemen who were named as 'The Trustees of Alton College of Illi- nois.' To prevent any complication of 'Church and State' it is supposed and to exclude all sectarian ascendency, this charter provided that no 'parti- cular religious faith should be required of those who become Trustees of the Institution.' Nor could any 'Professor of Theology ever be employed as a teacher at said College, nor any Theological Department be connected there- with or in any manner attached thereto,' without rendering the act granting the charter 'null and forever void.' The charter was not accepted. Nor were efforts to forward the object of the Association thereby retarded. In January, 1835, measures were adopted to raise $25,000 for 'the immediate wants as well as the permanency and prosperity of the Alton Seminary,' viz: $10,000 for buildings, $7,500 a fund for salaries of professors, and $7,500 a fund to aid beneficiary theoldgical students. The self-constituted Trustees proceeded to lay off streets, town lots and a college campus, and appointed and commissioned itinerant agents to solicit funds and enlist the co-operation of friends of advanced education in several of the Eastern, Middle and Western States. *" "In February, 1835, a new charter was granted, hi its general features sufficiently liberal, but retaining the offensive proviso with reference to a Theological Department. However, this charter was accepted. Without dissolving then* mutual covenant the seven subscribers to.'the original com- pact, with other elected members, became a distinct Board of 'Trustees of SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. Alton College of Illinois.' The Association now conditionally surrendered to the new corporation its entire property 'reserving fifty acres of the land for the education of the ministry of the gospel, and also such donations as may have been made for this special object.' In accepting the property surrendered, the College Board placed on their records a resolution, 'That it is understood in good faith that the principles of the original compact of the said gentlemen herewith recorded, be preserved by this incorporation in- violate, so far as said compact is compatible with the charter of this incor- poration.' The feature of the compact thus specially guarded was, 'That it is and shall ever continue to be & prominent object to aid in the education of young men of genuine piety designed for the Gospel ministry in this sec- tion of the Valley 'of the Mississippi.' "The original Association now assumed for its name, 'The Trustees of Alton Theological Seminary.' The two Boards, thus composed mostly of identical members, co-operated harmoniously in advancing their cherished enterprise. The Trustees of the Seminary appointed their Professor of Theology, and the Trustees of the College appointed their Professors, and their teachers of the Preparatory Department, and students in both Institu- tions pursued their preparatory studies hi the same classes and boarded to- gether at the common refectory. "In January, 1836, the charter of the College was amended by changing the name of the Board to 'The Trustees of Shurtleff College of Alton, Illinois.' This change was in consideration of the then very liberal donation of $10,000, to the endowment of the College, by Benjamin Shurtleff, M. D., of Boston, Mass. "In February, 1841, the offensive provisos of the college charter were re- pealed by the Legislature, and the Trustees were authorized to organize 'ad- ditional departments for the study of any or all of the liberal professions.' Soon after this a schedule was made of all the property belonging to the Seminary and held by its Board in trust for Theological purposes, and in the following July, its Trustees, at their annual meeting, closed the records of its history as follows : " 'Whereas, by an amendment of the charter of Shurtleff College granting the right, the Board of Trustees of that Institution has established a Theo- logical Department which supercedes the necessity of a separate organiza- tion, " 'Therefore resolved unanimously, that all the property of this Institution herewith be transferred to the Theological Department of Shurtleff College. " ' Resolved That this Board be dissolved, and all its books and papers be transferred to the Trustees of Shurtlefi College for its Theological Depart- ment. " From the foregoing it appears that Theological instruction has been a prominent idea in the plans of its friends from the very Inception of the In- stitution. The original school at Rock Spring was called a Theological School. In consequence of the pra iso originally belonging to the charter of the College, first granted in 1833, 'preventing the existence of a Theologi- cal Department, a separate Association was formed, known as "The Trus- 6 SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. tees of Alton Theological Seminary." Under the auspices of this body, Rev. Lewis Colby was elected Principal of the Theological Seminary, and served acceptably in this capacity during the years 1835-6 and 1836-7. When the College charter was amended by striking out the offensive proviso alluded to above, a Theological Department was at once established, in which Alton Seminary wag merged. Special arrangements were made for carrying on Theological instruction, which has been maintained, although with vary- ing success, until the present time. Under its present organization the Theological Department is accomplish- ing efficient work and is in the enjoyment of brighter prospects than for many years previous. Its funds are sufficiently ample for present purposes, and it is not anticipated that any emergencies will arise which will justify its suspension. In fact, as this sketch well demonstrates, there are insuperable obstacles, both legal and moral, to the abandonment of the sacred trust which the Fathers have imposed upon us. On the contrary, it is hoped and expect- ed that the future will see not only permanency, but growth and advance- ment in this special Department. From 1836 to 1841 the average number of students in attendance was eighty-eight, and of instructors four. During this period Rev. Prof. Wash- ington Leverett, LL.D., being the senior officer, acted as President of the College. In 1840 Rev. Adiel Sherwood, D. D., was elected to the Presiden- cy, which position he filled until 1846. During his Presidency Professors Zenas B. Newman, Washington Leverett and Warren Leverett, were asso- ciated with him in instruction. During the years 1847 1849 Dr. Washing- ton Leverett was again acting President of the College, and Warren Lever- ett, Erastus Adkins, Justus Bulkley and William Cunningham were instruc- tors. In 1850 Rev. K N. Wood, D. D., accepted the Presidency, which he held for five years. Rev. S. Y. McMasters, LL. D., succeeded him in 1855, as President pro tempore, and the next year Rev. Daniel Read, LL. D., became President and served 14 years. After an interval of nearly three years, during which the duties pertaining to the Presidency were performed by Professors Bulkley and Fairman, Rev. A. A. Kendrick, D. D., present incumbent, entered upon his duties. The names of the additional Professors and Instructors are given in the table following this sketch. It is a fact worthy of mention that the instruction furnished by the insti- tution has been of a high order from the very outset. Indeed, so wisely was the curriculum of studies projected, that no radical changes hi the various courses pursued, have been called for to meet the demands which modern views upon education have made. The Institution has been brought up to its present position by building carefully upon the foundations originally laid, increased facilities ot instruction having been acquired, and better work having been done, but with little modification of the ideas upon which the College was at the first projected. The advanced course of study insisted upon as a prerequisite to a degree goes far to account for the comparatively limited number of graduates, particularly when the general and public opin- ion of the West during this period, concerning liberal education, is taken into the account. The good which this College has accomplished, through the SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. educational facilities which it has furnished, must therefore be sought for in great measure outside of its list of graduates, in the training, more or less complete, which over Three Thousand young men and not a few young women, have received within its walls. The average number of students in attendance during the last twenty years has been about one hundred and twenty, of whom nearly one-fourth have been ministerial students. Just how many, in all, have entered the ministry, we cannot tell, but the number is known to be several hundred. During the late war between the States, a very large number of students enlisted in the service of the country at least 140 of previous students and those connected with the College at the time, were in this service, in the year 1864, so that the school was, for a little while, virtually suspended. Several of these students rose to great distinction as soldiers, becoming Majors, Colonels, Brigadier Generals, and two rising to the rank of Major General. But the students of this College have distinguished themselves and honored their Alma Mater, not only by their patriotism and bravery, but as jurists, and statesmen, teachers and editors, as well as by ranking among the first of the Christian ministers of the land. Two, who were formerly students in this College, are now representing a single city in our National Congress, and Btill more honorable than this, is the fact that four of the graduates of Shurtleff College are now missionaries of the Cross among the heathen in foreign lands. As the school has maintained its original idea, by establishing and sustaining a Theological Department, so it has again opened its doors to pupils of both sexes, in harmony with the more advanced ideas of the pres- ent age. Ladies have been graduated, during the last few years, from the full classical course of this College, by the side of young men, and won first honors in competition with them. Notwithstanding this Institution had its beginning when the country was yet in its infancy only a few years after Illinois became a State, and while most of the people of the West were yet poor, and the Baptist denomination especially, on which the College was mainly dependent, was feeble still, it has grown, if not with equal rapidity, nevertheless, somewhat in propor- tion, with the growth of the country and of the denomination, and to-day not including any Centennial or Jubilee contributions has a valuable prop- erty, consisting of its buildings and grounds worth at least $50,000; trust funds and invested endowments of several chairs, over $75,000, which last are all free from liabilities and incumbrance; and then additional outside properties and claims for at least $25,000 more, making a total of at least $150,000, besides Libraries, Apparatus and Furniture, in present possession of the College. And, still, valuable as its accumulations for the past half century have been, they were far from sufficient for the proper support of the Institution. The year 1876, the Centennial of the Nation, was an important one in the history of this College. As the result of the inadequate endowments, and in spite of all possible economy in administration, on the part of a faithful Board of Trustees, the year came in with a large debt standing against the 8 SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. College, and very small and insufficient provisions for its payment. There- fore, while most of the other of our denominational schools of the land were moving to effort and seeking relief, this College also started an effort to raise at least $100,000 a sum sufficient, not only to pay all debts, but to so increase the endowments of the College as to prevent a recurrence of debt, and render the College hereafter more efficient and independent. Rev. G. J. Johnson, D. D., was secured as Financial Agent, and Dr. Bulkley, of the College, consented to co-operate with him. As the result of their labors, and the assistance rendered by others, above $75,000 in all were secured a part however, being conditional upon securing the whole of the proposed $100,000. And now the glad Jubilee year of the College has come, and it has been resolved that the effort for the balance of the $100,000 desired shall not be suspended or relaxed, but, on the contrary, pressed forward with renewed vigor, and, not only the $25,000 balance be raised, but, if possible, $25,000 more, as a special Jubilee Offering. In closing our brief sketch, we may not perhaps do better, than to adopt the earnest words of the General Agent of the College, who, having served it through the Centennial year, is still prosecuting the work and consents to serve, at least through a portion of this Jubilee year, and now again appeals to the friends of the College thus: " Ought not such a College, enjoying the pre-eminence of being the oldest Institution of Learning in the Mississippi Valley, and, in fact, in all the West in a territory embracing fully three-fourths of the area of our American Union; a College that has already done the good this has, and is so favorably situated to do the good this is, and now celebrating its Jubilee year, to be liberally provided for by its friends? What possibly could we do that was becoming and do less for it than, as a JUBILEE OFFERING, to raise FIFTY THOUSAND DOLLARS in its behalf, including what may be nec- essary to complete fully the Centennial effort, so far advanced, to raise $100,000 ? Let it be done. " OFFICERS OF GOVERNMENT AND INSTRUCTION. In the following lists of Trustees and Teachers, the blank spaces, under the head of RETIRED, indicate those who are still in service. Those known to be deceased are denoted by an asterisk *. TRUSTEES. -O- ROCK SPRING SEMINARY. APPOINTED. TRUSTEES. RETIRED. 18 27 *Rev. James Lemen President 18 32 *Rev. John M Peck, D. D. , Secretary Benj F Edwards M D. *Rev. Zadock Darrow *Major Peter Cownover *Rev. Gorham Holmes *Rev. James Pulliam *Prof. John Messenger *Wm. Engle Esq. *Theron Brown field, Esq. ALTON SEMINARY. APPOINTED, TRUSTEES. RETIRED. 18 32 *Rev. Hubbel Loomis, President 18 35 Benj. F. Edwards, M. D Win. Manning, Esq. *Hon. Geo. Sin ith Hon. Cyrus Edwards, LL. D ... 10 SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. ALTON AND SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. APPOINTED. TRUSTEES. 1835 *Rev. Hubbell Loomis. A. M. (Prest. 1886.) J&$7 ion. Cyrus Edwards, LL. D 1866 Enoch Long, Esq 1840 *Hon.Geo. Smith 1852 Wm. Manning, Jr., Esq 1843 Benj. P.Edwards, M. D 1846 *Stephen Griggs, Esq., (Secretary) 1844 *Bev. Johu M. Peck, D. D 1858 *Geo. Haskell. M. D 1839 *Hon. Alfred W. Cavarly 1855 1836 John Tillson, Esq 1843 Rev. Lewis Colby, A. M 1838 1837 *Rev. Dwight Ives, D. D.... 1839 Wilson Jewell, M. D 1887 *Rev. Ebenezer Rodgers 1854 *Elias Hibbard, Esq " 1F89 *Hon. Samuel G. Bailey 1845 *Mark Pierson, Esq 1852 1840 *Rev. Jonathan Men-lam 1842 1841 Rev. Adiel Sherwood, D. D., Ex-officio 1845 1842 DavidS. Dodge 1848 1842 *Moses G. Atwood, (Sec. 1845.) 1862 1845 Rev. Adiel Sherwood, D. D 1852 "Orleans M. Adams 1855 1846 Rev. Washington Leverett, LL. D., Ex-officio ' 1^49 1847 James M. Leonard, Esq 1848 *Rev. Isaac D. Newell, A.M., (agent) 1850 1849 *Rev. Jeremy F. Tolman 1852 *Rev. Robert F.Ellis 1854 Col. James Dun lap 1856 Hon. Edward G. Miner 1852 1850 Samuel Howard 1856 1851 Willis Willard 1856 Rev. Wilfred Ferrell 1855 Rev. Henry G. Weston, D. D 1856 Rev. Thos. C. Teasdale, D. D 1853 *Elijah Gove, Esq 1874 *Rev. Elisha Tucker, D. D. . . 1854 Rev.G.W. Riley 1855 Harmon G. Reynolds 1856 David Pierson, Esq Daniel D. Ryrie, Esq 1852 Rev. JohnN. Tolman, A. M 1854 Hon. Lyman Trumbull, LL. D 1886 ". *Ebenezer Marsh, sen 1877 *Richard Emerson 1867 Maj.Geo. W. Long 1860 Rev. Justus Bulkley, D. D 1866 1853 *Hon. Peter G. Camden 1861 *Hon. Wm. M. McPherson *Hon. David J. Baker, A. M 1854 *Rev. Alvin Bailey 1856 1854 Rev. J. A. Smith, D. D. . . 1856 Rev. S. F. Holt, A. M Rev. Wm. Sym, A. M *Rev. A. J. Joslyn Rev.S. G. Miner 1855 *E. C. Blankenship 1865 Rev. G W. Pendleton 1856 Rev. Thomas Powell 1866 Rev. R. R. Coon 1863 *Hiram N. Kendall 1876 James S. Kimball 1856 Kev. J. C. Burroughs, D. I) 1856 D. J. Hancock, Esq 1868 Hon. John M. Palmer, LL. D 1859 Hon. Levi Browning 1859 *Prof. Warren Leverett, A. M 1857 Rev.D. L.Phillips 1872 Rev. Daniel Read. LL. D., Ex-offltio 1869 Alexander B. Morean, Esq 1862 SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. 11 APPOINTED. TRUSTEES 1857 Rev. D. P. French 1863 *Uapt. John Trible, LL. B " " John L. Blair, Esq 1858 *John R. Woods, Esq 1867 *W. W. Watson, Esq 1867 3on. Nathan Cole 1870 1860 *Z. B. Lawson, Eq 1870 W.P Withers, Esq 1862 Hon. Mason Bray man 1865 1861 J. O. Pierce, Esq 1864 Ion. James F. Pennington. rlevi Galusha Anderson, D. D E. D. Jones, Esq 1873 Rev. Robert Boyd, D. D 1867 John E. Hayner, Rsq 1862 C. M. Pomeroy, Esq 1868 Joseph Burnap, Esq 1866 1863 Samuel C. Davis. Eeq 1869 Thomas Pratt, Esq 1870 Richard Flagg, Esq Rev. L. C. Carr 1869 H. H. Cobb, Esq 1868 1864 Geo. K. Hopkins, Esq 1865 Norman Stanley, Esq 1867 *Herman C Cole. Esq 1874 1886 Rev. Isaac N. Hill 1871 Bartlett H. Mills 1872 ' Thomas Hobson. Esq 1874 1867 Hon. Willard C. Flagg, A. M 1876 1867 Hon. W T. Beekman Joseph Burton 18~2 A. M. Gregory, Esq 1870 Rev. Melvin Jameson, A. M 1869 1838 Hon. Cyrus Edwards, LL. D 1.870 John Kenower, Esq, 1871 1869 Daniel R. Stelle, Esq Washington Leverett. LL. D " *Rev. Nathaniel M. Wood, D. D 1871 1870 Rev. S. A. Kingsbury, D. D 1872 Charles F. Mills, Esq 1873 James Newman, A. M 1871 " Rev. J. M. Stifler, D. D 1871 Rev. M. D. Sevan, A. B Everett W. Pattison, Esq., A. M Rev. N.Butler, D. D 1874 Charles B. Day, Esq Rev. Henry C. Hazen 1874 Edward C. Lemen, M. D 1872 F. J. Comstock, Esq Ebenezer Marsh, Jr.,Ph.D 1873 1872 Rev. A. A. Kendrick, D. D., Ex-offlcio " M. M. Manning, Esq Rev. D T. Morrill Rev. G. J. Johnson, D. D., (Agent) E. B. Starkweather, Esq " G. W. Ingalls, Esq 1873 M.C.Cooley, Esq Hon. D. B. Gillham " A.T.Hawley, Esq 1874 C. C. Campbell. Esq ' ' Ralph Reynolds, Esq 1874 C. W. Leverett Esq., A. M 1875 Henry Miner, Esq T. P. Yerkes, M. D 1876 Isaac Snedeker, Esq TEACHERS. ROCK SPRING SEMINARY. APPOINTED. PRINCIPAL. 1827 | *Rev. Joshua Bradley, A. M. 1828 I *John Russell, LL. D 1828 1831 APPOINTED. PROFESSOKS. RETIRED. 1827 *Rev. John M. Peck, D. D., Theology. *John Messenger, Mathematics, etc. 1830 | *Dr. Ebenezer Marsh, English Branches. 18S1 1831 1830 ALTON SEMINARY. APPOINTED. PRINCIPAL. 1832 I *Rev. Hubbel Loomis, A. M. 1835 APPOINTED. PROFESSOR. 1834 | *John Russell, LL. D. 1834 ALTON AND SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. APPOINTED. PRESIDENTS. 1836 Rev. Washington Leverett LL. D. Acting 1841 1841 Rev. Adiel Sherwood, D D 1845 1^46 Rev. Washington Leverett LL. D., Acting 1S49 1850 *Rev Norman N Wood D D 1855 1855 *Rev. S. Y. McMasters LL. D. pro teinpore 1856 l>-56 Rev. Daniel Read. LL. D 1809 1870 Rev. J. Bulkley, D. D., Acting 1872 1871 Charles Fairman LL D Acting Vice 1872 Rev. A. A. Kendrick D. D SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. 13 APPOINTED. PROFESSORS. RETIRED. 1836 Rev. Washington Leverett, LL. D., Mathematics and Natural Philosophy 1853 1841 *Rev. Zenas B. Newman, A. M., Oratory, Rhetoric and Belles Letters 1844 1841 *Rev. Warren Leverett, A. M., Latin and Greek Lan- guages and Literature '1853 1841 Rev. Adiel Sherwood, D. D., Mental and Moral Science and Christian Theology 1845 1817 Rev. Erastus Adkins, D. D., Oratory, Rhetoric and Belles Lettres 1856 1850 *Rev. Norman N. Wood, D. D., Mental and Moral Science and Christian Theology 1855 1853 Rev. Justus Bulkley, D. D., Mathematics and Natural Philosophy 1855 1853 Orlando L. Castle, A. M., Oratory, Rhetoric and Belles Letters 1853 Rev. Erastus Adkins, D. D., Latin and Greek Lan- guages 1855 1855 Rev. Washington Leverett, LL. D., Mathematics and Natural Philosophy 1868 1855 Oscar Howes. A. M., Latin and Greek Languages and Literature 1873 1856 Ebenezer Marsh, jr., Ph. D., Chemistry, Geology and Mineralogy 1863 1863 Rev. Edward C. Mitchell, D. D.. Biblical Studies and Sacred Rhetoric , 1870 1865 *Rev, Warren Leverett, A. M., Associate Professor of Ancient Languages 1868 Rev. Justus Bulkley, D. D., Church History and Church Polity *Rev. Robert E. Pattison, D. D., Systematic Theology, and History of Doctrines 1869 1868 Charles Fairman, LL. D,, Mathematics and Natural Philosophy 1872 1871 *Rev. N. M. ;Wood, D. D., Systematic Theology and History of Doctrines 1873 Rev. James M. Stifler, D. D., Biblical Literature and Interpretation 1874 1874 Wm. Ashmore, A. M., Latin and Greek Languages 1875 Rev. Thomas M. Stewart, A. M., Mathematics and Na- tural Philosophy 1875 Rev. J. C. C. Clarke, A. M.. Latin and Greek Lan- guages and Biblical Interpretation Charles Fairman, LL. D., Mathematics and Natural History, Chemistry and Geology APPOINTED. TUTORS. RETIRE D. ia<55 *Rev. Hubbell Loomis, A. M 1836 1&55 *Rev. Zenas B. Newman, A. M.f 1*40 1838 Rev. Samuel R. Allard 1839 1839 *Rev. Warren Leverett, A, M.f '. 1841 1846 Rev. Justus Bulkley, A. M ... 1849 1849 William Cunningham, A. M 1850 185J Phillip P. Brown, jr., A. M.f 1853 3853 James R. Kay, P. B 1&54 >.->! Rev.-Elihu J. Palmer m r >5 1855 William A. Castle : 1856 1866 Edward A. Haight, A. M.t 1869 1867 John D. Hodge, A. M , M. D 1870 *Lewis C. Donaldson, A. B 1873 1870 George B. Dodge, A. M.t 1873 Rev. Thomas M. Stewart, A. M 1874 1875 Edwin W. Reid, A. B 1876 ]S7K Lucius M. Castle, A. B 1876 John D. Hodge, A. M., M. D tPrincipal of Academic and Preparatory Departments. STUDENTS. The names of regular members of both Theological, and Collegiate classes are given in CAPITALS. Those of theological graduates appear under the head THEOLOGICAL; followed by such as left without completing the course. The letters prefixed, S. M. J., denote the class, Senior, Middle, or Junior, of which they were then members. These of Collegiate Graduates, in the Classical and Scientific courses, appear under the head COLLEGIATE, and are followed by such as left without completing either course. The letters A. B- C. D., denote the class, Senior, Junior, Sophomore or Freshman, of the classical course, and the figures 1, 2, 3, denote the class of the First, Second or Third year of the Scientific course of which they severally were then members. Following these, in double columns and hi small type, are the names of all others, including IEEEGULABS, i. e., those who pursued a select or partial course of collegiate studies, and those who constituted the Academic and preparatory classes. The date of the name in the Catalogue indicates the last year of the stu- dent's attendance. The original residences are omitted the present being given so far as ascertained. No Catalgues of Rock Spring Seminary, or of Alton Seminary were ever published, nor can any full record of the students be found ; hence only partial lists are here given, and, probably, as many omitted as given. Students known to be deceased are marked by an asterisk.* ROCK SPRING SEMINARY- 1827-31. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND EESIDENCES. Jesse Applegate. *John Armstrong. Fanny Atwater, (Skidmore.) Geo. S. W. Bergen, Baltimore, Md. Ann Bergen. Ida Bergen, (Skidmore) Chillicothe. John Beach. Joseph Beedle, Sparta. Hannah Bayne. 'Hiram Bridges. K. A. Buckner. Lucinda Camp. William Casey. Abner B. Cole, Turner Station, Oregon. Abner M. Cole. "Oliver Cole. *Monroe Cole. *Abner Crozier. *Charles Darrow. *Lemuel Darrow. *Isham Day. *Augusta Earnst, (Wilcox.) Margaret Eads. Hon. Ninlan W. Edwards, Springfield. Benf. S. Edwards, Esq., Sprfngneld. William Engle. Joseph Engle. Belle Pasi, Oregon. Ann Engle, (Vickers,) Oregon. SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. 15 NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. Joseph Everett. Jerre Foss. Charles Gee. John P. Gillham. Shadrach Gijlham. Charles S. Gutherle. Mary Halstead, (Case,) Carlyle, Samuel Hathaway. John Hathaway. *Kev. Gorham Holmes. William Hopkins. John Hopkins. Jordon Howard, Carrollton. Asa Hutchingson. Josiah Isabell. Alfred Isabell. Marilla Isabell. Wil|iam Isabell. Ninian E. Journey. Robert M. Kelley. Cynthia Lawrence. James Lemen. Sarah Lemen. James C. Leonard. Elizabeth Leonard. Levina Long. *John Mace. Catharine Mace. (Stites,)Wichita, Kan. Alton Martin. Harriett Martin. N. Martin. *Minerva O. Messinger. *Parmelia A. Messenger. Harriet Morton. Hon. Jas. L. D. Morrison, St. Louis, Mo. M. Mullikin. Elizabeth Ogle, (Butler,) Chicago. John Peach, Lebanon. Eliza A. Peach, (Patterson,) O'Fallon. Samuel Peach, Waterloo. *William Pope. Augustus F. Post, New York, N. Y. *Harvey J. Peck. *Byder Peck. Hannah Peck, (Smith) Fairbanks, lo. Mary A. Peck, (Smith,) O'Fallou. *Ornan Pierson. Clarinda Pierson, (Collins) Jersey ville. Caroline Quigley. Wm. H. Rider, Jacksonville. Smith Rider. Elvira Gorin. Benjamin Roe. Charlotte L. Rose. *Rev. William D. Ross. Charlotte E. Ross, (Scott) Leaven- worth, Ks. Eliza Ross. John Russell. Jr. *Phillip Rutherford. Lewis W. Scanland, Normal. Maron Scarritt. Abigail Scarritt. *Benjamin Scott. Willlam Scott. Whitefleld Scott. Wlnfleld Scott. *Margaret Scott, (Stites.) George Shackford. Solomon Sharp. James M. Smith. Rev. James B. Smith. Henry Smith. Densil Smith. Delzel Smith. Delver Smith. *Rev. Elihu Springer. Rev. George Stacy. Beni. Stevenson, Edwardsville. William Henry Stuart, Belleville. Lucy Taylor, (Amos,) St. Rose. Charles S. Thomas. Charles W. Thomas. *Jacob Thomas. William S. Thomas, Belleville. Col. John Thomas, Belleville. James Thomas, Lebanon. Charles Thilm. John B. S. Todd, Springfield. * William Tosier. William Town. William Townsend. Sarah Webber. Sarah Wesley. Prof. William Whitney, Granville, O. *William Westfleld. Walter Westfleld. Rebecca Westfleld, (Beedle,) R. Prairie. Mary A. Westfleld, (Salter,) O'Fallon. John C. Wilson. Ann Yearsley, (Ruddick,) Decatur. ALTON SEMINARY. 1832-4. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. Joshua Allen. William Badger. Emily Brown. Elizabeth Ann Brown. Matilda Brown. Hon. Samuel Buckmaster, Alton. Frederick Chapman. *Herman C. Cole. John Cook. Stevenson Cook. Miles Cowan. Jane Cowan. Rachel Cowan. . *Solomon Davis. Porter Diamond. Eliza Diamond. Elizabeth J. Diamond. Ellis Dunmore. Ammi Greene. Ellen Haskell. Schuyler Hull, Greenville. Jackson Iverse. Anna Kidder, (Hibbard.) Henry Kistler. *Lucla Long, (Randall.) Robert P. Lamb. Caroline Loom is, (Newman,) U. Alton. John Calvin Loomis. Michael A. Lowe, Upper Alton. Richard,Lowe, " Paris Mason. Catharine Manning. C. H. Perry Maxcy. Patrick McClaln. Thomas McColley. Hampton Miller. Isaac F. Mills. Samuel J. Mills. Joshua Moore. Anna Moore. Hester Moore. Enoch Moore. Walter Moore. William Moore. Elizabeth Newman. Mary J. Newman, [Abbott.] Nashley G. Nofflnger. Virgil Noble. Hon. John M. Palmer, LL. D,, Spring- field. Rev. Elihu J. Palmer, Carbondale. Richard Pembroke. Sarah Ann Rodgers, [Badley.J Upper Alton. *Isaac Scarritt. James R. Sharp. John Wesley Somers. *Don Alonzo Spaulding. William Starr. Lucia Starr. Mary A. Staunton. Charles Street. Joan Tichnell. Cassandra Tichnell. Delilah Tichnell. Thomas Waddington. John Walker. Daniel Walker. Frederick Warnack. Betsy Warnack. James W. Watkins. Wilson Weeks. Jeremiah Wilcox. . Anna Wilder. Joseph Wood. William R. Wright, Upper Alton. Daniel Wright. Ann Wright, [Moore.] Mary Wright, [Stuart,] St. Louis, Mo. Susan Wright, [Simmerwell.] Jesse Wright. ALTON COLLEGE. 1835-6. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. William Adams. John Adams, San Jose, Cal. Isaac Baird. Sophia Bostwick. Jacob Bowman. John Bruner. Edward Carman. Glory Ann Caswell. Dan Wetherall Collet, Upper Alton. Sophia Davis, (Allard.) Mary Davis. Martha Davis, (Clark,) Houston, Texas. John Farwell. Gladden Farwell. Nathaniel P. Gillham. James Godfrey, Godfrey. Eliza C- Higham. Susan Higham. John Lamb. John Boyd Lathy, Upper Alton. Joseph Lester. Mary Lowe, (Lamothe,) LaMotte.Mo. William Marsh. Lydia Pease. 'Harvey Peck. Rev. William J. Pritchard. Lewis Reynolds. *Phoebe Rice. *John Rice. Sarah Rider. Amelia Riley. Rebecca Riley (Drennan,> Roodhouse. Rev. Prof. George Roberts. Jane Smith. (Stout) Upper Alton. *Sarah M. Smith, (Keith.) Jackson Taylor. Julia E. Wendell, (Mabee.) Geo. W. Whitesides. Leonidas Whitesides. N. B. The headings, THEOLOGICAL and COLLEGIATE will be omitted, as the Degrees conferred upon the graduates sufficiently indicate the Department from which they were severally graduated. The first five names marked t, under head of Shurtleff College following, were connected with Alton Theological Seminary. (See Historical Sketch.) That but one name appears under 1858-9, is explained in the fact that, in the change back from the Calendar to School year, but a part of a real year is represented. SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. 1836-7. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND EESIDENCES. REV. SAMUEL BAKER, D. D.,f Russellville, Ky. REV. NOAH FLOOD, A. M.f REV. JAMES M. FROST, A. M.f [j] REV. WILLIAM M. FROST.t [j] REV. JAMtiS B. OLCOTT.f Cincinnati, Ohio, Edwin Arnold. John C. Bernard. Quincy. Thomas Bond G. W. Bowler, Collinsville. Lewis O. Buckley. Wesley Campbell. John 8. Ca vender. R. Dabhs. Enoch Dodson. Mortimer Dorsey. Joshua Gooch. Erastus Greene. Edward Hempstead. C Jewell. H. Jewell. H. King. Joel Leach. Adam Martin. I. Moore. . William Norman. Solomon Norman. Needham Olive. Rev. John C. F. Pinckard. Rev. Patrick Pinckard. James Reding. Fielding Rice. Calvin Riley. Joseph Sickle. Rev. James S. Smith. Chester Stamps. Alfred Stearns. William C. Tool. C. Waite. Charles Warren. Rowleigh Williams. W. Wood. 1837-8. Robert Baskett. C. H. Bernard. J. Gate wood Bernard. Calvin Boynton. John Clark Rev Cyrus C. Clark. Maj. Gen'l J. Cook, Springfield 1 , Nicholas Cornelius. John Estabrook. James Estabrook. Charles Fox. A. P. Frost. Calvin Godfrey. A.H.Haley, John Harrington. Rev. Samuel Haskell, D. D., Ann Arbor, Mich. A. Hedge. David Hibbard. G. Hibbard. John Higham. Jacob Holmes. J. Jencks. Charles G. Lincoln. C. L. Lippincott, Springfield. H. Loomis N. N. Nims. H. Palmier. Maj Gen'l. John Pope. Calvin Prom . Sherwood Ray. Rev. John H. Rodgers. C. Seeley. James Shemuel. Edwin Sidle. Joseph Sidle. Judson Somers. Edmund Sweet, Chicago. Rev. John N. Tolman. A. M., New Woodstock, N. Y. J. Trabue. *Wm. Ross Walker. Rolla Williams. J. L. Wood. L. Wood. Cunningham Woods. SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. 19 1838-9. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. [d] REV. CALEB BLOOD, A. B., La Cygne, Kansas. Milton H. Abbott. Charles Brooks. C. Burge. Alexander Campbell. John Clark. William Q. Connor. Daniel Cornelius. James Dougherty. Mitchell Dye. Gordon Evans. Benjamin Finch. Joseph Flood, Kearney, Mo. Geo. W. K. Jennings. Leigh R. Kimball. Rev. Charles F. Kirtley. Lewis Kirtley. Wm. Wayland Manning. Melville M. Manning, St. Louis, Mo. David Marsh. *William McLoud. John Mooney. Michael Mooney. Austin Morrell. J. S Moore. Horace D Munson, Zanesvllle, Ohio. *John Murray. Josiah Riley. William Riley. Philander Slater. John H. Smith, Upper Alton. Joseph J. Smith. G. Smith. M. Smith. ( hauncey E. Staples. Rev. William C. Van Meter, Rome. Italy. LaFayette Walker. Demosthenes Walker. Cicero Walker. 1839-40. [d]*ALFRED B. DAVIS. [cj PRuF. SAMUEL A. WILLARD, A. M., M. D. William H. Bailhache. Leonidas Bales, Springfield. Franklin Beedle. John Chappell. George Clayton, Claytonville, Kas. Abijah W. Corey. John Durno. Ellis Elwell. William Evans. Harrison Hart. Henry Hart, Alton. Joseph A. Hay. John H. Healey. John L. Higham. Alexander W. Hope. Andrew J. Howard. William T. Hull. Thomas Hunter. Paris D. Johnson, Springfield. Rollin H Kimball. Henry Kistler, Ottawa. James M. Lawrence. *Rev. Benjamin F. Lemen. Joseph Lemen. *Moses Lemen. Henry Mason. *David Pease. James M Shook. John K Simpson. James W. Smith. Isaac D. Stockton. William Summers, Los Angeles, Cal. Samuel Toorner. Fenelon Trabue, Carllnville. Allen Wilkinson. Joseph S. Wood. Lewis Wood. Nathan Wooldridge. 1840-1. REV. WILLIAM H. BRIGGS. REV. DAVID STALEY. *REV. JOEL TERRY. [c] *HON. NELSON G. EDWARDS. ri] HON. JOSEPH BROWN, St. Louis. 21 GKORGE W. <'ARR, Malone, New York 11 JOHN R liolHiK, Isormal II HON WILLIAM B HUNDLEY. 1 ! \V KBB C. QUIGLKV. M D., Alton. 1] 'JONATHAN F. RICE, M D. 20 SHUKTLEFF COLLEGE. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. Nelson Adams. Robert Allen. Washington Barnard. Aaron A. Corey. *Hiram Cyrenius. Nimrod M. Dorsey. James Durno. Ezra S. Evans. Joseph Evans. Andrew T. Hawley, Alton. Thomas B. Lester. Moses H. Long. *Henry M. Merriam. Roberts. Morris. Thomas W. Morrison. *Alvin Olcott. *Vine Pease. Rev. Henry G. B. Perry. John A. Ryrie, Alton. Rev, Joseph Spence. James Tully. Daniel H. Walker. Henry Watson Webb, Cairo. Thaddeus William*. William P. Withers. Joseph Wood. 1841-2. REV. HIRAM A. GARDINER, A. B. EGBERT DODGE, St. Louis, Mo. *PROF. WILLIS G. EDWARDS, M. D. *REV. JOHN M. SCROGIN. *THEODORE HAY, M. D. WILLIAM HENRY HAYDEN, Springfield. RICHARD L. METCALF, M. D., St. Louis, Mo. CHARLES A. MURRAY, Alton. HON. EDWARD Y. RICE. Hillsboro. HENRY P. SHURBURNE, St. Louis, Mo. William Blair. Francis H. Bostick. Clayborne Cheatham. Edwin S. Cox. Frederick Cowles. Marshall N. Diuguid. James M. Dobyns. Reuben Gerry. James Johnson Gillham, Madison. Rev. Henry Gordon. Robert S. Greene. Joseph Handshy. George H. How land. Dixon H. Kennett, St. Louis. Stephen Long, Chicago. John A. Mauzy. Alfred Mix. Robert Fulton Morris. Robinson Y. Northern. Harvey V. Owens. Silas E. Owens. William Riley. Henry L. Roach. Edward Shurburne, St. Louis, Mo. David Smith. Martin T. Smith. *John N. Starkweather. Francis Tryon. William H. Wallace. David Wendell, Bird's Point, Mo. 1842-3. c] HON. HENRY S. BAKER, A. B., Alton. cl REV. PROF. HORACE CLARKE, Houston, Texas. d] HON. NATHAN COLE, St. Louis, Mo. dj 'BENJAMIN E. EDWARDS. c] * JAMES S. JACKSON. 2] HON. LYNE S. METCALF, St. Louis, Mo. it ANDREW JACKSON SMITH. 1] REV. THOMAS G. SMITH. Manoah F. Bostick. Alpheus S. Brayman. Thomas E. Breckenridge. William Crabbe. Carey H. H. Davis. John Dunlap. William Ellston. Elisha D. Giddings. Fielding T. Harrison, Upper Alton. Milton H. Hume. James Johnstone. Robert Lemen. Thomas Moon. Winfleld Scott Palmer, Litchfleld. Nathaniel P. Prichett. *Joseph H. Quigley. Rev. Orimel G. Stewart. SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. 21 1843-4. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. c] *REV. JUDSON BENJAMIN, A. B. d] "CHARLES P. HAZARD d] REV. ADDISON D. MADEIRA. *HON. HUGH C MURRAY. WILLIAM B. PRINCE, A. B. I [1] LANSING B. MEIZNER. "DeWitt Clinton Adams. Isaac G. Calkins. William W. Chapman, Winchester. Hon. Thomas P. Cowan. James W. Davis. Franklin C. Edwards, Kirkwood, Mo. Rev. William W. Freeman, Carlinville. *George Greathouse. William Greathouse. Prof. James Henderson, A. M., Chicago. John S. Hill. Aston Madeira. Orange C Martin George Olcott. William Peck. *Elra P. Pettinglll. John W. Quick, Upper Alton. 1844-5. cl ISAAC E. HARDY, M. D., Alton. c| "OLIVER T. JONES. dj *REV. ANDREW MOFFATT. cf JOSHUA PEERS. Collinsville. 1] "JAMES D. BURNS. 11 "ISAAC LANSING WELLS. Edward Trabue, Jerseyville. | Frederick Wendt, Alton. 1845-6. [d] "REV. AUGUSTUS B. CRAMB. Tel "REV. JAMES B. EDMONSON. [C "JAMES H. HIBBARD. [b[ "GEORGE H. SHERWOOD, M. D. REV. CHARLES N. WEST, California. 11 REV. REUBEN T. PEAK, Bloomfleld, Iowa. 1] "BENJAMIN F. TAYLOR. [11 Rev. Cyrus P. Cross. Jefferson Fruit, Edwardsville. William Fruit, Edwardsville. "Horace G. Hibbard. "William Kent Lathy. Leven H. Luckett. Jose Douaziano Martinez. Franklin Moore, Upper Alton. Marvin T. Moore. Henry M. Peck, Bantas, Cal. James Peak. Leonard J. Rose, Los Angeles, Cal. Hiram D. Wood. "Paul Wright. 1846-7. HON. EDWARD L. BAKER, A. M., Consul, Rio Janeiro, S. A. REV JUSTUS BULKLEY, D. D.. Upper Alton. WILLIAM CUNNINGHAM, A. B. [dl BENJAMIN SHURTLEFF FREEMAN. Boston, Mass. [2] HON. SAMUEL S. GILBERT, Carlinville. 22 SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. Daniel D. Ames. Samuel Davis. Thomas Dimmock, St. Louis, Mo. John J. Elliott. C. Columbus Greene, St. Louis, Mo. Erastus V. Johnson. Fountain Jones, M. D. *Joseph H. Kaatz. Edmund Keirsey, Taylorville. *William A. H. Loveland. Geo. S. March. William Patterson. Joseph S. Smith. Lewis Souther, St. Louis, Mo. George Spaulding. Richard Squire. William G. Stewart. *Willlam G. Taylor. John L. Tolman. *Benjamin Trabue. Joseph H. Trabue. Silver C. Wood, Woodburn. 1847-8. WILLIAM T. KAY. JOHN R. SHANNON, Chester. 1] DANIEL S. DA VIE. '21 HON. ANDREW F. RODGERS, Upper Alton. 2] *JOHN MILTON RODGERS, M. D. Hiram P. Boqua. David G. Brooks, M. D. Noyes F. Brown. Noyes B. Chapman , Stonington. Schuyler M. Combs. Valentine Cunningham. George B. Davis, Independence, Texas. James S. Delaplaine. Benjamin F. Dickson. Rev. Josiah T. Dickson. William L. Dougherty, M. D. Samuel B. Edwards. James R. Elliott. Samuel G. Hill. Charles Humbert. John B. Hundley. Isaac G. Israel. Moses Land. Harvey Lemen. Ellas McMurtry. John A. M. Miller. Hiram G. Miller. Geo. W. Miles. Joshua Miner. David H. Nichols. Rev. William Owen. *Rev. Orlando J. Sherman. Henry S. Spaulding Cape May, Del. Robert Stanley, Upper Alton. William John Stewart. James W. Van Brunt, M. D. Joseph P. Vaughn. Hiram P. Virgin. Ira P. Warren. -9- REV. E. S. DULIN, D. D., LL. D., St. Joseph, Mo. Ira W. Barbee. Edward W. Britton. Benjamin Buck. John R. Crandall. Madison Darr. Isaacs. Douthit. James Fishback, Jacksonville. Francis W. Fox. John Freeman. Jeremiah R. Halderman. William P. Hancock, St. Louis. Hume Harkness, St. Louis. Alvin B. Higham. Hon. Daniel Kerr, Grundy Centre, lo. George Lebold. William H. Mann. Ephraim Marsh, Fulton. James F. Mathews. Milton McClure, Carlinville. Charles McDuniels. William F. Meldrum. Albert J. Metcalf. Antoine E. Morgan. Jesse George W. Palmer, M. D., Samuel T. Patterson, Bethalto. Charles M. Parsons. Onslow Peters. Mortimer Plympton. John M. Randle. Andrew Reid. Robert John W. Scott. George F. Settlemyers. Soranus A. Shaw. Charles F. Simmons. Douglas F. Simmons. Timothy Sullivan. Adrian Tandy. James E. Tandy. Jacob W. Terry, Edwardsville. William B. Terry, Shipman. William O. Torrey, M. D. Charles A. Walker, Carlinville. Samuel Walker. William Walker. EliasD. Wilder. Loring A. Williams. William D. Williams. Edward Willis. Hon. John M. Wood son, St. Louis, Mo. 1 1 ask ins Wooldridge. SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. 23 1849-50. NAMES AND EE8IDENOES. NAMES AND EESIDENCES. [2] HON. WILLIAM B. LOOMIS. Carlinville. Rev. Asahel Brown. Josephus B. Hopps. *Bev. David M. Howell. Justus G. Ketchum. John McBeynolds, Upper Alton. Samuel A. Murphy. Geo W. Palmier. Daniel A. Pettinglll. Elijah W. Smith. 1850. [c] *WILLIAM L. RODGERS. ISHOM T. GILLHAM. *BYRON L. GREGORY. MATHEW GRIFFIN. BENJAMIN MASON. JOHN R. RITENOUR, Kansas City. Mo. Preston H. Bailhache, M. D., Quincy. Alexander Bettersworth. Henry W. Buckmaster. John Wallace Collet, Upper Alton. Mark Crowd er. Even Cunningham. William J. Cunningham. James H. Digby, St. Louis, Mo. Calvin B. Dishon. John C. Dunlap. Albert Estabrook. Henry M. Goff. Edwin R. Harkness. William Henry Harrison. George R. Hill. John R. Kneeland. Isaac K. Leach. Albert W. Moody. George S. Pomeroy. William A. Rader. *John A. Russell. *William H. Russell. Reuben K. Smith. Marcus L. Tunnell. Thomas R. Wallace. 1851. *JOHN TRIBLE, A. M., LL. B. GEORGE M. ATWOOD. JOHN C. BOWMAN. JOHN C. CROWDER. bj PRESLEY J. EDWARDS, Hillsboro. J *GEORGE L. GRISWOLD. ,1 *< :T J< ! .K I *GEOBGE R. MILLER. *GEORGE I. NEWELL. REZIN H. C. NOEL. EDWIN J. BEMENT. SAMUEL B. HENDERSON. JOHN R. REACH, St. Louis, Mo. SAMUEL S. PEEBLES. *HENRY C. SPEARS, Tallula. SIMON J. STOOKEY. [2J JAMES TRUSCOTT. William Ash, Rawlings Springs, Wy. T. James W. Bailey. Andrew Carlin. Henry S. Carter. William Hoit Chamberlain. James Churchill. Thomas E. Clifford. James T Cooper, Edwardsville. *Guy Covell. James Crays. Orlando O. Dorsey. Cyrus L. Edwards. Franklin Emerson, Boston, Mass. Francis H. Ferguson. Benjamin F. Greene. William T. Hardy. Richard B. Hill. Charles Holliday, Alton. Charles Howard. William F. Johnson. 24 SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. Richard S. Johnson. Abram L. Lippincott. Thomas P. Lippincott. Edward P. Lovejoy. JohnH. Metcalf. Alvin A. Neff, Alton. William P. Olden. Augustine T. Perry, Kane. Josiah W. Preston, Chicago. Irvin B. Handle, Jr. , Upper Alton. Robert N. Rattan. William M. Rice. John P. Savage. John A. Segar. Warren A. Souther, St. Louis, Mo. Samuel W. Stewart. William H. Temple, Alton. John W. Trabue, M. D. Shipman. Charles W. Trumbull. William O. Weisner. 1852. REV. SAMUEL M. BROWN, A. B, Momence. PROF. EBENEZER MARSH, A. M.. Ph. D., Upper Alton. *LIVINGFIELD MORE, A. M., M. D. JAMES R. KAY, P. B., M. D., Bushnell. cl REV. GEORGE W. S. BELL, Tallula. c] GEORGE GILBERT, Carlinville. Nil *JOHN G. POTTS. cl HON. THOMAS A. SHERWOOD, Jefferson City, Mo. c] *EDWARD G. TURNER. b] EDWARD PIERSON WADE, Alton. AARON GILBERT BUTLER. WILLIAM FAY. EDWARD M. FRY. JOHN C. HARDCASTLE. HORACE J. LOO MIS. MADISON LOWE. GEORGE S. MOSHER. DAVID RANKIN. *REV. WILLIAM ROBERTS. James H. Atkinson. John W. Bell. John Bostwick, Upper Alton. John C. Carlin. Charles T. Clayton, Upper Alton. George W. Corey, Kane. Andrew J. Crabb. Alexander J. Crowder. Eldred G. Davis. John M, Davis. James W. Davis, Alton. Samuel J. Delaplaine, St. Louis, Mo. Edward Dorsey. * James L. Gill. *Robert M. Goff. Henry C. Jones. William H. Lake. Isaac McLaughlin. James D. Metcalf. John Mumper. Jacob Noel. Robinson Y. Northern. Lucius M. Olden. James H. Pulliam. William M. Quigley. David Rankin. Lewis C. Robinson. Thomas J. Severns. William K. Smith. *Madison Farmer Smith. Hon. George Alton Smith, Alton. James S. Temple. George W. Tuthill. Albert Wade, Alton. Edward S. Webb. William H. Wendell, Upper Alton. Parker J. Whitney. John C. Wilderman. *John Willis. 1853. GEORGE S. KELLENBERGER, A. B. SPENCER G. RUSSELL, A. B., Bluffdale. *JAMES W. BELL. P. B. SAMUEL A. CHAMBERLAIN, P. B. [cl *WILLIAM LEVERETT. [c] JAMES W. LEVBRETT, A. B., Humburd, Wis. SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. [dl WILLIAM H. CHAMBERLAIN, Bunker Hill. fo] CARRY E. MORE, A. B. [bl REV. CYRUS F.TOLMAN, A. M., Sec. of A. B. M. U., Chicago. [1] HENRY QUIGLEY. Leonard Adams. Samuel Bishop A. M., M. D., Bloom- in gton. Charles Boflnger. Henry Catlett. Christopher Cummings. William H. Duncan. Lewis Button . Perry J. Fisher. Thomas Gallaher. Loyal P. Griswold. Oliver B. Ground, Alton. Joseph Gutzweiller, M. D., Springfledl. Charles C.Lawrence. Robert W. Lemen, Freeburg. Edgar Morris. George W . Orme . Eli W.Pettingill. Oliver H. Pettingill. Abel G Randolph, Virden. William J. Robinson. Rev. Reuben H. Weeks, A.M. James M. Wiswell. I8 54 . HON. DAVID JEWETT BAKER, A. B ., Att'y, Cairo REV. ORSON L. BARLER, A. B., riiusdale. GEORGE I. FOSTER, P. B., Jerseyville. CHARLES M. KAY, A B. , Spring Cape, Mich. *REV. JOHN EVELARD MOORE, A. B. DANIEL S. ALVORD. JAMES MINER, M. D., Winchester. CALVIN A. PEASE, Beatrice, Neb. WILLIAM M. POTTS, Whitehall. WILLIAM C. CALDWELL. HIR\M M. CURREY. JOHN CURREY. SAMUEL L. JEWETT. JOSEPH McKINNEY. FREDERIC W METCALF. SAMUEL WESTFALL. William F. Ballard, Dubuque, lo. Ralph Ballard, Dubuque, lo. James A. Bean-. Ezra B. Blaisdell, Alton. John D. Bond. Sanders Burgess. George E. Clayton, Clay ton ville, Kan. Albert Dancke Ezra D. Davison, Groveland. Andy K Demint. Plutarch H. Dorsey, Glllespie. William B. Dorsey, Dorsey Station. William Duff', St. Louis, Mo. James L. Eldred. James A. Glenn, Hillsboro. Simeon B. Harrison. Tavlorville. Edward M. Hopkins, Shelbyville. William Kennedy. Joel T. Kirkman. William H McVay. *Finley B. Moore. Thomas W. Morrison. James J. Pennifll. William P. Rumbolz. Elias P. Sanders. S. M. Shaw. Virgil H. Shuey. Benjamin G. Smith. Samuel R. Smith. Milton H. Stowe. William C. Stuart. Philip J. Teasdale, St. Louis, Mo. John W. Teasdale, St. Louis, Mo. Rev. J. K. E. Tschirch. Shadrach Vaughn. James K. Whitaker. Haskins T. Wooldridge. I8 55 . REV. PROF. JOHN B. JACKSON, A. M.,D. D., Chicago. JOHN FIELD, P. B., Wellsville, Kan. 26 SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. [d] REV. FRANK ADKINS, A. B., Pella, Iowa. dl JAMES B. BERNARD. cl JOEL M. CORIIINGTON. d| JAMES H. McQUIRE. d] JOSEPH M, MILLER. cj OLIVER O. PITCHER. d] JOHN W RANSOM. c] GEORGE D. THOMAS, Belleville. 21 SAMUEL Q,. DEBOW, New York, N. Y. 21 HENRY FR1CK, Jonesboro. 2] MARSHALL W. JOHNSON. 11 M. T. STOOKEY, Belleville. [2j JOHN F. WILCOX, Loami. Baker Andrews. S. Blair. William Boulter, Brighton. J. H. Burnett. Andrew G. Clifford, Alton. Andrew G. Clifford, (2d.) Edward A. Crandall, Barry. John W. Dillman. W. B. Duckells, Carlinville. Charles J,. Dunlap. James Dunn. Bellville. Thomas Ford, Carlyle. Norman T. Gassett, Chicago. David Glenn, Hillsboro. George Hunter, Carlinsville. J. H. Jones. Rev. Ezekiel Kinman. Isaiah Larue. D. D. Leach Samuel T. Moore. Dubart E. Murphy. Rev. Isaac D. Newell, Clayville, Neb. Lewis M. Peebles, Chesterfield. Judson M. Perry, Kane. Douglass Pope. Nathaniel Pope. Richard P. Rider. DeWitt C. Robbing. Walter S. Robbins. R. S. Scott. William Scott. S. H. Sharpe. William Sippy. Robert J. Smith. *George W. Somers. J. R. Ward. William Ward. Zacc-heus C. Wilson, Nokomis. F. C. Wooldridge. 1856. HENRY W. BOWERS, A. B. REV. GEORGE A. PEASE, A. B., Beatrice, Neb. NATHANIEL WILSON, A. B., LL. B., Washington, D. C. COL. JOHN POPE BAKER, P. B., Springfield. REV. GEORGE P. GUILD. P B., Ahnapee, Wis. *WILLIAM RANDOLPH, P. B. *EBENEZER RODGERS, P. B., M. D. SAMUEL S. BOONE, Chtcago. *WILLIAM W. FOUTCH. WILLIAM B. GILBERT, Att'y, Cairo. PERRIN L. KAY, Payson. JOSEPH L. WILCOX, Loami. 1] JAMES P. BLANKINSHIP. ' VINCENT BROWN. JOHN BUCK MASTER, Alton. RICHARD B DORSEY, Dorsey Station. * JAMES D. RUSSELL. , JAMES M. STOOKEY. ll VINCENT A. STOOKEY. Belleville. I] GEORGE TRUSCOTT. George Beeley. Edward Breath, Alton. * William Carter. Stephen Child. John Dorsey, Dorsey Station. Theodore Dorsey, Dorsey Station. *Ed ward S.Gill. William W. Gill, Bethalto. Peter Gutzweiller. J. H. Lacy. Joseph F. Leach, North Alton. Willis W. Long. James W. Lumpkin, Carlinville. SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. 27 NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. W. B. Murphy. *Samuel Ide Newman. James Padon. *Moore C. F. Randolph. Thomas Rhea. Richard G. Robinson. Carrollton. E. Sidney Robinson, Omphghent. Edward Scott. J. A. Stanton. J. H. Stanton. H. Turpin. Robert L. Webb. Thomas J. Williams. I8 57 . PROF. GEORGE B. DODGE, A. M., Upper Alton. REV. HENRY L. FIELD, A. M., Upper Alton. *ZACCHEUS W. HOBBS, A. B. EDWARD C. JAMES, A. M., M. D., Upper Alton. THOMAS M. LONG, A. M., Alton. REV. JOSEPH C. MAPLE, A. M., Cape Girardeau, Mo. JOSEPH LEMEN, P. B., Collinsville. ROBERT S. LEMEN, P. B., Collinsville. 1] JESSE CHEWNING. '-t -\1TTT T T A TViT ITfyDTI T," 1 T *JOSEPH F. BAKER. JAMES M. COX. Olathe, Kas. REV. JOHN P. LAWTON, Osceola, Mo. WILLIAM H. D. NOYES, M. D., Pittsfleld. *THuMAS A. SLATER. WILLIAM WIRT EDWARDS, Upper Alton. DANIEL. R. HARRISON. ALBERT H. HASTINGS, Upper Alton. SAMUEL HILL. EDWARD G. JOHNSON. DAVID S. LINK. JESSE W. LONG. ALLEN McDOW. CAPT. CHARLES H. PHINNEY, Boston, Mass. JOHN H. ROBINSON. THOMAS E. SEXTON. ALBERTES SILSBE. WILLIAM E. WEBB. James N. Adams. Lewis N. Bailey. Henry C. Barnes. Att'y, Jacksonville. Frank Bridges, Whitehall. William T. Brown. William L. Burnett, Charles Cooper, Galveston, Texas. Carlos C. Cox. Robert L. Crowder, Los Angeles, Cal. William C. Dean. William Dings. Augustus G. Dishon. Thomas Duckels. George C. Emerson. Robert S. Evans, Carrollton. James Gelder, Carlinville. Orlando Glore. Philip Q. Harrison. Charles L. Joesting, Alton. James Monagan. James D. Moore. Adam Richardson. James M. Rice. James D. Robards. Charles Roberts. Samuel R. Sanders, Mattoon. Isaac C. Simmons. Samuel J. Smith. Reuben Wetmore. 1858, REV. PROF. PETER STEENSTRA, A. B., Cambridge, Mass. JAMES M. GARETKON, P. B.. Odin. ROBERT B. SMITH, P. B., Alton. [b] JOSEPH F. CORRINGTON. [d] GEORGE W. COX. Virden. 28 SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. [h] "HOUSTON DISHON. [dl *HENRY T. QEEBY. Ibl REV. JOHN H. MIZE, Troy, fb] REV. LEWIS P KINMAN. d] *REV. MOSES M. RANDOLPH. [d| NATHANIEL A. WHIPPLE, M. D., Pleasant Gap, Mo. JOHN W. AMISS. WILLIAM M. ANDERSON. NEWELL H. BROWN, Plainview. CHARLES F. DANDRIDGE. 'WILLIAM H. CLAYTON. *WILLIAM J. GLENN. ALONZO T. HARLOW, St. Louis, Mo. SIMEON B. HARRISON, Taylorville. WILLIAM W. HAYS. *JAMES HOLDEN: 1] OSCAR M. KAY. fl] STEPHEN B. LITTELL. 1] EDWARD RODGERS, Upper Alton. 1] OVID SMITH, Texas, Mo. George W. Allen. Benjamin F. Allen. Cyrus A, Bailey. William T. Carter. Elias Cockrell. James B. Conway. Edwin F. Earl, Fairbury. Harmon Ether ton. J. F. Fry. *William T. Garretson. John F. C. Glenn, Hillsboro. William P. Hancock, St. Louis, Mo, Jordon C. Harris. Byron P. Henderson. Sheaff L. Herr. Hezekiah Johnson. Edwin F. Larkin. Richard P. Lewis. James L. Long. Joseph P. Lurtou. Frederick L. Ormsby. John H. Pipkin. William Rodemeyer. Alton. William H. Rodgers. James Rowe. Rinaldo R. Sanders, Samuel Slater. George W. Stocker, Upper Alton. James M. Stout, Auburn. William M. Teague. Nathaniel B. Thompson. *Albert W. Ware. Peter G. Weyhrich. James W. Winters. Lewis N. Wise. Artemus Wiswell. *Benjamin F. Wollam. 1.858-9. REV. TRUMAN S. LOWE, A. B., Fidelity, 1859-60. REV. PRES. THOMAS W. GREENE, A. M., Vacaville. Cal. CYRUS WILLIAM LEVERETT, A. M., Att'y, Upper Alton. WILLIAM WARREN LEVERETT, A.M. REV. JOHN SAWYER, A. B. PROF. JOHN H. WOODS, A. B., Jacksonville. GEORGE J. GILLHAM, P.B., LL. B., Memphis, Tenn. [b] GEORGE W. HILLIARD, Brighton. LCI REV. JOHN KINGDON, A. B., Washington, D. C. [1] REV. WILLIAM E. MOSES. SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. 29 NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. Rev. Samuel Atwell. Metropolis. Samuel H. Beedle, Ridge Prairie. John H. Boswell. Horace Charles. Peter L. Denby. Thomas R. Denby. William Ellis. Thomas J. Ho well. Thomas J. Hoxsey, Alhambra. Joseph E. Jackson. Cyrus Lemen. Henry C. Mauzy. Douglas A. Morean. Samuel B. Orem..Att'y, Clinton, Mo. James L. Penninl. Klias Ptnnington. Richard M. Rice. James W. Scott. Benjamin F. Sperce. Ludlow P. Squier, Jerseyville. Aaron Salmon Teasdale, St. Louis, Mo. *Jsmes A. Van Arsdale. Albert Wagenseller. James F. F. Wallace. 1860-1. REV. EDWIN C. M. BURNHAM, A. B., Aurora. REV. HARRY M. GALLAHER, A. B., LL. D., New Haven, Conn. REV. JOHN W. TERRY, A. B., Att'y, Trinidad, Col. HENRY A. WARNE, A. B. GEORGE LEVERETT, P. B , Edwardsville. TITUS P. YERKES, P. B., M. D., Upper Alton. Id] *LEWIS P. CLEVELAND. d| REV. JAMES M. COON, A. B., Galva. c] REV. REUBEN W. COON. A. B., Belvidere. ' REV. FRANCIS M. ELLIS, A. B., D. D., Denver, Col. *JAMES B. NEWMAN. REV. HENRY H. NORTHRUP. d"| REV. ALEXANDER C. RAFFERTY, Westport, Mo. fl] MOSES W. CLENDINEN. CHARLES B. DARROW, O'Fallon. JOHN GELDER. )1 WILLIAM T. GLENN. 11 THORNTON HUGHES. HENRY A. SANGER. JASON L. TERRELL, Morrisonville. 11 ROBERT H. WHYTE, 11 THOMAS H. "WYCKOFF, Jerseyville. John W. Bowler. ^ illiam L. Burnett. Bolivar B. Chandler. Charles B. Cole, Chester. John A. Corey, Jerseyville. Theron Baldwin Corey. William A. Darneille. Conrad H. Flick, Bethalto. George R. Frost. Frederick S. Gilhousen. JohnH. Gonterman, Princeton. Alonso F. Hart. John C. Hart. Benjamin P. Harris, Upper Alton. Charles H. Hastings, Rochester, N. Y. John M. Hobbs. James M. Houck, Woodburn. William W. Jarvis, Troy. Charles Joesting, Alton. James M. King. Edwin C. Lawson, Chesterfield. Frank Maxcy, Upper Alton. Samuel N. McReynolds. Hon. James T. A, essick, East St. Louis. Richard W. Montgomery. Samuel W. Peach. James C. Pease. Henry R. Phinney, Alton. Thomas L. Reynolds. John Sparks. Niuhaniel Stephens. Hiram A. Stone. Albert Y. Button. John W. VanHorne. George L. Warnach, Upper Alton. Peter G. Weyrlch. R. Ansley Yerkes, Valley, Kas. 30 SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. 1861-2. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. CYRUS L. COOK, A. B., Att'y. Edwardsville. REV. ALEXANDER J. DELANO, A 1 . B. , Atlantic, lo. PROF. JOHN D. HODGE, A.M., M. D., Upper Alton. *REV. THOMAS S. MIZE, A. B. REV. ADDISON L. COLE, P. B., Memphis, Tenn. REV. ALBERT C. KEEN, P. B.,Lyocs, lo. ib] RYNOLD RODGERS. [dl JAMES CRAWFORD WHITEFORD. 2] JOHN H. BOWLER. 1] LUCIAN E. CLEMENT, Nashua, N. H. 1| HENRY E. CORD. 11 JOHN R. COWAN. REV. LEVI FOSD1CK, Pella, lo. CHARLES HENDERSON. CHARLES SMITH. MOORE C. STELLE, Delhi. REV. JOHN W. SWIFT, Mexico, Mo. 1] ISAAC H. TRABUE. William S. Anderson. John W. Barber. Lewis J. Clawson.Jr., Chicago. Rev. Marshall M. Cooper. Frederick Davis. Henry Davis; Belleville. George A. Debaun. Edward G. Duck ells. Julius H. Gillham, Princeton. Rev. Riolly F. Gray, Griggsville. Cephas Gregg. Abraham Griffin. Tevi C. Keen. Charles KelleDberger, St. Louis. James P. Kingsley. Stephen H. 1 ong, Chicago. E. Webster MaCauley, Wilnor Richmond, Alton. Amos H. Sawyer. Thomas L. Smith. George W. Spurd. James C. Whiteford, Chicoga. Joshua Ward. Samuel P. Whiteside. 1862-3. REV. CHAUNCEY E. BRISTOL, P. B., Chaplain in U. S. A. [al *NICHOLAS A. BOYER. [b] GEORGE WASHINGTON COX. Virden. [a] *WILBERFORCE LOVEJOY HURLBUT. Ldj REV. R. R. WILLIAMS, Pres. Theological Seminary, Ram- apatan, India, Asia. [31 NATHAN A. FRANCIS. I] JESSE E. HARRIS. li REV. HENRY RIPLEY HICKS, Paw Paw Grove. 1] THOMPSON W. AlcGEE. Kills Atwood, Rus.-ell S. Burls. Robert M. Craig. Theodore B. Dorsey, Dorsey Station. Daniel E. Dye. Francis M. Entrekin. Jesse B. Ford. Jesse P. Griffith. Robert II. llarwood. Lcvi S. Lamb. *George H. i amothe. Rev. Jonathan M.Lappin, Billings, Mo. William B. Lawson, Chesterfield. William F. Mitchell. Francis J. Mulberry. Milton G. Ramsay, Woodville. Thomas J. Williams, Upper Alton. Isaac Newton Wiswell. SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. 31 1863-4. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND KESIDENCES. [j] REV. HENRY BETHEL DAVIS, B. D. ] REV. GEORGE EDWIN PRUNK. 4 WALTER SCOTT DINSMORE SMITH, Pinckneyville. i.i REV. GEORGE KLINE, A. B., Clinton. Mo. REV. PROF. JOHN PACKER, A. B., Rangoon, Burmah, Asia. REV. HARRISON SAWYER, A. B., Dorchester. *RESTOKES COX S VI ALLEY. A. M. REV. PROF JOHN EATON VERTREES, A .B., Edinboro, Mo. b] GEORGE ORLEANS ADAMS, Alton. b] HENRY P. RODGERS, Marianna, Ark b] WILLIAM EDWIX SMITH, Att'y, Chicago. b| PROF. JOSHUA PIKE, Jersey ville. b] EBEN "WHITNEY. REV. HARRY BARBER, Upper Alton. WILLIAM HENRY BOWLER, Collinsville. GEORGE RODNEY FERGUSON. JESSE REIDKR FORD, Carlyle. KD WARD GRIMKS. CHARLES D. HOILES, Greenville. CH \RLES IVES. LUTHER OSGOOD KEND ALL Clay ville, New York. 1 i 1 1 1 1 1 I EUGENE HOtt'ACE L^AHEE\~cliicago'. 1J ISAAC WHISMAN MAUPIN, Jerseyville. - FRANK MERRI WET HER. Shipman. CHARLES FRANCIS MILLS, Springfield. FREDERICK PHILLIPS. THOMAS J. RICHARDSON. M. D., St. Louis, Mo. 1JREV. EUGENE G. SAGM. Virden. 1) WILLIAM E. SCHWEPPE, Alton. 1] JAMES SQUIRE, Godfrey. 1) HARLOW M. STREET. 1| WILLIAM JASPER TURPIN. 1| FRANK MAYFIELD VANCIL. lj MH. TON DAVID WEAR. II ART EMUS W IS WELL, Watterloo. John H. Anderson. John Anderson. John Edwin Black, Bridgeport. Edward Drew Black. LaFayette Boyd. George Maine Brown. James William Budd, Alton. Charles Budd. Henry Bullock. Everett Atherton Clement. Joel Colby, Zanesville. John Hardcastle Colby. Roger Williams Cressey, Arbor Hill, lo. Franklin Curtis, Convent, La. George William Dandridge. Thomas Jefferson Davidson. James Thomas Davis. Frank Willis Edwards, St. Louis, Mo. Nelson Green Edwards. Rev. Charles Thomas Floyd. Charles Henry Gill, Upper Alton. Henry H. Hays , Upper Alton. John Hauck. Addison C Holcomb. Francis M. Johnson. Charles Vernon King. George Andrew Lamothe. Amos T. Lawton. Pickering Irving Little. Joseph Philip Maxcy. Don. Carlos McKenzie. Michael Mooney. Lewis Moore, EdwardsviHe. Ed. R. Norton, Cape Town, Africa. Stephen Shelmen Olmsted. William Stewart Parks Edward Phillips. William S. Ramsay. Madison S. Roll. John Sawyer. Gideon Newport Simpson . John Wesley Spillman. William Stephen. Alexander S. Stocker, Upper Alton. Lyman P. Stookey, M. D., Belleville. Thomas M. Triplett, M. D., Delavan. Cephas Daniel Vertrees. William Wells, Upper Alton. George R. Whyte. John Lemen Wildermau, Belleville. David Wilkinson. Thomas Irby Williams, Upper Alton. Lewis R. Williams, Kane. Corwin Wilson. Hugh Wilson. Francis Marion Wilson. Judson Wilson. William Martin Winchester. James Able Wood. 32 SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. 1864-5. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. [m] REV. CHAUNCEY E. BRISTOL, P. B., Chaplain inU. S. A. ~m] REV. HENRY RIPLEY HICKS, Paw Paw Grove. m] *REV. JOHN EVELARD MOORE, A. M. j ] REV. J. S. MOORE, A. M. [ j ] REV. CALAWAY C. NASH. [ j ] REV. GEORGE I. YEAGER. REV. MILTON D. BE VAN, A. B., Normal. REV. FRANK BENJAMIN CRESSEY, A. B., Pontiac, Mich. Ld] JOHN R. P. MARTIN. [bJ REV. MOSES BEAL SLOAN, Allegheny City, Pa. [2] OLIVER J. FLICK. [3] REV. DANIEL WISE, Whitehall. Albert Franklin Baird. George Edward Billingsly. Henry Clay Black. Samuel Bowman. Henry Martyn Carr, Alton. John Chatham. William Chatham. William John Cook. Charles Edwin Cox. James K. Francis. George Robinson Fultz. Thomas Jefferson Gaskill. Lewis Oscar Gillham, Alton. Alonzo Byron Glass, Edwardsville. * Joseph Harper. Theodore Hastings, Upper Alton. John Henderson. Washington Wright Herold. Marion L Hoag. John Madison Johnson. William Mitchell Jones. Isaac Kay. John H. Knight. Edwin H. Lemen. Daniel Patterson Mason. Richard Washington Mason. Lewis Young McAdams, Otterville. James Carroll McBride. John Tiffin McKernan. AsaM. Mills. Thomas Johnson Montgomery. James Cunningham Moore. Freeman Jones Muzzy. Hugh Sampson. James Daniel Shaffer. Henry Francis Sherr. William Ernest Silver, Springfield. James Henry Smith. Walter Scott D. Smith, Pinckneyville. Daniel Edward Sweet. William Edward Talley. 1865-6. REV. ALBERT M. BACON, A. M., B. D., Dundee. REV. ADDISON L. COLE, P. B., B. D., East Minneapolis, Minn. REV. JONATHAN M. LAPPIN, B. D., Billings, Mo. REV. FRANCIS NAYLOR, B. D. REV. ADDISON B. TOMLINSON, B. D., Wyoming. [m] REV. MYRON ROOT, Manchester, Io. " REV. HENRY HUDSON BEACH, A. B., West Union, Iowa. WILBUR THEODORE NORTON, A . M , Editor, Alton. REV. NICHOLAS LINDEN RIGBY, A. B., Winfleld, Kan. REV. JAMES MADISON STIFLER, A. M., D. D., Hamilton, N. Y. REV, WILLIAM HENRY STIFLER, A. M., Cedar Rapids, Io. [b] REV. JEFFERSON H. AUSTERMELL, North Alton. 1] WASHINGTON THEODORE AUSTERMELL, St. Louis, Mo. II WARREN BENHAM BEADLE, Trenton. 1] LINN BKDKLL, Summerfleld. 1) CYRUS SYLVESTER BEGOLE, Ridge Prairie. 1) GEORGE EDWIN BLACK. l; SAMUEL ELDER EVANS, Carlinville. SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. 33 NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN HIGHT. GEORGE W. HILL. Feesburg. WILLIAM D. HODGE. Alton. ALFRED N. HOUGHTON, Boston. Mass. EDWARD C. LEMEN, P. B., M. D., Upper Alton. AIDLIA CAMPBELL MoELVAINE. ISAAC TERRELL. LEWIS A. WINTERS. Duquoin. Henry Badley. C. W. Baldwin. Joseph S. Barnhurst. *Edward Batchelder. John Batchelder. John Berry. H. E Booth. John Boyer, Virden. Edward Bramble. William Newton Bryson. Thomas H. Burnett. John Franklin Chapman. James B. Clinton. Rev. Frank Minn Coard, Waverly. H. J. Cockrell. Mathew J. Coffin. Charles Coffin. Charles P. Coloneus. Richard T. Condon. Charles H. Cooper, Galveston, Texas. William Cowan. Samuel Oliver Curtiss, Summerfleld. Stephen B. Dannel, Summerfleld. Rev. Jacob S. Deck. Bethalto. C. S. Delay. George Dlckson, Upper Alton. Edson Asa Dodge. Nathaniel S. Drake. William Hart Duff. George W. Edwards. Elias Loomis Edwards, Alton. Frank W. Edwards, Att'y St.Louis.Mo. Jesse Evans. George Ferre. Samuel Goodwin Foster. Hiram N. Foster. William Fraser. Isaac N. Gaskill. Nathaniel Pope Gillh'am. B. F. Goldsby. Rev. William Jesse Grant. John Harden Greene, Kane. Warren Hamlin. John S. Harris, Upper Alton. John T. Hart. Augustine Head. Edmund Henderson. Edward H. Hendon. Peter M. Hill. Lewis Hord. Alexander McDonald Ir\vin. Frederick M. Johnson. Kichard L. Johnson. Ashby Donelson Jones. William M. Jones. John Koeck, M. D., Chicago. Robert Boyd Leeper. Charles E. Lewis. Charles Lowe, Upper Alton.. John Manning. Charles McAdams, M. D. Charles Merrill, Upper Alton. John Gamble Miller. Charles Frederick Miner. James Moore. Joseph Moore. Orbun T. Moore, Edward R. Norton, Cape Town, Africa. Daniel J. Overholt, Pana. Hon. John Mayo Palmer, Springfield. Charles Lewis Palmer, Dwight. Christian Paul, Bethalto. John J. Penix. Charles Perkins. Henry S. Pettingill. Alfred Henry Russell. Charles W. Russell. Norton Johnson Sanders. John William Sanders. Charles W, Sanders. L. H. Scanland, Normal. Augustus Schott, M. D., Alton. George D. Shaffer, Upper Alton. Richard R. Shaffer, Upper Alton. W illiam H. Shaffer, Upper Alton. John Lovell Sippy. John F. Sisson, Jerseyville. Henry Sisson, Jerseyville. Amos Slighton. John H. Smith, Upper Alton. Philip E. Smith. Orville A. Snedeker, A. M., Att'y Jerseyville. Thomas B. Spaulding, M. D., Troy. Johh H. Stahl, Moro. Charles F. Stocker, Upper Alton. Charles Theuor. Smith Townshend, M. D., Washinton, D. C. Jesse T. Walton. Robert S. Welch. W. W. G. Weldon. Lewis R. Williams. George W. Wilson. James H. Wood. Spencer Wyckoff. Jerseyville. William Edwin Young. 1866-7. REV. ALEXANDER J. DELANO, A. M., B. D., Atlantic, lo. REV. CHARLES T. FLOYD, B. D., Independence, Kas. REV. GEORGE KLINE, A. M., B. D., Clinton, Mo. 34 SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. NAMES AND EB8IDENCE8. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. REV. PROF. JOHN PACKER, A. M., B. D., Pres. Karen College, Rangoon, Burmah, Asia. KEY. JOHN J. WILDEY PLACE, B. D., Winchester. [m] REV- HARRY BARBER, Upper Alton, [s] REV. ARTEMAS WISWELL, Waterloo. REV. JOSEPH Li. MURRAY YOUNG, A. B., Macoinb. d] CHARLES EDWIN COX, Hudson. d] JAMES MILTON DAVISON, Chesterfield. cj RICHARD HENRY FLAGG, Alton. c| HOSEA HOWARD, Bloomington. 11 THEODORE ORLANDO BAILEY, Gillespie. 21 WILLIAM BATEMAN LAWSON. 21 JOHN HENRI LOOMIS, Chicago. 1] ROBINSON SMILEY SAWYER. Alton. II ROBERT MORRIS STEWART. Harrison Allen. John W. Armstrong. Elijah W. Ashley. Charles Avis. Rene L. Bailiff. John Moore Bartlett, Clayville, Neb. Horace Bernard, Pay son. George Boggess. Girard. Jesse K.'Cadwallader, Otterville. Eugene H. Carr. Robert A. Carter. Delos Allen Chappell. William H. Charles. William Congdon. William. Ambrose Cundall. Archibald Lamont Daniels. Rev. William K, Dean, Rainbow. Ct. Benjamin F. Draper, Upper Alton. Andrew Eagan, Virden. William Ellis Elwell, Upper Alton. Birl Hamilton Evans. Aaron Lance Fleming. Stewart Floyd. Peter Garetson, M. D., Macomb. Jamee K. P. Grimes. Frederick O. Hall. Downs Hard castle. Jacob H. Hungate. William Johnson. Edward R. Judd. Isaac V. Lee Edward Levis. Alausou Lewis. Lorin W, Lewis. Edward McNama. George McOmber. Joseph Messick, East St. Louis. Edward Riley Miller. Otis Alonzo E. Miller. O. W. Montross, Alton. Joseph T. Ogle. Roderick W. O'Meara. Adolpus H. Parks. William Patton. Thomas H. Phillips, Att'y, Anna. Charles Manning Policy. James Madison Randolph. William T. Rhea, Charles Richards . Robert Richardson . N. R. Rodgers. Albert E. Russell. John F. Sisson. Henry H. Smith. Robert M. Spurgeon. Daniel L. Stahl, Moro. Henry C. Terry, Otterville. Thomas John Turner. Clark Wetherbee. Harvey Widaman, Godfrey. David Wilkinson. George Robert Wilson. Clarence E. L. Woodruff. William Adams Young. John J. Young, St. Louis, Mo. 1867-8. REV. MILTON D. BEVAN, A. M., B. D., Normal. REV. HENRY L. FIELD, A. M., B. D., Upper Alton. REV. ROBERT GIBSON, B. D., M. D., Alton. REV. RIOLLAY F. GRAY, B. D., Griggsville. REV. HARRISON SAWYER, A. M., B. D., Dorchester. [ 8 ] REV. HOWARD MALCOM DAY. [m] REV. HENRY MARTYN DEAN, Dayton, Ohio. [m] REV. F. M. DsMARANVILLE. SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. 35 NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. f 1 ] REV. EDWIN NATHAN ELTON, Cordova. ] REV. FREDERICK HILL, [ml REV. ALBERT OGLE, Seymour, Ind. [in] REV. CARLOS WILCOX, Tonica. REV. EDWARD KNOWLES CRESSET, A. B, Chicago. REV. JOHN M TITTERINGTON, A. B., Eaton Rapids, Mich. REV. JAMES HERVEY WILDERMAN, A. B., Belleville. OLIN J. CLAWSON. PAXTON MARSHALL DRURY, Cincinnati, O. ALFRED MURRAY FLAQG. FREDERICK T. DUBOIS, Springfield. JESSE K. DUBOIS, M. D., Springfield. JOSEPH HAIGH. JOSEPH LEWIS IRWIN. REV. JOSEPH GOFF LEMEN, Lebanon, Mo. JOHN LEVERETT, Upper Alton. ALBERT J. LYON. ALBERT SPENCER MERRIAM, Quincy. S. VICTOR PROUDFIT, Att'y, Glenwood, lo. REV. JAMES KNOX READER. REV. THANBYAH, A. B., Rangoon, Burmah.Asia. JOHN C. WHITE, A. B., Att'y, Effingham. [1] GEORGE SPEARS BEEKMAN, Tallula. [2J ELLIOT BREJiSE GLASS, Att'y, Edwardsville. David S. Beaty, Jerseyville. William Eldred Bell, Upper Alton. Arthur H. Benjamin. Amos E. Benbow, Upper Alton Joseph Bernard, Upper Alton. William Berry. Henry Olney Billings, Atfy, Alton. William A. Bonham, Judsonia, Ark. Horatio J. Bowman, Town Hill. James Buchanan. Dyer Christy. Amos L. Conklin. Walter S. Corey, Jerseyville. Rev. George A. Cressey , Elkhorn, Wls. Thomas Mel. Cullimore, Carrollton. George M. Deck. Mark Dickson, Upper Alton. Edwin Dorsey. Rev. William H. Dorward, Freeport. James H. Dutro, Chicago. William F. File. George W. Floyd. Stuart Floyd. William F. Ford. Samuel B. Force, Alton. Rev. Richard Garton, Waterloo, lo. Isaac Gillham. Ammon L. Green. Albert Green. George W. Griflln. Kevere C. Gunning. Adolphus Henderson. George W. Hill. Charles F. Hoisington. Lewis Hord. Beal Ives. William Jones. Jacob Kingsbury. James H. Kirby, Jerseyville. Walker Larew. Frederick Loer, Alton. George Frank Long, North Alton, James W. Masters. Albert McClery. Heslop H. McCulloch. Thomas D. Mllroy. John Moore. OrbunT. Moore. Isaac Moore, M. D., Portage, Mo, David Morrell, St. Louis, Mo. Charles Smith Morton, St. Louis, Ma Joseph E. Matter. Corwln A. Overholt. Henry H. Padon. Rev. Adolphus H. Parks. William H. Parks. Everett J. Penning. John H. Perrine. Henry S. Pettingill. John O. Pierce. Rev. Francis E. Pierce. William Pool. Joseph T. Quigley, Alton. Peter J. Randolph, Virden. John Redfei M. Joseph B. Rich. Issachar Roberts. William Rufus Roney, A. B. George B. Sanders. William S. Sawyer. . William T. Sawyer. Gideon Scanland. John S. Schwendener. John B. Seward. i George D. Shaffer. George H. Shaw. Charles Simmons. Frank W. Smith. Cyrus S. Stahl, Moro. Maurice Starne. John B. Stifler. James Voorhies Stryker. O. D. Taylor. Thomas Terry. Thomas Tighe. Carey Tilbury. John J. Travis. James P. G. Vissering, Alton. 36 SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND KE8IDENCES. Henry B. Volk, Quincy, George R. Voorhfes. Walter Warder. Charles D. W. Warren. Justus B. Willoughby. James W. Wise. Jesse Wood. 1868-9. REV. JOHN E. INGHAM, B. D. REV. THOMAS JEFFERSON KEITH, B. D., Gowalpara, As- sam, Asia. REV. NICHOLAS L. RIGBY, P. B., B. D., Winfielcl, Kas. REV. JAMES MADISON STIFLER, A. M., B. D., D. D., Hamilton, N. Y. REV. WILLIAM HENRY STIFLER, A. M., B. D., Cedar Rapids, Iowa. REV. CYRUS THOMAS, B. D., New Lisbon, Wis. REV. FRANCIS W. TOLMAN, B. D., Dexter, Me. [m] REV. JOHN H. HARTMAN, Amesbury, Mass, [j] REV. GEORGE MAoARDLE. j] REV. WILLIAM MAXWELL. [j] REV. JAMES HERVEY WILDERMAN, A. M., Belleville. REV. DANIEL HILL DRAKE, A. B., Kurnool, India, Asia. REV. CHARLES ALBERT HOBBS, A. B., Mason City. HENRY EDMUND MILLS. A, M , Att'y, St. Louis. Mo. ROBERT JARVIS MITCHELL, A. B., M. D.,Nilwood. WILLARD A. SMITH, A. B., Att'y, Chicago. REV. WILLIAM HENRY STEDMAN, A. B., Urbana. T>] JOHN CRAWFORD COX. *JAMES F. GULP, JOHN S. GULP, Upper Alton. CAREY E. EMERSON, Alton. GEORGE W. MELTON. EDWIN B. MILLER. REV. PHILANDER S. MOXOM, Rochester, N, Y. JOHN D. S. RIGGS, Chicago. [2] LEWIS STOOKEY.Harristown. Lemuel W. Armstrong. Marshall D. Bedal, O'Fallon. James S. Blanton. Benton Bonnell. James M. Bowers. William S. Burton. Solomon Chatham. Arthur L. Coggeshall, St. Louis, Mo. Harry C. Cole, Chester. Alvin B. Crane. David C. Davis. Calvin T. Dripps. Eli Edwards. Aug. Cornelius Glass. Edward C. Gray, Greenville. Albert R. Jamieson. Rev. Willis A. Jarrell, Olney. Olin M. Johnson. Leonard S. Jones. *Frank Ketchum. Lewis E. Lemen, M. D., Georgetown, Colorado. Oliver Main, Chicago. Joseph H. Maxwell. William Maxwell. John C. McAlpine. Daniel McFarland, Att'y Peoria. John Mitchell. Samuel A. Moore. Edward Mott. John Panick. Logan Patten. A. Judson Phillips, Springfield. John Phillips, Springfield. James T. Polk. Rev. Orson B. Read, Danville, N. Y. 'Archibald L. Read. Isaiah W. Read, Elkhart, Ind. Walter Keid. Fulton Seeley, Alton. Samuel J. Snedeker, Jerseyville. John C. Stout, M. D., Aubnrn. Augustine Sum tier. Ferdinand D. Tharp. James A. Wheeler. SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. 37 1869-70. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES A.ND RESIDENCES. REV. WESLEY ADAM CAIN, B. D., East DesMoines, Iowa. REV. LORIN GEORGE CATCHPOLE, B. D., Waterloo, Wis.- REV. OSCAR MONTREVILLE MERRICK, B. D. [jj GEORGE W. BRADFORD. [j] REV. DANIEL HILL DRAKE, A. B., B. D., Kurnool, India, Asia. [m] REV. STEPHEN K. FUSON, Rockville, Ind. [j] REV. RICHARD GARTON, B. D., Waterloo, Iowa. i] REV. CHARLES A. HAYDEN, B. D., Cincinnati, O. j] REV. CHARLES ALBERT HOBBS, A. B., B. D., Mason City. [m] REV. ISAAC DENNISON NEWELL, B. D., Clayville, Neb. [j] REV. EDWARD AUGUSTUS STONE, B. D., Hillsdale, Mich, [m] REV. HIRAM DRENNELS WEAVER, Delaware, Iowa, [m] REV. LUCIUS MONTGOMERY WHITING, Manchester, Iowa, [m] REV. JOSEPH LINDLEY MURRAY YOUNG, A. B., B. D., Macomb. SMILEY NEWTON CHAMBERS, A. B.. Att.y Vincennes, Ind. IBENEUS D. FOULON,A. B., Att'y St. Louis, Mo. PROF. JOHN ABRAHAM KELLEY. A. M., Vacaville, Cal. COLUMBUS BYRON GULP. THEODORE S. HARLEY. REV. JOHN LOVINGTON JACKSON, A. B., Aurora. CHAR1 ES OLNEY PETERSON. SPENCER HUGH WARE, A. B., Att'y, Eminence, Mo. JAMES MAGNUS RYRIE, Alton. Harrison Allen. Robert A. Barr. William Ross Burroughs. Cromwell Casey. Franklin A. Clement, M. D., Brighton. Abraham Goodpastor Colson. Prof. Edwin William Craven, A. B. William Thomas Cuppy. Roberts Monroe Dry, Piuckneyville. Asa Wilbur Fisher. Albert JLucius Harmon. William Henry Wearne. David Newton Longworth, McLean. Archie Millen , Alton. Thomas Alexander Morgan. Benton PolkMurphy. Moses Asahel Newell. Thomas P. Nisbett, Alton. Joseph Thompson Ogle. Edward H. Panick. Rev, Madison Reed. William Erwin Reed. Thomas Taylor Rhea. Theophilus Abraham Shuff. Isaac A. Smith. John Andrew Stephens. Joseph B. Stobbs. Melvin Miles Wamboldt. Joel Mathis Williams, Upper Alton. Isaac D. Wood. William J. Zimmermann, Litchfleld. REV. HENRY WOOD BRAYTON, A. B., Rome, Mich. REV. THEODORE CORNELIUS COFFEY, A. B., |Appleton, Wis. REV. JOHN FLEMING HOWARD. A. B , Bunker Hill. CHARLES NEWMAN, A. B. , Att'y Alton. REV. CHARLES BROCKWAY ROBERTS, A. B., Waukesha, Wis. 38 SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. JOHN LUTHER BEVAN, A. B., Att'y, Atlanta. WILLIAM DEBOLT, Galveston, Ind. *LEWIS CABS DONALDSON, A. B., C. E. PROF. JAMES CORBIN FOLEY, A. B., Batavia, N. Y. REV. CORNELIUS WILLIAM GREGORY, A. B., Bacup, England. c"| GEORGE COLLINS INGHAM, A. B., Att'y, Chicago, d] JOSEPH LEW IRWIN. dj ELDEN HERBERT LOVETT, Lorraine. N. Y. cl DAVID GHEENLEAF PERRINE, Centralia. -1 REV GEORGE WHITEFIELD READ, Peru, Neb. Uj HENRY CLAY REED, Westville, Ind. a] WOLSEY COMBS SIMPSON, A. B., Att'y, Minonk. William Davis Blackall. Stephen Long Breckinridge, Alton. Albert Star Burlingham, Patterson, N. J. Rev. Wesley Adam Cain, East Des Moines, Iowa. James William Challacombe. Benjamin Robert Grumpier. James Edward Dunnegan. Rush English, Kane. Thomas Jefferson Garrett, M. D., Til- den. William Franklin Gates. Frank Gere. M. D., Moro. Henry William Jutting. Lesley Hacalia Leggett. Jerome LaFayette Love, M. D., Whit- ing, Ks. Edward Augustus Mason, Godfrey. Alfred Bennett McCoy. John Moore. Orville Overholt. *Albert Hardin Pritchett. Gilbert LaFayette Pritchett, M. D., Worden . Rev. Isaiah Wolfe Read, Elkhart, Ind. Rev. James C. Head, Westville. Ind. Matthew Darr Rhoades. John Collins Robertson. Albert Livingston Shanklin, Virden. John Sims. William Henry Sutton. Thomas Hollis Turner. Frederic Tuscher. Silas Elwood Wharton. Noah Theovault Whitney. William Hamilton Wilderman. SOLOMON DRAPER, A. B., Att'y, Niobrara. Neb. REV. JOHN BRECKINRIDGE ENGLISH. A. B., Quincy. GEORGE JOHNSON KENDALL, A B., M. D., Fosterburg. Rev. WILLIAM WHITNEY REGAN, A. B., Farmington. BENJAMIN SETH SAWYER, A. B., Att'y, Alton. REV. WILLIAM SHIELDS ROBERTS, A. B., B. D., Janes- ville, Wis. dl WILLIAM HENRY BAKER. 'd| GILBERT MARSH CLEAVELAND. 'dj PROF. AVERY CHAMBERS HANCOCK, A. B., Arcola. ROBERT MORGAN IRELAND, A. B., Att'y, Elgin . b JrSil.VJ. 1V1UKUAIN lttJft.ijAi"NU, A. J5..AII y, Jlilglll. REV JOSEPH MOUNTAIN, A. B., Brodhead, Wis. *HASSELTINE LAVINIA READ. WILLIAM JUDSON H. ROBERTS, Upper Alton. HERBERT TAFT ROOT, A. B. Henry Brown Adams. Mary Barler. Louisa A. Barler. William Walker Bell. Thomas Harrison Bowman. Ameda Berthold Cole, St. Louis, Mo. Oliver Garrison Cole, Salem, Oregon. John Robert Connover, Tallula. John Frank Dannel. Wm. Henry Davis. John Louis Elble. Alton. Jacob Farnsworth, ElPaso. Wm.Henry Ferguson, M. D., Brighton. John Marion Gates. William Edward Hall, Chicago. Eelle Hattie Harris, Upper Alton. Henry William Harting,Paducah,Ky. James S, Hermon. Ada Fletcher Hicks. John William Holaway. Henry Adolph Homeyer, Chicago. Minnie C. Homeyer, (Davis), Alton. Garrett Johnson Hopper, Bunker Hill. Rev. Simeon Hussey, B. D., Pana. SHUETLEFF COLLEGE. 39 NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. John Joshua Noble. Benton Eugene Ogle- *Harlon Page Read. William Henry Reed. Frances E. Root, Edwardsville. Louisa Elmira Regan. James Michael Sell. Charles Edward Snell. Milton Slack. Elizabeth Stanley. Albert O. Terry, Att'y, St. Louis, Mo. T. Frellnghuysen Terry, Jerseyville. Caroline Walke, Upper Alton. OteliaL. Walker, (Ratliff,) Princeton, Ky. DeWitt C. D. Whitcomb, Beloit, Wis. Alice Whittlesey, Highland. Thomas Francis Williams. *Robert Graham Williams. Larkin Madison Williams. Samuel Henry Wilson. Frank Ernest Wright. SARAH ELLEN BULKLEY. (Roberts,) A. B., Waukesha, Wis. JOHN GUELBARHON OULSON, A. B,, Upper Alton. REV, PR0F. THOMAS MEFFORD STEWART, A. M.. B. D., Vacaville, Cal. d] WILLIAM BADLEY, Upper Alton, d] LINUS THRALL CASTLE. Alton. " CARROL HERBERT COGGESHALL, Newton Centre, Mass. PETE BOSTWICK DAVIS. REV. JAMES BARTLETT EDMONSON, Bloomfleld, lo. CHARLES E. FAIRMAN.Jr., A. B., M. D., Upper Alton. GEORGE WASHINGTON GUNNISON. Erie, Pa. THEODORE ADOLPHUS LEMEN.A. B., Denver, Col. REV. JOHN GABRIEL MANGE. OSCAR LEVERETT PEAK, Bloomfleld, lo. T TJ" A 1S.TTMPTJ O rpTJ A ft'Ii'D [d LEANDER S. THACKER. Lelia E. Albro, (Diddle), Bethalto. John B. Wilber Amsden. Amos Augustus Anderson. William G. Andrews. *Henry Spauldlng Barler. Benjamin Hirst Bean. C. Ten Brock Beekman. Tallula. Benjamin Best, St. Louis, Mo. Louisa F. Bishop, (Oulson.), Upper Alton. William Henry Bradt. Josephus Justus Brown, Upper Alton. Charles Patterson Buck. Luther Madison Gates. Oliver Morris Conklin. Charles Fremont Dannel. William Henry Davis. James R. Davis. James Dooling, Upper Alton. William. Dooling, Upper Alton. Samuel Ferdinand Douglass. John James Downey. Frederick C. Drape, St. Louis, Mo. Jefferson Creed Duncan. *William Douglass Ely. Rodney Marcellus Ferguson. George William Fisher. Ephraim Comton Gibberson. Wilber Graham. William Russell Greene, Woodburn. Robert Warren Greene, Woodburn. John Henry Greer, Woodburu. James Jefferson Hamilton. James William Hardin. Julia Hewitt (Rodger's,) Upper Alton. George Houghton. George Wilmur Howes. William Rufus Huff. John J. Keeler. William Coleman Marlow. Andrew Jackson McBride. Peter Meyer. Emma Elizabeth Patterson, Bethalto. Phillip Henry Paul. Albert Stockton Peak. Harmon Penning, Godfrey. William J. Roberts. Frank Orlando Sebastian. Thompson Maple Sheaff. Eberle Kost Shelton. Andrew Ward Shelton, M. D. George W. Silver, Bunker Hill. Olive Lecca Slafter. Wesley David Sparks, Alton. George Hull Squier. Amaziah Melancthon Stark. Rev. Henry W. Tate, B. D., Newton Centre, Mass. John Orlen Thomas, Judsonia, Ark. Kdwjird Lyman Underwood. Mary Kmeline Underwood. Rev. Henry J. Wertz. Warren Nelson Wilson. Frank Samuel Worcester. Frank Worden, M. D. , North Alton. 40 SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. 1873-4. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND EESIDENOE8. REV. THEODORE CORNELIUS COFFEY, A. B., B. D., Ap- pleton, Wis. REV. JOHN FLEMING HOWARD, A. B., B. D., Bunker Hill. REV. CHARLES BROCKWAY ROBERTS, A. B., B. D., Waukesha, Wis. REV. SAMUEL DOUGLASS BADGER, A. B., B. D., Chicago. JAMES THOMAS COVEL, A. B.. B. D., Centre. REV, JOHN W. PRIMM, A. B., B. D., Newton Centre, Mass. d] FRANK BARRY, St. Louis. Mo. c] ALEXANDER BEVAN, A. B., West Medway, Mass. c] HENRY THOMPSON BURNAP, Upper Alton. d] REV. JOHN CARTER, Sandoval. d] EDWARD EVJERETT_ COLE, Chester. LITTLE BERRY FORD. EMMA MARIA GRAY. Upper Alton. JENNIE AMELIA GREER. Woodburn. KATIE E. S. JOSLYN, Virden. ADONIRAM JUDSON PLOWMAN, Virden. REV. ANSEL HOWARD POST. BEL. G. RICHMOND, Moro. d] ARTHUR JUDSON SCROGIN, Lexington. d] BENJAMIN FRANKLIN SIMPSON, A. B., Rochester, N. Y. [c] JUDSON B. THOMAS, A. B., Atlanta. John Jackson Kinley. Mary Etta Kirby, (Read), Jerseyville. Florence M. Lamothe, Lamothe, Mo. Clara Lapp, Upper Alton. Mary Louisa Limberg, Godfrey. Lillie Matthews, (Nisbett), Alton.' Thomas Maxwell. Catherine Maxwell. William F. McCall, Brighton. Jonathan T. McCullom, Flora. Katie McRynolds, Upper Alton. Wm. E. Morgan. James I. Morton, St. Louis, Mo. George Nevlin, Upper Alton. George W. Peters. Alford B. Penniman, Woodburn. Ida May Prewitt, (Prichett), Worden. Flora May Pritchett, Fidelity. Lillie Mary Pritchett, Fidelity. Albert W. Reed. Faiinie S. Roberts, Upper Alton. John Rohacek. John Adams Ryrie, Alton. Charles E. Sawyer, Alton. Ernest Schweppe, Alton. \ Austin H. Scrogin, Lexington. Milton Slack. Alba Stacey. Ernest Steen. H. M. Tlbbetts. Lulu Topping, Alton. Otto Ulrlch, Alton. Hattie M. Vallette, St. Louis, Mo. Frederick P. Vallette, St. Louis, Mo. Julia E. Van Hoosor, Nokomis. Nannie \Varuack, (Castle), Alton. Horace \Vhittlosey, Highland. Helen H. Winthrop, St. Louis, Mo. Ephraim Buchanan Wood, S. Boston, Mass. Fayette D. Wood, Upper Alton. James F. Amos. Edward Atkins, Upper Alton. *Henry S. Barler. Richard Barler, Hinsdale. John R Bonney, Flora Rowland Bonney, Flora. Edward R. Bonney, Flora. Emma E. Buckland, St. Louis, Mo. Nellie Duncan Burton, Upper Alton. Carrie Campbell, Medora. Adoniram J. Cole, Minneapolis, Minn. Atison Comer. John E Cooper. Katie Crane, (Lathrop), Evansville, \Vis. James A. Curry. Benjamin G. Drape, St. Louis, Mo. Bell M. Depry, Upper Alton. William H. Enos, M. D., Jerseyville. Phil. S. Erwin. Frank Corey Finity, Kane. CassiusH. Francis. Eugene M, Gardiner, Kane. Zachary Taylor Gaines. James G. Evans Greer. Woodburn. Mary Ground, Upper Alton. Amy Hamilton, Whitehall. John B. Hammond. Lovell D. Harrison, Marble Rock, lo. William Wilkes Harris. Albert Heminover, Marble Rock, lo. Henry A. Herwig. Mattie Himrod, Lockport. Mollie Himrod, Lockport. Anna Louisa Homeyer, Chicago. Harry A. Homeyer, Alton. May Howes, Hamilton, N. Y. Benson Hume. Jesse W. Hurst. Roxana Hurst. Edward Burnhard Joesting, Alton. SHURTLEFF COLLEGE.' 41 1874-5. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND KESIDENOE8. REV. JOHN BRECKENRIDGE ENGLISH, A. B., B. D., Quincy. REV. WILLIAM SHIELDS ROBERTS, A. B., B. D., Janes- ville, Wis. [ j ] REV. THOMAS E. ROOT, Versailles. ELIJAH TAYLOR CASSEL, A. B., Nebraska City, Neb. ROBERT ALLEN HAIGHT, A. B , Alton. LEMUEL JEFFERSON HANCOCK, A. B., Lltchfleld. EDWIN SENIOR HOWELL, A. B., Brighton. REV. CHARLES R. LATHROP, A. B., Evansville, Wis. REV. GEORGE CARTER PECK. A. B., Newton Centre, Mass. EDWARD WINFIELD REID, A. B., M. D., Bethalto. ROBERTTEMPLETONSTILLWELL, A.B., Att'y.St. Louis, Mo. MARY ELIDA. BARRETT, (ENGLISH), P. B., Quincy. c] JOHN CHARLES BOWMAN, Whitehall. cj THOMAS ALBERT BRUNK, Auburn. C! WILLIAM KEATING. d] THOMAS N. JOHNSON, Edwardsville. d| JOHN CULBERTSON KEITH. Edwardsport, Ind. dl GEORGE HASKELL MIZE, Troy, [dj FRANK MORTON, St. Louis, Mo. [b] CLARENCE SPAULDING SARGENT, New Haven, Ct. II] ARTHUR G. PEARSON, Chicago. [1] JOHN. FLETCHER TATE, Winterset, Iowa. Ira Alward, St. Louis, Mo. Madison Bagby. Augustus Condoii Barter, Chicago. David Barnett. Charles Bell, Upper Alton. R^v. James Jackson Bristow. John Brown, Upper Alton. H A. Carr, James K- Cheseldine, Winchester. Charles Edwin Clayton, Chatham. Carol Herbert Coggeshall, Newton Centre, Mass. Henry Cook, Upper Alton. Mary E. Covel. Springfield, Ohio. Nora Cowan, Virden. Mattie Crane, Virden. Isaac F. Davis, Longmont, Col. Edward II. Davis. Hiram S. Dean, Upper Alton. Edward C. Denny, Piasa. Mary Elble, Alton. Mundy J). French, Brighton. Nathan M. Garland, Godfrey. Hattie Lillian Gray, Upper Alton. George M. Gray, 1'pper Alton. Robert W. Greene. Kane. John J. Greene, Piasa. George H. Greene. Hattie Greene, Kane. Emile L. Guillette, Lamothe, Mo. "Charles E. Hall, Latham. Carrie Nutt Harris. Charles E. Haydon, Shelbyville. Otelia Hoppe. Upper Alton. Alfred J. Howell, Brighton. IdaM Hull, Barry. Albert G Hurd, Jerseyvllle. >I;iry K. Jones, Denver. Col. Susan E. Jones, Denver, Col. Charles H. Kirby, Jerseyvllle. Charles A. Lamothe, Lamothe, Mo. Mary G . McClure. George A. McMillen, Alton . William Mehagan, St. Louis, Mo. Philip E. Michaels. Dollle J. O'Hara Moore, Upper Alton. Lizzie Olcott, Upper Alton. William Palmer. David P. Pritchett, Fidelity. Nettie L. Proudnt, Virden. William M. Rhoads. A. W. Rhoads. C. G. Richards, Jerseyville. Blanche Russell, Upper Alton. Erne Ryrie, Alton. EmmaSchott, Upper Alton. Frank Sergent, Upper Al'on . J W. L. Slefkes, Roanoke. Richard Simmons, Greenfield. Calvin Snyder. Frederick S. Stock. James M. Stubbert. Robert Sturgeon , Woodburn. Murray B. Trabue, Jerseyville. Robert Underwood. Otto Walter, Alton. Thomas E. Watkins, Lamothe, Mo. A. W. Wehmier. Charles S. Wheeling. W. Douglass White. George B. White. Elery B. Widaman, Virden. George Williams, Upper Alton. Mattie J. Witt George Worden, Upper Alton. 42 'SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. 1875-6. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. REV. SIMEON HUSSEY, B. D., Pana. [j] REV. DANIEL SECKMAN, Xenia. FRANCES NEWELL, BULKLEY, A.B.,Mt. Carroll. LUCIUS MARSH CASTLE, A. B., Upper Alton. REV. WILLIAM JACKSON CRAWFORD, A. B., Nilwood. ELISHA ENGLISH, A. B., Springfield. J. OTIS HUMPHREY, A. B., Auburn. HIRAM NELSON KENDALL. A. B.. Upper Alton. RUTH CATHERINE MILLS, A. B., Mt Carroll. CHARLES NEWTON, A. B., Jefferson City, Mo. JOHN W. RENNICK, A. B., Farmington, Mo. MARY JANE RENNICK, (BEID) A. B.. Bethalto. JOHN EMERSON ROBERTS, A. B., Upper Alton. ELISHA EDWARD TYSON. A. B., Irvfngton. MILES JOHN HUFFMAN, P. B., Medora. GERTRUDE MELISSA ROWE, P. B., Sacramento, Cal. [d] THERESA L. CHAPMAN, Upper Alton. \d\ JOHN J. COON, Pana. [d] ANNA M. COON, Pana. lei REV. DAVID H. FIELDING, Garnett, Kansas. [b] DANIEL READ KENDALL, Upper Alton. [dj MAY ROSAMOND KENDALL, Upper Alton. |cj JOSEPH E. MORROW, Indianapolis, Ind. [d] MANFORD JAMES RICKS, Bloomington. lc] MARY E. ROBERTS. Upper Alton. [bl WILLIAM W. WHITE. [I] GEORGE T. DAVIS, Alton. ill SARAH HOOD, Bunker Hill. LI] JAY FRANK SHEARMAN, Columbus, Ks. Julia Armour, (Huffman) Medora. Lilian E. Armstrong. Alton. Glenn P. Badeau, Hillsboro, Anna B. Bishop, Godfrey. A. G. Brueggeman , Alton. Samuel D. Buckmaster, Upper Alton. Matthew Chance. Ezekiel Chance. Albert A. Chapman, Winchester. Grace Cole, Upper Alton. Joel B Compton. Virden. Louise Cooley, Upper Alton. Lucius A. Cummins, Hamilton, Alfred C. Cunningham. Solon M. Delaney, Flora. M Jessie Dannel, Kemper. Edward F Deterding, Alton. Rev. George G. Dougherty, Ewing. Louis W. Drape, St. Louis, Mo. Jessie Drew. Joseph B. Elble, Alton. J. D. Erwin. Fernando E. Ferguson, Godfrey, W. F. Forman, Bloomington. John P. Hardwick, Winchester. Charles W. Harris, Goodland, Ind. George B. Harris, Goodland, Ind. Samuel A. Harrison, Upper Alton. Henry Hessenower. William R. Hewitt. John Heinrich, Bethalto. William S. Hood Bunker Hill. George F. Hulbert, Upper Alton. Fannie Lora Hulbert, Upper Alton. Flora Mathews, Alton. George S. Meenach. Sarah E. Mitchell. G. E. Moberly, Duquoin. George L. Moore. Ferdinand Morse. Olive P. Murdough, Belleflour. Anna Nantkis, (Keuch), Betbalto. Washington L Parker, Champaign. Walter B. Pendleton, Godfrey. Isaac W. Powell, Pella, Iowa. Eva M. Randolph, Piasa. Albert W. Reid. Bethalto. Su-an Rhoads, Piasa. Nettie Rising. Upper Alton. Mary C. Rood. Godfrey. Wm. J. Russell, Iron Mountain, Mo. George H. Schaper. Charles Willard Sparks, Alton. Belle Snow Fannie Squier, Alton. Hattie Squier, Alton. Heber M. Squire, Godfrey. William Henry Stallings. Elihu T Stout. Auburn. Nancy L Stratton. Charles W. Sutton. Indianapolis, Ind. Maria L. Tindall, Upper Alton. John C. Tolman. XJharles A Vallette. St. Louis, Mo. Frank Waegoner, Godfrey. Henry F. Wagner. Charles C. Walker, Upper Alton. Paul Walter, Alton. Walter L. Waples, Alton. Carrie A Whittlesey Highland. Ellsha Whittlesey, Highland. J;itnes F. Whitworth. LaFayette Whitworth. William Winkelmann, Belleville. Warren Eugene Wise. Emily Wood, Albert Lee. Arma.R. Young, Upper Alton. SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. 43 1876-7. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. PRESENT ATTENDANCE. [s] SAMUEL ELLICOTT TYSON, Irvington. [j] WILLIAM R. ANDERECK, Sandoval. j] JOHN CARTER, Potoka. ] REV. WILLIAM JACKSON CRAWFORD, A. B., Nilwood. ] REV. TIMOTHY S- DODGE, Upper Alton. j] ELISHA ENGLISH, A. B., Springfield. "i} REV. W. SANFORD GEE, Mt. Vernon. ] FRANCIS WAYLAND PARSONS, Grisrgsville. j] JOHN EMERSON ROBERTS, A. B., Upper Alton. i] ELISHA EDWARD TYSON, A. B., Irvington. [j] REV. GARDNER S. TUCKER, Webster, Mo. a) OSCAR EUGENE BADGER, Fort Madison, lo. al BELL ENGLISH, Springfield. a] LINDSEY ENGLISH, Springfield. a| FRANCIS MARION MITCHELL, Gillespie. a | FRANCIS WAYLAND PARSONS, Griggsville. a] JOHN JOSEPH PITTS, McLean. [b] JOSIAH ANDREW ARMOUR, Shipman. [b] ABRAELLA C. HUDSON, Alton. I bl FRANCIS WARNER PARKER, Upper Alton. [b] EDWARD CADLE HHOADS, Plainview. [b] EBENEZER CHARLES SAGE, Virdeu. 10 ELLIS AUSTIN, Red Oak, Ind. Ter. EBENEZER BADLEY, Upper Alton. WILLIAM H. BEEBY, Piasa. THOMAS S BOVELL, Arcola. EMMA CECILIA BULKLEY, Upper Alton. [a] GEORGE CAMPBELL, Delavan. re | WILTON S. COLLAWN, Bowling Green, Va. |OJ ALBERT N. DRAPER, Upper Alton. re] WILLIS L. FAIRMAN. Upper Alton. [cj GEORGE T. JOHNSON, Alton. [c] ISABELLA J. LOWIS, Piasa. [0] AMOS F MARSHALL, Eureka. ~ IRA E. MARSHALL, Eureka. ELLEN L. MUHLEMANN, Woodburn. SOPHIA MINNIE WAGE, Virdpn. TIMMIE AUSTIN STANLEY, Upper Alton. HELEN G. STK.LLE, Upper Alton. cj JAMES F. WELLS, Fairbury. [dl JOHN FRANK BAKER, Bloomington. |d] JOHN W. BLAIR, Alton. [,i| HERBERT H. BRANCH, Springfield. Id] JUSTUS L. BULKLEY, Upper Alton. Idj CHARLES BULL, Gillespie. fdi THOMAS M. COFFEY, Griggsville. [dl GRACE E. FAIRMAN, Upper Alton. [d I JOHN J. HUSTON, La Grange, Mo. [d] FRANK IVAN MERCHANT, Cedar Falls, Iowa. [dl JOHN L. PEARSON, Godfrey. Susie F. Brown, St. Louis, Mo. I G. Lansing Merrill, Upper Alton. Charles W. Connor, Alton. Alice P. Rising, Upper Alton. Elizabeth G. Elwell, Upper Alton. | Charles G. Rlchey, Winchester. Laetitia M. Field, Washington, D. C. Oren V. Stookey, Freeburg. 44 SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. NAMES AND RESIDENCES. John M. Adair, Fort Gibson, Ind. Ter. Henry S. Baker, Jr., Alton. Frank B. Black, Canton. Elijah H. Bettis, Oswego, Kansas. Clara M. Bulkley, Upper Alton. Ella A. Bulkley, Upper Alton. William H. Cartwrighl. Upper Alton. Celestina P. Chapman, Upper Alton. John F. Cox, Bethalto. Cora V. Cole, Upper Alton. George E. Dye, Elkhart City. Benjamin W. Garr, Sutton, Neb. S. J. Gee, St. Francisville. Nannie A. Gillhain, Upper Alton. Fannie F. Gillham, Wanda. Willard L. Gillham. Upper Alton, Abraham Lincoln Hoblit, Atlanta. John J. Herman, Alton. El wood S. Jones, Pawnee. Albert Jewett Kendrick, Upper Alton . Lida H. Kendall, Edwardsville. William J. McOollom, Scottviile. Charles H. McKee, Cnrisman. John T. Miller, Upper Alton. David T. Merrill, Jr., Upper Alton. .JfimieS. Morrill, Upper Alton. Gilbert G. Palmer, Medora. Solomon Parsons, Griggsville. Henry Pollard, Upper' Alton. John W. Place. Winchester. Frank D. Rood, Godfrey. ThomaK J Sanford, Morrissoiiville. Charles E. Schenck, Paris. Sam. Stephen A. Douglas Stahl, Moro. Josie Stanley, Upper Alton. Louie C. Warren, Lyndonville, N. Y. Stubaren D. Wham, Salem. Walter Apperson, Bourbon. Thomas S. Barber, Upper Alton. Otto Barth, Brighton. TalbottF. Brunk, Springfield. William B. Butler, Carlyle. Bertha Bulkley, Upper Alton. Edward G. Clarke, Upper Alton. Frank J. Douthitt, Curdsville Ky. Frank J. Ehrler, Upper Alton. William A. Foster, Tonica. Frank Hewit, Upper Alton. 1 Moses H. Hart. Vancil's Point. Joseph W. Hoblit, Atlanta. Allen Archie Ashlock, Alton. Edward Barnett, Jkiwardsville. Lewis C. Beckmeyer, Upper Alton. John Boals, Alton. Charlotte E. Burton, Upper Alton. James B. Camp. Staunton. Henry M. Cartwright, Upper Alton. George M. Cameron. Carrollton. James Wm. Cain, Medora. Jane M. Dunn, Belleville. Minnie A. Dunn, Belleville. Samuel E. Earp, Alton. Joseph B. Bible, Alton. Joseph .S. Forrest, Scullyvillc, Iml. Ter. Austin L. Hanes, Fyxville. John Hildebrand, Upper Alton. Edward M. Hodge, Upper Alton. Harriet M. Jinkenson, Bethalto. Charles W. Jolly, Plainview. Alexander W. Joesting, Alton. Orville V. Kell, Salem. Daniel M. Kittinger, Upper Alton. Walter W. Lemen, Freeburg. Francisca Leigh, Suffolk, Va. George E. Marsh, Upper Alton. Henry A. Marsh, Upper Alton. Edward Maupin, Alton. Samuel Beaman Nott; Jerseyville. Thomas M. Robinson. Greenflld. John Rodgers, Upper Alton. Rev. Henry Schultz, Fosterburg. Isaac C. Woolery, Sciota. Leonard O. Vaughan, Van Horn, Mo. Georare F. Kirsch, Alton. George C. Lemen, Freeburg. William Lewis, Springfield. Franklin McKee, Chrisman. Joel L. .Michael, Salem. Hsirlan P. McCoy, Georgetown, Col. William Miedel, Aiton. Paris Hampton Montgomery, Bethalto. Edward S. Morse, Alton. Horace E. Roberts, Upper Alton. Edwin E. Reed, Newbern. Elmer Rutledge, North Alton. Albert F. Scott, Belleville. John Albert Steiner, Alton. Mary Emeline Stookey, Freeburg. Charles A. Stookey, Belleville. Charles F. Tonsor, Alton. Robert Ward, Otterville. Martha Ellen Wham, Salem. Benjamin F. Williams, Upper Alton. Byron Wood. Upper Alton. Samuel H. Wyss, Alton. SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. 45 GENERAL SUMMARY. Students in Rock Spring Seminary 138 Students in Alton Seminary 79 Students in Alton College .....!.......... 39 flrregular, Preparatory, Academic, &c 1,587 Collegiate Under Graduates 367 Collegiate Graduates 126 Students of past Theological Under Graduates 51 and present in { Theological Graduates 36 Shurtleff College Academic, Present Attendance '. 43 Preparatory, Present Attendance 63 Collegiate, Present Attendance 48 L Theological, Present Attendance 11 2,578 Deducting those counted twice /..... 38 Grand Total 2,540 NOTE. It is kntwn positively that 242 Students, in all, attended Rock Spring Seminary, while the names of only 128, as given, were found in time for use in this Catalogue ; and it Is also estimated that 150, at least, attended Alton Seminary, while only 79 names are given. It Is also know^i that different per- sons attended the College, during the earlier years, concerning whom all record is now lost; so that, it is probable, quite 500 more pupils, during the Fifty Years of the history of the School, have been connected with it, under Its various or- ganizations, than are named in the Catalogue or included in the above Sum- mary making a probable aggregate, of all, that, first and last, have been con- nected with the Institution, of more than 3,000. HONORARY DEGREES. Those conferred by this College are designated by italics. *Prof. ZenasB. Newman. A. M. 1.S41 *Rev. Alvin Bailey, A. M. 1841 *Rev. Isaac D. Newell, A. B. 1841 Rev- Thomas Powell, A. M. ..Ottawa 1841 *Rev. John McGilton, A. M. 1842 "Captain A. Harris. A. M., M. D 1842 Rev. William B. Maxon, A. M. Brookfield, N. Y 1842 *Rev. James M. Frost, A. B 1843 *Benjamin Shurtleff, A. M., M. Z>.,M.M.S.S 1843 N. B. Shurtleff, A. M., M.D., M.M.S.O..S.H.S... Boston, Mass 1843 Rev. Russell Holman, A. B Petra, Mo 1843 Rev. James L. Hodge, A. M., D. D Brooklyn, N. Y 1845 Rev. Prof. James C. Furman, A. M. Greenville, S. C 1845 Rev. Henry G. Weston, A. M., D. D Ciicstcr. Pa 1847 *Rev. Dwightlves, A. M., D. D 1847 Rev. JirahD. Cole, A. M., D. D Highland Park 1850 Rev. J. E. Ryland, D. D , Virginia 1852 Hon. Lyrnan Trumbull, LL. D Chicago 1852 46 SHURTLEFF COLLEGE. Hon. Cyrus Edwards, LL. D .Upper Alton 1852 Rev. Jeremiah Hall, A. M., D. D Jessup, Iowa 1854 Rev. S. F. Holt, A. M East St. Louis 1854 *Rev. A. J. Joslyn, A.M. 1854 Rev. J. A. Smith, A. M. Chicago 1854 Rev. J. N. Tolman, A. M. Woodstock, N. Y 1857 Hon. J. M. Palmer, LL. D Springfield 1857 Rev. E. T. Hiscox, A. M., D. D New York City 1857 Rev. E. J. Thomas, A. M. Atlanta " 1858 Rev. J. B. Morrison, A. M. Oskosh, Wis 1858 *Kev. P. Bennett, A. M 1858 *Rev. Silas Tucker, A. M. 1858 Rev. W. D. H. Johnson, A. M. 1859 Rev. Thomas M. E. Robson, LL. D England 1859 O. C. Drake, A. M. 1860 James Newman, A. M Alton 1860 A. W. Alexander, A. M. St. Louis, Mo 1860 *AsaPotter, A. M. 1860 *Rev. C. B. Read, A. M. I860 *Rev. Albert Smith, A. M., D. U I860 Rev. H. J. Eddy, D. D Syracuse, N. Y 1860 Rev. Robert Boyd, D. D Waukesha, Wis 1861 Rev. William Cooke, D. D London, England 1861 Rev- J. A. Smith, D. D Chicago 1861 Rev. James Dixon, A. M., D. D 1862 Rev. Geo. P. Guild, A. M. Ahnapee, Wis 1863 Rev. A. H. Burlingbam, A. M., D. D Patterson, N. J 1863 *Rev. C. H. Taylor, A. M., D. D 1863 Rev. G. S. Bailey, D. D Pittston, Pa 1865 Rev. Samuel Graves, U. D Grand Rapids, Mich. ..1865 Gen. Oliver O. Howard, LL. D U. S. A 1865 Rev. F. M. Ellis, A. M. Denver, Col 1866 Rev. A. C. Rafferty, A. M. Westport, Mo 1866 Rev. Joseph Banvard, D. .D Neponset, Mass 1866 Rev. Richard Edwards, LL. D Princeton 1866 Hon. Mark H. Dunnell, LL. u Owatonna, Minn 1867 Rev. A. C. Osborn, D. D New York, N. Y 1867 Rev. A. M. Bacon, A.M. Dundee 1868 Rev. S. A. Kiugsbury, D. D Bath, Maine 1868 *Rev. Miles Bronson, D. D 1869 Prof. A. M. Bebee, D. D Hamilton, N. Y 1869 Rev. Sylvester Adams, A. M. Hastings, Min 1871 Rev. Charles E. Hewitt, D. D Chicago 1871 Prof. John B. Jackson, D. D Chicago 1871 Rev. Moses B. Sloan, A. N. Allegheny City, Pa 1872 Kdward C. Lcmen, M D., P* B Upper Alton 1872 James P. Sladc. A. M. Belleville 1873 James 11. Kay, M. D., A. M Bushnell 1873 Prof. Charles Fairmau, LL. D Upper Alton 1873 Orville A. Snedeker, A. M. Jerseyville 1874 Reuben Aldrich Guild, LL. D Providence, R.I 1874 A. S. Everett, M. D., A. M. St. Louis, Mo 1875 llev. .1- M. Stiflcr, D. D Hamilton, N- Y 1875 Rev. Frank M. Ellis. D. D Denver. Col 1875 Rev. II. M. Gallaher, LL. D New Haven, Ct 1875 Flavel Shurtleff Thomas, .1. M Hanson, Mass 1876 * Lewis V,. Donaldson, A. B 1876 Uev. I. N. Hobart, D. D Chicago 1876 Prof. Washington Leverett, LL. D Upper Alton 1876 INDEX OF STUDENTS. T denotes Theological and designates all in that department; C, Collegiate, both graduates and under graduates, and is affixed to all in regular Collegiate course, whether classical or scientific; and I indicates those who pursued a se- lect course, or who were in the Preparatory or Academic department. The figures indicate the page in the Catalogue on which the name may be found. A B Bergen G. S. W 14 i Buckmaster, H. W... 23, i Bement. E. J 23, c Bowman J. C 23, c Armstrong, J 14, i Bergen, A 14, i Bailey, J. W 23, i Atwater, F 14, i Bergen, J 14, i Brown, Rev. S. M 24, c Bell, Rev. G. W. S. . . .24, c Butler, A G 24, c Allen, J 16, i Beach, J 14, i Beedle, J 14, i Adams, W 17,1 Adams, J 17, i Bayne H . 14, i Bell J. W. 24, i Arnold, E 18,1 Bridges H . . .14, i Bostwick, J 24, i Abbott, M. H 19, i Buckner, E. A 14, i Badger W .16 i Bell, J. W 24, c Bishop Rev. S 25, i Adams, N 20, i Allen, R 20, i Brown E 16, i Bofinger, C 25, i Adams, D. W. C 21, i Brown, E. A 16, i Baker, D. J 25, c Ames, I), t) 22, i Brown M .. 16,1 Barler, Rev. O. L 25, c Atwood, G. M 23, c Buckmaster S ....16, i Ballard, W. F 25, i Ash, W 23, i Balrd, J 17, i Ballard, R 25, i Atkinson, J.H 24,1 Bostwick S 17, i Bean. J. A 25, i Adams, L 25, i Bowman, J . ....17, i Blaisdell. E. B 25, i Alvard, D. S 25, c Bruner J . 17, i Bond, J. D 25, 1 Adkins, Rev. F 26, c Baker, Rev. S 18, t Bernard, J. C 18,1 Bond T 18 i Burgess, S 26, i Andrews, B 26, i Adams, J. N 27, i Bernard, J. B 26, c Blair, S 26, i Amiss, J. W 28,c Anderson, W. M 28. c Bowler, G. W 18,1 Buckley, L,. O 18, i Boulter AV 26, i Burnett, J. H 26, i Allen, G. W 28, i Baskett, R . .18 i Bowers, H. W 26, c Allen, B. F 28, i Atwell, Rev. S 29,1 Bernard, C. H 18, i Bernard, . I. G 18,1 Baker, J. P 26, c Boone, S. S 26, c Blankinship, J. P 26, c Brown, V 26, c Anderson, W. S 30, i Atwood, E 30, i Boynton, C 18. i Brooks C , 19 i Adams, G. 31, c Blood C 19 c Buckmaster, J 26, c Anderson, J. H 31, i Burge, C . .. 19, i Beeley, G 26, i Anderson. J 31,1 Bailhache, W. H 19. i Bales, L 19 i Breath, E 26, i Baker, J. F 27, c Austermell, Rev. J.H. 32, c Austermell, W. T 32, c Allen, H .34, i Briggs. Rev. W. H 19. t Beedle, F. 19 i Bailey, L. N 27, i \ Barnes, H. C 27, i Ar msti ong, J. W 34, i Ashley, E. W 34, i Brown, J . ... 19 c Bridges, F 27, i Barnard, W 20, i Blair, W 20 i Brown, W. T 27, i Burnett, W. L 27, i Brown, N. H 28, c Avis, C .34, i Armstrong, L. W 36, i Allen, H 37, i Bostick, F. H 20 i Baker, H. S 20. c Bostick M F. 20 ' Bailey, C. A 28, i Beedle. S. H 29, i Adams, H. B 38, i Albro, L. E .",0, i Brayman. A. S 20, i Breckenridge, T.E....20, i Boswell, J. H 29, i Burnham, Rev.E.C.M.29, c Bowler, J. W 29, i Amos, J. F 40, i Atkins, E ... 40, i Benjamin, Rev. , I ... 21 c Alward I 41 i Burns, J. D 1 c Burnett, W. L 29, 1 Armour, J . 42, i Baker, E. L. . 21 c Bowler, J. H 30, c Armstrong, Li. B .... 42, i Bulkley. Rev. J 21 c Barber, J. W 30, i Andereck, W. R 4:i, t Boqua. H. P 22, i Brooks D. G 22, i Bristol, Rev. C. E... 30, c Boyer, N. A 30, c Armour, J. A ... 43 c Austin, E 43 c Brown N F .. ^2 i Burts, R. S .80. i Adair, J. M. 44, i Barbee, J. W .. 22,1 Barber, Rev. H 31, c Apperson, W ., 44, i Britton, E. W 22 i Bowler, W. H 31, c Ashlock, A. A 44 i Buck B . 22, i Black, J. E 31, i Amsden, J, B. W 39, i Anderson, A. A 39, i Andrews, W. G 39, i Brown Rev A 23 i Black E. J 31, i Bailhache P H 28, i Boyd, L 31, i Bettersworth, A 23,1 Brown. G. M .. ...31. i 48 INDEX. Budd, J. W. . ..31, i Bonney J. R Bonney, R Bonney, E. R ..40, i ..40, i ..40, l Carr, G. W Corey, A. A Cyrenius, H .19, c ..20, 1 .20, i Budd, C ..31, i Bullock, H ..81, i Bristol. Rev. C. E... Bevan, Rev. M. D.. Baird, A. F ..82, t ..32, c 32, i Buckland. E. E . 40, i Cheatham, C .20, i Burton, N. D .40, i Cox.E. S .20, i Barrett, M. E ..41 c Cowles F 20, i Billingsly, G. E.... ..3-2, i .41, c Clarke, Rev. H ..20, c Black, H. C ..32, i Brunk, T. A .41, c 41 i Cole,N Crabbe, W .20, c .2<, i Bowman , S. .... . 3'^, i Bacon, Rev. A. M,.. Beach, Rev. H. H.. Beadle, W. B ..32, t ..32, c ..32, c Barler, A. C Barett, D .4), i 41, i Calkins J. G .21, i Chapman, W. W. . . . .21, i Bell, C .41, i Cowan. F. P 21, i Bedell L 32, C Bristow, J. J 41 i Cramb, Rev. A. B.. Cross, Rev. C. P .21, c 21, i Begole, C. S .35, C Brown, J. , 41, i Black, G. E ..32, C Bulkley, F. N .42, c Cunningham, W. . . . .21, c Badly, H ..33, i Badeau, G. P 42, i Chapman, N. B .22, i Baldwin, C. W .33, i Bishop, A. B .42, i Combs, S. M Cunningnain, V .22, i .22, i Barnliurst, J. S. . . . ..38, i Bruggemann, A. G. . Buck master, S. D.. Badger, O, E .42, i .42, i 48, C 43 C Batchelder, E . 33, i Crandall, J. R 22, i Batclielder, J 33, 1 Collet, J. W .23, i Berry J .83 i Badly, E Crowder M . . "t, i Booth, H. E 33, i Beeby, W. H 43, C Cunningham, E.. . . 23, i 33 i Bovell, T. S. 43 C Cunningham, W. J. Crowder, J. C .23, i 23, c Bramble E .. 33, i Bulkley, E. C 43, C Bvson, W. N . . 33, i Baker, J. F Blair.J. W Branch, H. H .43, C .43, c .43 C Carlin, A Carter, H. S Chamberlain, W. H Churchill, J. .. .23, 1 .23, i .23, i 23, i Burnett, T H ..33, i Barber Rev H. 34 t Bailey T. O . 34, c Bulkley, J. L... 43, C Bailiff R. L 34 i Bull, C 43 C Clifford, T. E. 23, i Bartlett J. M 34, i Brown, S. F 43, i Cooper, J. T .23, i Bernard, H .... .34, i Baker, H. S... 44, i Covell, G .23, i 154 i Black, F. B 44 i Crays, J 23, i Bevan, Rev. M. D. . . Beekman, G. S Beatty D 8 . ..34, t ..35, c 35 i Bettis, E. H 44, i Carlin, J. C 24, i Bulkley, C. M. 44 i Clayton, C. T ... 24, i Bukley.K 44 i Corey, G. W 24, 1 Bell W. E 35, i Barber, T. S .44, i Crabb, A, J .24, i Benjamin, A. H ... . Kft, i Barth, O .44, i Crowder, A. J .24, i Ben bow A E 35 i Brunk, T. F. 44, i Jhamberlain, S. A... Chamberlain, W. H. Catlett, H .24, C .25, C .25, i Bernard. J . 35, i Butler, W. R. 44, i Berry, W 35, i Bulkley, B 44, i Billings, H O 3i i Barnett, E 44, i Cummings, C 25, i Bonham, W. A . 3-i. i Beckmyer, L. C. . . 44. i Caldwell. W. C 25, C .25, C .25, C .25, i Bowman, M. J ..35, 1 Boals, J Burton, C. E C Camp, L .44, i .44, i 14 i Currey, H. M Jurrey, J Clayton , G. E Buchanan, J ..85, i Bedell, W. D 36, i Blanton, J. S . 36, i Corrington, J. M .26, c Bonnell, B 36, i Clifford, A. G .26, i Bowers, J. M. .. ..36, i Clifford, A. G., (2d).. Crandall. K. A . . .26, i 26, i Burton W S 36 i Bradford, G. W .37, t Casey, W Cole, A. B .14, i Carter, ty .14, i Child. S .26, i .26, i .27, c Barr, R. A . 37, i Burroughs. W R 37 i Cole, A. M .14, j Cox, J. M Brayton, Rev. H. W Bevan, J. L Blackall, W. D ..37, c ..38, c ..38, i Cole, O... .14, i Chewing. J .27, c Cole, M Crozier, A Chapman , F Cole, H. C .14, i .14, i .16, i .16 i Cooper, C .27, i Cox, C. C Crowder, R. L .27, i .27, i Breckenridge, S. L. Burlingham A >S ..38, i 38 i Corringtou, J. F 27, c Baker, W. H Barler, M ..38, c 38, i Cook, J Cook, S .16, i .16, i Cox, G. W .27, c Clayton, \V. H .28, c Barler, L. A 38 i Cowan, M .16, i Carter, W. T .28, i Bell, W. W Bowman, T. H ..38, i S8 i Cowan, J Cowan R .16, i 16, i Cockrill, E .28, i Con way, J. B 28, i .29, i Bulkley, S. E. 39 c Carman E .17, i Charles, H Badley, W. Barler, H. S ..39, c b9 i Caswell, (T. A Collet, D. W .... .17, i 17, i Cleveland, L P 29 c Coon, Rev. J. M.. . 29, c Bean, B. H 39 1 Campbell, W .18, i Coon. Rev. R. W .29, c Beekman, C. T. B.. Best, B ..39, i 39 i Cavender, J. 8 .18, i Clendinen, M. W Chandler, B. B .29, c 29, i Clark, J .18, 1 Bishop, L. F Bradt, W. H ..39, i 39 i Clark, Rev. C. C Cook, J .18, i 18, i Cole, C. B Corey, J. A .29, i 29 1 Brown, J. J ..39, i Cornelius, N Campbell, A Clark, J .18, i .19, i 19, i Corey, T. B Cook, C. L .29, i 80 c Buck, C. P Badger, 8. D ..39, i . A 1 *, c Cole, Rev. A. L .30, c Barry, F Bevan, A . .40, c 40, C Connor, W. G Cornelius D .19, i .19, i Clement, L. E .30, C Cord, H. E 30, C 30, c Burnap. H. T . .41), c Chappell, J .19, i Cowan, J. R Barler H. S 40, i Clayton G 19 i Clawson. L. J . . 30 i Barler, R ..40, i Corey, A. W .19, i Cooper, Rev. M. M . . . .30, i INDEX. 49 Cox, G. W... .30, c Cassel, E. J... .41, c Dishon, C. B 23, i 23, i 23, 1 24, i 24, i 24, i 24, i 24, i 25, i 25, i 25, i , 25, 1 25, i 25, i 25, i !i5, i 26, i 26, i 26, c 26, i 26, i 26, c 26, i 26, i *7, e 27, i 27, i 27, 1 27, i *8, c 28, C 29, 1 29, i 29, C 29, i 30, c 30, i 30, i 30, 1 30, i 30, i 30, i 31, t .31, 1 31, i 31, 1 Craig B. M .30. i Carr, H. A 41 i Dunlap J O Clement, E. A .31, i Cheseldine, J. K 41, i Dorsey, O. O Colby, J .31, i Clayton. C. E .41, i Davis, E G Colby, J. H .31, i Coggeshall, C H 41, i Davis, J. M . .. Cressey, B. W .31, i Cook, H Covell, M. E ..., .41, i .41, i Davis, J. W Delaplaine, S. J...... Curtis, F .31, i Cressey, Bev. F. B... Carr, H M .32, c .32, i Cowan, N .41, i Dorsey, E Crane, M 41, i 42 c Duncan, W. H .32, i Castle L. M Dutton, L Chatham W 32, i Crawford, Bev. W. J. Chapman, T. L .42, c .42, c Dawcke, A Davison, E. D Cook, W. J .32, i Cox, E 32, i .32, t .33, i .33, 1 Coon, J. J .42, C Demint, A. K Cole, Bev. A. L Chapman, J. F Coon , A. M Chance, M .42, C .42, i Dorsey, P. H Dorsey, W. B Clinton, J. B Chance, E .42, i Duff, W Coard, Bev. F. M.... Cockrell H. J .33, i .33, i Chapman, A. A .42, i Dillman, J. W.... Cole, G . . 42, i Duckells, W. B... Coffin, M. J .33, i Comptoji, J. B .42, i DeBow, S. Q, Dunlap, C. J. . .. Coffin, C .33, i Cooley, L 42 i Colon eous, C. P .33, i Cummins, L. A . 42, i Dunn, J .... Condon, B. G .33, i Cunningham, A. C. . Carter, Bev. J .42, i 43, t .43, t .43, c Dorsey, B. B Cooper, C. H. .33. i Dorsey, J Cowan, W Curtis, S. O... .33, i .33, i Crawford, Bev. W. J Campbell, G Dorsey, T Dodge, G. B Cox, C. E 34, c Collawn, W. S .43 C Dean, W. C. . . Cadwallader, J. K Carr, E. H .34. i 34, i Coffey, T. .43, c Dings, W Connor C W 43 i Dishon, A. G Carter, B. A .34, 1 Cartright, W. H. 44, i Duckels, T. . . Chappell, D. A .34, i Chapman, C. P 44, i .44, i Dishon, H Charles, W. H .34, i Cox, J. F Dandridge, C. F Congdon W\ .34, i Cole, C. V. 44, i Denby, P. L Cundall, W. A Cressey, Bev. E. K. . Clawson, O. J . . . .34, i .35, c 35, c Clarke, E, G Camp, J. B .44, i .44, i Denby, T. B Darrow, C. B Cartwright H. M 44, i Darneille, W. A Christy, D .35, i Cameron, G. M .44, i Delano, Bev. A. J. . . . Davis, F Conklin. A. D .35, i Cain, J. W .44, 1 Cowey, W S .35, i D 14 i Davis, H Cressey, Bev. G. A.. Cullimore, T. M. J.. Cox, J.C .35, i .35, i .36, c Debaun, G. A Duckells, E. G Dorsey, T. B Gulp, J.F J-6, c Dye.D. E Gulp, J S .36, Day, I .14, i Davis, Bev. H. B Coggeshall, A. L Cole, H. C 36, i .36, 1 Davis. S Diamond, P Diamond, E 16, i 16, i .16, i Davidson, F. J Davis, J. T Cain, Bev. W. A Catchpole, Bev. L. G Chambers, S. N Gulp, C. B 37, t .37, t 37, C .37, c Diamond, E. J Dunmore, E Davis, S Davis, M 16, i 16, i 17, i 17, i 17 i Deck, Bev. J.S Delay, C. S Dickson, G Dodge, E. A 33, 1 33, i 33, 1 .33, i Casey, C Clement, F. A Colsou, A. G Craven, E.W .37, i 37, i 37, i .37, i Dabbs, B Dodson , E Dorsey, M Dougherty J 18, i 18, i 18, i 19, i Drake, N. S Duff, W. H Delano, Bev. A. J Davison, J. M .33, i 33, i .33, t .34, c Cuppy, W. T Cottey, Bev. T. C... . . Cain, Bev. W. A Challacom.be, J. W. Grumpier, B, B Cleveland, G. M.... 37, i .37, c 3S, i .38, i 38, 1 .38, c Dye, M Davis, A. B Durno, J Dodge, J. B Dorsey, N. M Durno, J 19, i 19, C 19, i 19, c 20, i .20, i Daniels, A. L Dean. Bev. W. K Draper, B. F Day, Bev. H. M Dean, Bev. H. M. .. De Maranville, Bev 34, i .34, i 34, i 34, c .34, t Cole, A. B Cole, O. G Connover, J. B Castle, L. T Coggeshall. C. H Gates. L. M 38, i 38, i 38, 1 39, C .39, c .39, i Dodge. E Dinguid, M. N.; Dobyns, J. M Davis, C H. H Dunlap, J Davis, J. W 20, c 20, i 20, i .20. i 20, i .', i F. M Drury, P. M Dubois, F. T Dubois, J. K Deck, G. M Dickson, M 34, t 35, c 35, c 35, C 35, i 35, i Coflfey, Bev. T. C Carter, Bev. J... .39, i 40, t .40, C Davis, S Dtmmodk T 22, i .22, i 99 f Dorward, Bev. W. H. Dutro, J. H .35, i .35, i Cole, E. E Campbell, C 4!), C .40, i Davis, G. B Delaplaine, J. S 22, i .22, i Drake, Bev. D. H Davis, D. C .36, c .36, i Comer, A Cooper, J. E... Covel, J. T .40, i 40, i .40, 1 .40, C Dickson, B. F Dickson, Bev. J.T... Dougherty, W. L.... Darr, M 22, i ..22, i .22, i .22, i Dripps, C. F Drake, Bev. D. H Dry B M .. .. .37, t 37, i DeBolt, W .38, C Curry, J. A ..40, i .49, i Douthit, I. S 22, i Dunnesran, J. E. .. .88, i 50 INDEX. Draper, S , 38, c Edwards, F.W 33, i Evans, J. 33, i Eagan, A . 34, i File, W. F... ...35, i Floyd, G. W 35, i Dannel, J. P 38, Davis, W H 38, Floyd, S 35, i Davis, P. B... ...39, c Elwell, W. E 34, i Evans, B. H. 34 i Ford, W. F 35, i Flagg, A M 35, c Dannel, OF 39 Davis, W. H 39, Elton, Rev. E. N 35, t Emerson, C. E 36, c Edwards, E 36, i Foree, S. B 35, i Davis, J. B 39, Dooling, J 39, Fuson, Rev. S. K 37, t Foulon, I. D 37. c ' Dooling, W. 39, English, Rev. J. B 38, c Elble, J. L 38, i Edmonson, Rev. J.B..39, c Ely, W. B 39, i Fisher A. W 37, i Douglass , S. P 39, ' Downey, J. J 39 Foley J C 88, c Farnsworth J 38, i Drape, F. C 39, Ferguson, W. H 38, i Duncan, J. C 39,1 Enos, W H 40, i Fairman, C. E 39, c Drape, B G 40 i Erwin PS. . 40 i Ferguson R. M 39, i De Pry, B. M. .. 40 i .English, Rev.J. B 41, t Elble, M . ... 41, i Fisher, G. W 39, 1 Ford, L B 40, c Davis, J. P. . . 41, i Davis, E. H 41, i English, E 42, c Finity, F. C 40, i Dean, H. S 41, i Elble, J. B 42, i Francis, C. H 40, i Denny, E. C 41, i Erwin, J. D 42, i French, M. D 41, i Delaney, S M 42, i English, E 43, t Fielding, Rev. D. H..42, c Ferguson, F. E 42, 1 Davis, J. G. T 42, c English, B 43, c Dannel, M. J 42, i English, L . ..43, c Forman, W. F 42, i Deterding,. E. F 42, i Elwell, E. G 43, i Ehrler, F.J 44, i Fairman, W. L 43, c Fairman, G. E 43, c Dougherty, Rev. G.G..42, i Drape, L. W 4&, i Earp, S. E. .. 44, i Field L. N 43, i Drew, J 42, i Elble, J. B. .... 44, i Forster, W. A 44, i Dodge, T. S. 43 t F Foss, J. . . . . .15, i Forrest J S 44, i Draper, A. N 43, c G Gee.C 15, i Gillham J P. 15, i Dye, G. E 44, i Douthitt, F. J 44, i Dunn.J.M 44, i Dunn, M. A 44, i Farwell, J 17, i Farwell G 17 i E Earnest. A. 14, i Eads, M. ! 14, i Flood, Rev. N . is) t Gorin E: 15, i Frost Rev J M 18 t Gillham S 15, i Frost, Rev. "W. M.....18, t Fox, C 18, i Frost, A. P. . 18, i Gutherie, C. S 15, i Green, A 16, i Gillham, N. P 17, i Edwards, N. W 14, i Finch, B 19, i Flood, J 19, i Godfrey, J 17, i Gooch, J 18, i Edwards, B. S 14, i Engle, W . . 14, i Freeman, Rev. W.W..21, i Fruit, J 21, i Green, E 18, i Engle, J 14, i Godfrey, C 18, i Engle, A 14, i Fruit, W 21, i Gardiner, Rev. H. A.. 20, c Gerry R 20, i Everett, J ... 15, i Freeman B. S 21 ,c Estabrook, J 18, i Fishback, J 22, i Gillham, J. J ...20, i Estabrook. J 18, i Fox, F, W 22, i Gordan, Rev. H 20, i Edwards, N. G 19, c Freeman J ... 22 i Green R. S 20, i Evans, G .19, i Ferguson, F. H. .23, i Giddings, E. D 20, i Elwell, E 19, i Fay, W 24, c Greathouse, G 21, i Evans, \V 19. i Evans, E S . 20 .1 Fry, E. M 24, i Fisher, P. J 25, i Greathouse W 21, i Gilbert, S 21, c Evans, J 20, i Edwards^ W. G 20, c Edwards, B. E 20, c Foster, G. J 25, c Field, J 25, c Ford, T... ...26, 1 Green, C. C 22, i Gillham I. T 23, c Gregory, B. L 23, c Ellston, W 20, i Frick.H 26, c Foutch W W 26, c Griffin, M 23, c Goff H. M 23, i Edwards, F. C. 21 i Edmonson, Rev. J. B..21, c Elliott, J. J 22, i Edwards, S. B. 22 i Field, Rev. H. L 27, c Fry, J. F 28, i Flick C H 29, i Griswold, G. L 23, c Greene, B. F 23, i Gilbert G 24, c Elliott, J. R 22, i Frost, G. R 29, i Francis, N A .. 30, c Gill.J.L 24, i Goff. R. M 24, i Estabrook. A 23, i Edwards, P. J 23 c Posdick Rev. L 30, c Gallaher, T 25, i Edwards, C. L. 23, i Ford J. R ... . 30, i Griswold, L. P 25, i Emerson, F.... ...23, i Ferguson, G.R 31, c Gultzweiller, J 25, i ' Eldrid, J. L . 25, i Ford J R . 31, c Ground, O. B 25, 1 Edwards, W. W 27, c Floyd Rev. C. T ... 31, i Glenn, J. A 2i, i Emerson, G. C 27, i Flick, O. J 32, c Gassett. N. F 26, i Evans, R. S 27 i Francis J. K 32, i Guild, Rev. G. P 26, c Earl, E. P.. 28, 1 Fultz, G. R 32, i Glenn, D 26, i Etherton, H 28, i Ellis, W 29, i Ferre, G 33, i Foster S G. . 33, i Gilbert, W. B 26, c Gill, E. S 26, i Kills, Rev. F. M 29, c Foster, H. N 33, i Fraser, W 33, 1 Gill, W. W 26, i Gutzweiller, P 26, i Entrekin, F. M 30, i Edwards, F. W 31, i Floyd Rev C T 33 t Gelder. J... ...27. 1 Kd wards, N. G ....31, i Flagg R H . .34, clGlore, O. . 27 i Evans, S. E 32, c Fleming, A. L 34, ilGarretson, J. M 27, c Edwards, G. W 33, 1 Floyd, K 34, 1, Geery, H. T... 28, c Edwards EL 33 i Kleld. Rfiv. TT T, 34. t.l Glenn. W. .T . 28. a INDEX. 51 Garrctson, W. T.. . ..28, Hopkins, J ...15, Hart, A. F 29 i Glenu, J. F. C . .28, Howard, J 15 Hart J C 29 1 Greene, Rev. T. W.. ..28, Hutchingson, A.... . . 15, Harris B P 2't i (liliham, G. J ..28, Haskell, E . 16, Hastings, C H >') i Gallaher. Rev. H. M Gelder, J ..29, ..89, Hull, S Higham, E. C ..1C, ..17, Hobbs, J. M Houck, J. M... ..29,' i ..29, i Glenn, W. T .29, Higham, S ..17, i Hodge, J. D 30 c Gillhausen, F. S ... ..2<), Hemstead, E ..18, Henderson, C. .. 30 c Gonterman, J. H... .29, Haley, A. H 18 Harwood R H 30 i Gillliam. J. H .30, Harrington , J ..18, Hurlbut, W. L. 30 c Griffith, J. P .30, Haskell, Rev. S.... ..18, Harriss, J. E 30 c Grey Rev. R. F .30, Hedge. A. . 18 Hicks Rev H R 30 C Gregg C ..30, Hibbird, D 18 Hoiles C D "31 ' C Griffin A .30, Hibbard, G 18, Hays, H. H 31 1 .81, c Higham, J . 18, Hauck, J. 81 ' i Gill C H 31, Holmes, J. . . 18 Halcomb A C 31 1 Gaskill, T. J .32, Hart, H< 19, Hicks, Rev. H R 32 t Gillham, L. O .32, Hart, H.... ..19, Harper, J 32 i Glass, A. B .32, Hay, J. A ...19, Hastings, T 32 i Gaskill I. N 33, Healey, J. H 19 Henderson J 32 1 Gillham, N. P .33, Higham, J. L... ..19, Herold, W. W... 32 i Goldsbv B. F 33, Hope, A. W 19 Hoag, M. L 32 i Grant Rev. W. J .33, Howard, A. J 19 Hight, B. F 33 C Greene, J. H .33, Hull, W. T . 19 Hill, G. W 33 c Garretson, P .34, Hunter, T ..19, Hodge, W. D. . 33 c Grimes. J. K. P .34, Hundley, W. B ..19, c Houghton, A. N... 33 c Gibson, Rev. R .34, t Haroley, A. T ...20, Hamlin, W . 33 Grey, Rev. R. F Garton, Rev. R .34, t .35, i Hay, T Hayden, W. H ..20, c ..20, c Harris, J. S... Hart, J. T .33, 33 Gillham, I .35, i Handshy, J ..20, Head, A 33 .35, i Howland G. H ... .20 i Henderson E 33 Green. A .35, i Harrison, F. T ..20, Hendon, E. H. .. .33, Griffin G. W .35, i Hume, M. H . 20, Hill, P. M .. 33 Glass E. B .35, c Hazard. C. P . .21, c Hord, L. . . 33 Gunning, R. C .35, i Henderson, J ..21, Hall, F. O 34 Glass A C .36, i Hardy, I. E 21, c Hardcastle, D. 34 i Grey E. C 36, i libbard, J. H . .21, c Howard, H 34 C Garton, Rev. R .37, t Hill. J.S ..21, i Hungate, J. H... 34 i Gregory, Rev. C. W. . Garrett, T J .38, c .38, 1 Hibbard, H. G Hill, S. G ..21, 1 ..22, i Hill, Rev. F... Haigh, J .35, t 35 c Gates W F 38, i Humbert, C 22 i Henderson, A. 35 i Gere F .... 38, i Hundley, J. B 22, i Hill, G. W. .. 35 i Gates. J. M 38, i ..22. i Hoisington, C. F. . . 35 i 39, c Hancock W. P 22, i Elord, L 35 i Gibberson E. C 39, i Harkness, H .22 i Eartman, Rev. J. H 36 t Graham W. 39, i Higham, A. B .22, i Hobbs, Rev. C A... 36 c Greene W. R .39, i Hopps, J. B .23, i Hayden, Rev. C. A. . . 37 t Greene, R W Greer J. H .39, i 39, i lowell, Rev. D. M.. Harkness. E. R. . . . .i!3, i .23, 1 Hobbs, Rev. C. A... Harley, T. S .37, t 37 C Grey, E. M 40, c Harrison, W. H .23, i rlarman, A. L 37 i 40, c Hill, G. R 23, i tlearne, W. H . 37 i Gardiner E. M ... 40, i Henderson, S. B. . . . .23, c Joward, Rev. J. F 37 c Gaines Z. T 40 i Hardy, W. T 23, i Hall, W E 38 i Greer J G. E 40. i Hill, R. B 2:5, i iTarris, B H...... 38 i Ground M. 40, i Holliday.C .23, i Parting, H. B 38 i Garland N M. 41, i Howard, C 23, i 3ancock, A. C. ... 38 c Grey H. L. 41, i Hardcastle, J. C. . . . .24, c lermon, J. S 38 i Grey G. M 41, i Harrison, S. B .25, i 3icks, A. F 38 1 Greene, R. W 41, i Hopkins, E. M .25, i Jolaway, J. W.... 38, 1 Green J J 41, i Hunter.G 26, i rlomeyer, H. A 38 i Green G. H 41, i Hobbs, Z. W .27, c Jomeyer, M C. . . 38 i Green, H 41, i Harrison, D. R 27, c Hopper, G. J 38, 1 Guilette E. L. 41, i Hastings. A. H 27, c Jussey, Rev. S 3H i Gee W S 43 t Hill, S .27, c Hamilton, J. J 3<) i Garr B W 44, i iarrison, P. Q, 27, i Hardin, J.W. ., 39* i Gee S. J .... 44, i Holden. J .28, c Hewitt, J 39 1 Gillham, N. A 44, i Hancock, W. P .28, i loughton, G... 39, i Gillham F. F 44 i Hew, S. L 28, i lowes, G. W... 39 i Gillham, W. L 44, i Harris, J. C .28, i luff, W. R 3D, i Harlow, A. T Henderson, B. P .28, c 28, i toward. Rev. J. F. . . Hamilton. A 40, t 40,* i Garrison, S. B .28, C Hammond, J. B 40, i Halstead, M ; . . . 16, i Hilliard. G. W .28, C Harrison, L. D 40, i Hathaway, S 15. i Hays, W. W .28, c larris, W. W 40, i Hathaway, J 15, i Howell, T. J 29, i leminover, A 40, i Holmes, Rev. G IS 1 Hoxsey T. J 29 i Herwig, H. A 40, 1 Hopkins, W 15 i Hughes, T . . . .29 c Hirrirod, M , . , , , . 40, i 52 INDEX. Himrod, M ..40, i Johnson, M. W .26, C Kelley, J. A .37, C Homey-er , A L Homey er. H A 40, i ..40, i 40 i James, E. C Johnson, E. G Joesting, C L 27, c .27, C 27. i Kendall, G. J Kane, R. E Keeler, J. J .38, i .39, i Hume, B ..40,' i Johnson, H .28, i Kinley.J.J 40, i Hurst, J. W Hurst, R 40, i ..40, i Jackson, J. E Jarvis, W.W 29, i .29, i Kirby, M. E Keating, W .41, C Haight, B. A 41, c Johnson, F. M 31, i 32 J Keith, J. C Kirby, C. H ..41, i Howell E S 41 C Jones AV^ M 32, i Kendall, H.N .42, C Hall.C.'E Harris C N 41, i 41 i Johnson, R. L 33, i 33, i Kendall, D. R Kendall, R. M 42, C .42, C Haydon, C.E 41, i 41 i Jones, W. M Johnson \V 33, i .34, i Kendall, D. R Kittenger, D. M 43, i .44, i Howell, A. J Hull I M ...41,' i 41 i Judd E R 34 i Kendrick, A. J .44, i 35, i Kendall, L. H .44, i Hurd A G 41 i Jamieson, A. R.f... Jarrell, Rev. W. A.. Johnson. O. M Jones, L. S Jackson, Rev. J. L.. Jutting, H. W .86, i .36, i| .36, i .36, i .37, c .38, i Kell,O. V .44, i 42 c Kirsch, G. F .44, i Hoffman M. J..... Hussey, Rev. S Hardwick, J. P... Harris C W ...42, C ...42, t .. 42, i 42 i L Lawrence, C ..15, i .15, i Harris, G. B ...42, i Joslyn, K. E. S 40, C .40, i Harrison, S A .. . . 42, l Joesting. E. B . 15, i Hessenower. H. . . . . 42, i Johnson, T. N .41, C 15, i Hewitt, W. R Heinrich, J ...42, i 42, i Jones, M. E Jones, S. E .41, i .41, i .15. i 15, i Hood, W. S ...42, i Johnson, G. T Jones, E. S .43, c ..44, i Long, L Lamb R P ..10, i 16, i Hood S 42 C Hulbert, G, F ... 42, i Jinkenson, H. M. . . . .44, i .16, i Hulbert, F. L ... . 42, i Jolly, C. W .44, i ..16, i Huston, J. J ...43, c Joesting , A. W K Kelley. R.M... .44, i .15, i ..16, i Hudson, A. C ...43, C Lowe R ..16, i Hoblit, A L . 44, i ..17, i Herman, J. J ...44, i ..17, i Hewitt. F. ...... . . 44, i 17, i Hart, M. H. . . . .44, i Kidder, A .16, i Lathy' J B . 17. i Hoblit, J. W 44 i Kistler, H ..16, i . 18, i Hanes, A. L 44, i King, H .18, i Lincoln, C. J Lippincott C. L . . ..18, i .18, i Hodge, E, M 44, i Kimbal, L. R ..19, i Hildebrand, J ...44, i Kirtley, Rev. C. F.. Kirtley, L ..19, i ..19, i Loomis, H ..18, i ..19, i I Isabell J . .. 15, i Kimbal R. H ..19, i Lemen, Rev. B. F.. ..19, i ..19, i Kistler, H ..19, i Kennett, D. H ..20, i ..19, i Isabell, A 15, i ..22, i Lester *T B 20, i Isabell, M ...15, i Keirsey, E ..22, i Long M. H ..20, i Isabell, W ...15, i Kay, W.T ..22, c ..20, i Iverse, J... Israel, 1. G ...16, i ...22, i Kerr, D Ketchmin, J. G ..22, i ..23, l ..20, i Lathy W. K ..21, i Ives C 31, C ..23, i Luckett L H. 21, i Irwin A. M. ...33, l ..23, C Loveland, W. A. H. Land, M Lemen H ..22, i ..22, i ..22, i Ives, B. ...35, i Kay, J. R Kellenberger, G. S.. Kay, C. M ..24, c ..24, C ..25, C Irwin, J L ...35, C Ingham, Rev. J. E. Ingham, G. C Irwin, J. L ...36, t ...38, c 38, C Lebold G ..22, i Kennedy, W Kirkman.J. T ..25, i ..25, l Loomis W B . 23, c Leach J K ... . 23, i Ireland, R. M ... .. 38, C Kinman. Rev. E.... Kay P, L ..26, l ..24, i J Journey, N. E 15, i .26, C Lippincott T P. 21, i Kinman, Rev. L. P, Kay.O.M ..28, C ..28, C Lovejoy, E. P Loomis H. J ..24, i ..24, c Kingdon, Rev. J. .. ..28, C ...24, i Jewel, C Jewel, H ...18, i ...18, i King, J. M Keene, Rev. A. C.. Keen, L. C Kellenberger, C ..29, i . .30, C ..30, i ..30, i Lake, W. H Leverett, W ..24, i ..21, C Jencks, J Jennings, G.W. K Johnson, P. D.... .. 18, i Leverett, J. W.. . .24. C ...19, i ...19, 1 Lawrence, C. C ..25, i Kingsley, J. P ..30, i Lemen, R. W ..25, i Jackson, J. S Johnstone, J ...20, c ....20, Kline, Rev. G Kendall, L. O ..31, C 31, c Larue. I ..26, i Leach, D. D ...26, i Jones, O. T Johnson, E. V ... -...21, C 22, King, C. V Kay, I ..31, i ..32, l Lacy, J. H . .26, i Leach, J. F 26, i Jones, F ...22, Knight,.J H .32, '. Long, W. W ..26, i Johnson, W, F 23, Koeck, J 33, i Lumpkin, J. \V... . 26, i Johnson, Rev. R. Jones, H. C S..24, ....24, Kline, Rev. G Kingsburg, J ..33, t ..35, i Long T. M ..27, C Lemeri, J ...27, C Jewett S . L 25, C Kirby J H ..35, i Lemen, R S .... ..27, c Jackson, Rev. J B Jones, J. H ....25, < 26 Keith, Rev. T. J Ketch urn. F ! . ..36, 1 36 i Lawton, Rev. J. P. Link. D. S... . .27, C . .27, C INDEX. 53 Long J. W .27, c Moore, A 16, i Maple, Rev. J C 27, c Littell, S. B Larkin, E. F Lewis R P .28, c .28, i .28, i Moore. E Moore, H Moore , W . . . 16, i 16, i 16, 1 Me Dow, A Monagan, J Moore J D. . . 27, i 27, 1 28, c 28, c 29, i 29, i 29, i 29, i 29, i 29, i 30, i 30, i 30, i 30 i .28, i Moore, W 16. i Moses, Rev. W. E Lurton, J. P .28, i Marsh, W .17, i Mize, Rev. J. H Lowe Rev T. S .28, c Martin, A Moore,! Manning W. W .18, i .18, i 19, i Mauzy, H. C Morean, D. A Leverett. C. W Leverett W. W .28, c .28, c Maxcy F Lemen C .29, i Manning, M. M.... Marsh, D .19, i .19, i McReynolds, S. N... Messick, J. T Leverett, G .29, c Lawson E C .29, i McLoud, W 19, i .19. i Montgomery, R. W.. Macauley, E. W McGee, T. W Long S. H .30, i Mooney, J .30, i Mooney, M. Morrell A ... .19, 1 .19, i Lamothe G. H .30, i Mitchell, W. F Lappin, Rev. J. M. . Lawson , \V. B .... .30, i .30, i Moore, J. S JMunson H. D . . 19. i 19, i Mulberry F. J Mize, Rev. T. S 30, c 31, c 31, c 31, c .31, i Lahee, E. H Lamothe, G. A .31, c ..31, i Murray, J Mason, H .19, i .19, i Maupin, I. W Merriwether, F Lawton A. T 31, i Merriam H. M ... 20, i 20, i Mills, C. F Little, P. I .31, i Morris R S Maxcy, J. P Lemen, E. H . .32, i Morrison , T. W 20, i 20, c 20, i McKeuzie, D. C 31, i Lappin, Rev. J. M.. Lemen, E. C .32, t . 33, c Metcalf R. L. Mooney, M.... 31, i Murray C. A Moore, L 31, 1 32, t 32, t 32, c Leeper, R. B .33, i Mauzy, J. A .20, i Moore, Rev. J. S Lewis, C. E Lowe, C Lawson, "W. B .33, i ..33,1 34, c Mix, A Morris, R. F Metcalf L. S .20, i .20, i 20, c .20, i Moore, Rev. J. E Martin, J. R. P Mason, D. P.. .... 32, i Loomis, J. H... .34, c Moon,T Mason, R. W Lee, I. V ..34, i Maderia, Rev. A. D. Murray, H. C .21, C .21, c 21, 21, i McAdams, L. Y McBride, J. C McKernan, J. T .32, i .32, i 32, i Lewis, E . .34, i Lewis A ..34, i Lewis, L. W ..34, i Maderia A . . . . Mills, A. M .32, i Lemen, Rev. J. G.. Leverett, J .... ..35, c ..35, c Martin, O. C .21, i Montgomery, T. J. . . Moore, J. C .32, i .32, i Moffatt Rev. A 21 c Lyon, A. J ..35, c Martinez, J. D Moore, T .21, i .21, i Muzzy, F. J Manning, J .32, i .33, i Larew, W ..35, i Loer, F ..35, i Moore M T 21, i McElvaine, A. C .33, C Long, G. F ..35, i March G S 22, i McAdams, C .33. i Lemen, L. E .... . 36, i SSJ, i Merrill, C 33, i Longworth, D. N... Lovett, E. H ..37, i . .38, c Miller J A. M . 22, i Miller, J. G .33, i Miller, H. G Miles G. W .22.1 2-2, i Miner, C. F Moore, J .f3, i 33, i .33, i Leggett, L. H ..38, i Love, J. L . 38, i 22, i Moore, J Lemen, T. A... Lamothe. F. M ..39. c 40, i Mann, W.H .22, i 22, i .22, i Moore, O. T .33, i McNama, E .34, i Lapp, C ..40, i Mathews, J. F McOmber, G .34, 1 Limberg, M. L. . . . 40, i McClure M 22 i Messick, J .34, i Lathrop, Rev. C. R. Lamothe, C. A ..41, c 41, i McDaniels C 22, i Miller, E. R .34, i Meldrum W F. 22 i Miller, O. A. E .34, i Lewis, I. J 43, i Metcalf A. L. F 22, 1 Montross, O. W .34, i .35, c Lemen, W. W ..44, i Morgan A. E ... 22, i Leigh, F.. 44, i 23 i Masters , J . \V .35, i Lemen, G. C . 44, i 2-'$, i McCleary , A 35, i .35, i Lewis, W . .44, i Mason B .23. c McCulloch.H. H M Mace. J . .15, i Moody A. W 23, i Milroy, T. D : .35, i Miller G. R .23, c Moore, J .35, 1 Metcalf J H 24 i Moore O T 35, i Marsh. E More L .24, c .24, c Moore, I. Morrell , D 35, i .35, i Mace C 15, i Martin A . 15, i Mosher G. S .21, c Morton, C. S .35, i Martin H 15, i McLauehliri I .24, i Motter, J. E .35, i Martin, N 15. i Metcalf J. D 24, i .21, i McArdle, Rev. G Maxwell, Rev. W.... Mills, H. E .36, t .3", t 36, c .3(5, c Messinger, M. O.... ..15, i Mumper, J Messenger P A .. . 15, i More C. E .25, c Morton, H Mullicin M ..15, t 15 i Morris, E Moore Rev. J. E Mitchell, R J Melton, G. W .36, c Morrison, J. L. D. .. Mullikln, M ..15, i 15, i Miner, J McKinney, J .25, c .25, C Miller, E. B, Moxom, Rev. P. S. . . Main, O .36, c .36, c .36, 1 Mason, P ..16,1 16 i Metcalf, F. W McVay W. H .25, C 25, i ..'.->. i 25, i Maxwell, J. H Maxcy, C. H. P MoClain, P ..16, i 16 i Moore, F. B Morrison, T. W Maxwell, W McAlnine. J. C .36| i .36, i McColley, T... ..16, i McGuire, J. H Miller, J. M 26, c< McFarland, D .98, < Mitchell, J .36, 1 .36, i Miller, H . .16, i Mills, I. F Mills S J 16, 'i 16 i Moore, S. T Murphy D. E 26, i! Moore, S. A a, il Mott. E .36, i Moore, J 16 i Mnrnhv. W. B. . . 917, i IMerrick, Rev. O. M. .37, t 54 INDEX. Millen A 37, 1 Newman, J. B 29, c Peak, J 21, i Northrup, Rev. H. H.29, c Norton, E. R 31, i Patterson, W 22, i Murphy B P 37 i Palmer, J. G. W 22, i Mason E A 38, i Nash, Rev. C.C 32, t Patterson, S. T 22, 1 McCoy' A B 38 i Naylor, Rev F 32, t Parsons, C.M 22, i Moore J 38, i Norton, W. T 32, c Newell, Rev. I. D....37, t Newell, M. A. 37, i Nisbett, T. P 37, i Newman, C 37, c Noble, J. J 39, i Peters, 22, 1 Mountain, Rev. J.... 38, c Mange, Rev. J. G 39, c Marlow W C 39, i Plympton.M 22, i- Palmier, G. W 23, i Pettingill, D. A 23, i Pomeroy, G. S. 23, i Peebles. S. S !23, c Perry, A. T 24, i McBride A. J 39, i Nevlin, G 40, i Maxwell T 40, i Newton, C 42, c Nan tk is, A 42, i Preston, J. W. 21, i Potts, J. G 24, c McCall W. F 40, i Nott, S.B 44, i O. Ogle, E 15, i Olcott, Rev. J. B 18, t Olive, N 18, i Pulliam, J. H 24, i Pettingill, E. W 25, i McCullom J T 40 i McReynolds, K 40, i Pettingill, O. H 25, i Pease, C. A 25, c Morton,' J. 1 40, i Mine, G. H 41, c Morton, F 41, c McUlure, M. G 41, i Potts, W. M 25, C Pennifll, J. J 25, i Pitcher, O. 26, c Peebles, L. M 26, i McMillen, G. A 41, i Mehagan, W 41, i Michaels, P. E 41, i Moore, D. J. O. H....41, i Mills, R. C 42, c Owens, H. V 20, i Owens, S. E 2', i Olcott G,. 21, 1 Owen, Rev. W '2, i Olden, W.P 24, i Perry, J. M 26, i Pope, D 26, i Pope,N 26, i Pease, Rev. G. A 26, c Padon, J 27, i Morrow, J. E 42, c Matthews, F 42, i Olden, L. M 24, i Orme, G. W 25, i Pipkin, J. H 28, i Pennifll J L> . V 9 i Mitchel. S. E 42, i Moberly, G. E 42, i Ormsby, F. L 28, i Orem, S.B 29, i Olmsted, S. S 31, i Pennington, E 29, i Peach, S. W 29, i. Pease, J. C 29 i Morse, F 42, i Murdaugh, O. P 4'<, i Mitchell, F. M 43. c Marshall, A. F 43, c Marshall, I. E 43, c Muhlemann, E. L 43, c Merchant, F. J 43, c Overholt, D. J 33, i Ogle, J. T 34, i O'Meara, R. W 34, i Ogle, Rev. A 35, t Overholt, C. A 35, i Ogle, J. P 37, i Overholt, 38, i Ogle,B.E 39, i Phinney, H. R 29, i Prunk, Rev. G. E 31, t Packer, Rev. J 31, c Pike. J 31, c Phillips, F 31, c Parks, W. S 31, i Phillips.E 31, i Palmer J M 33 1 Marsh, G. E 44, i Marsh, H A 44, i Maupin, E 44, i McCollom, W. J.......44, i McKee, C. H 44, i Oulson, J. G 39, c Olcott, L, 41, i P. Peach, J 15, i Palmer, C. L 33, i Paul, C 33, i Penix, J. J 33, 1 Perkins, C. 33, i Pettingill, H. S 33, 1 Packer, Rev. J 34, t Peach, E. A 15, i Place, Rev. J. J. W..34, t Parks, A H 34, 1 Morrill J S 44 i Peach, S 15, i Pope, W 15, 1 Post, A. F 15, i Peck, H. J 15. i McKee, F 44, i Michael, J. L 44, i McCov HP. .. 44, i Patton, W 34, i Phillips, T. H 34, i Polley, C.M 34, i Miedel, W 44, i Montgomery, P. H 44, i Morse, E. S 44, i Peck, R 15, i Peck,H 15, i Peck M. A 15, i Proudflt, S V 35, c Padon, H. H 35, i Parks, Rev. A. H 35, 1 ' N. Norton, E. J 15, i Pierson C 15, i Penning E J 35, i Palmer J M . 16, i Perrine, J. H 35, i Pettingill, H. S 35, i Palmer, Rev. E. J 16, i Pembroke R 16, i Pierce JO.. .. 35, 1 Norton, L. B 15, i Pease L 17 i Pierce, Rev. F. E.... 35, i Pool "W" H5 1 Norton, E. A 15, i Peck H . 17, i Newman, E IB, i Newman, M. J. . 16, i Noffinger, N. G 16, i Pritchard, Rev. W. J..17, i Pinckard,Rev.J. C. F.18, i Pinckard.Rev.P 18, i Palmier H 18 i Paiiick.J 36, i Patten, L 36, i Phillips, A. J ... . 3>>, 1 Noble, V 16, i Phillips J 36 1 Norman, W 18, i Pope J ' 18, i Polk J T. 36, i Norman, S 18, i Nims, N. N 18, i Prom, C 18, i Pease D 19, i Peterson, C. O 37, c Panick EH 37 1 Northern, R. Y 20, i Pease V ... 20, i Perrine, D. G. . . . 38 c Nichols, D. H 22, i Perry, Rev. H. G. B .20, i Palmer W S 20, i Pritchett AH 38 i Newell, G. 1 23, c Pritchett, G L. 3s i Noel, R. H. C 23, c Priohett N P 20, i Peak A L 39 c Neff, A. A 24, i Peck W. . 21, i Patterson, E. E 39, 1 Paul.P. H 39, i Peak, A. S 39, i Noel, J 24, i Pettingill, E. P 21, i Pears, J 21, c Peak, Rev R T 21, c Northern, R. Y 24, i Newell, Rev. I. D 26, i Newman, S. I -27, i Penning H 39 1 Prince W B 21, c Plnwmnn AT 4O c. Noyes W. H D 27 c Peck. H. M ...21. iiPost. Rftv. A.TT 40. o INDEX. 55 Primm, Rev. J. W.. Peters G. W ..40, C ..40, i 24 c Reed, W. H... .39, i Roberts Rev W^ 24 C Root, F. E .39, 1 .39, i 39, i 40, t .40, c Penniman A B ... ..40, i 24 i Regan, L. E Prewitt J M .40, i 24 i Roberts, W. J Pritchet't, F. M ..40, i Russell S G 24, c Roberts, Rev. C. B... Richmond, B. G Pritchett L. M .40, i Randolph A G 25, i Peck Rev G. C 41, c Robinson W J 25 i Keed, A. W .40, i 41, c Rumbolz,' R. W. P. . .25, i 26 c Roberts, F. S .40, i Palmer 'w 41, i Rohacek, J .40, 1 Pritchett D P 41, i Rider R' P 26 i Ryrie, J. A .40, i Proudflt. N. I. .41, i Robbin, D. W C .26, i Roberts, Rev. W. S. . Hoot, Rev.T. E .41, t .41, t Parker W L 42 i Robbing \\r g 26 i Pendleton, W. B Powell, J. W 42, i .42, 1 Randolph. W Rodgers, E 26, C .26, C Rhoades, W. M Reid, E. W 41, i .41, C Parsons, F. W Parsons, F. "W Pitts, J. J 43, t 43, c ..43, c Russell, J. D Randolph, M. C. F... Rhea, T 26, C .27, 1 .27, i Rhoads, A. W Richards, C. G Russell, B 41, 1 41, 1 .41, 1 Parker, F. W 43, c 43 C Robinson , R. G 27, i 27 i Rennick, J. W .42, c Palmer *G G 44 i 27 c Rennick, M. J .42, C 44, i 27 i Roberts, J. E .42, C Pollard H 44 i Rice J M 27 i Bowe, G. M .42, c Place J W 44 i Robards J D 27 i Ricks, M. J .42, C Q Quigley, C Quigley, W.C 15, i . .19, C Roberts 'c 27 i Roberts, M. E ..42, c Randolph, Rev.M.M .28, C 28 c Randolph, E. M .42, i Rhoads, S .42, 1 Rodemeyer, W Rodgers, W. H 28, l 28, i Rising, N Rood, M. C Russell, W. J 42, i 42, 1 .42, 1 Quigley, J. H Quick, J. W Quigley, W. M Quigley, J. T Quigley, H 20, i 21, i 24, i 35, i ..25, C Rice, R. M Rafferty, Rev. A. C Reynolds, T. L Rodgers, R .29, 1 .29, c 29, i .30, c Roberts, J. E Rhoads, E. C Ritchey, C. G Rood, F. D Robinson T M 43, t 43, C ..43, i 44, 1 44 i R Roe B . . . 15, i Ramsay, M. G Richardson, T. J Rodgers, H. P 30, i 31, c .31, c 31 i Rodgers, 'j Roberts, H. E..:... Reed, E. E 44, i 44, i .44, i Rutledge, E .44, i Rose, C. L ..15, i Roll M.S .31, i S Scandland, L. W.. Scarritt, M Scarritt A .18, 1 .15, i .15, i Rider, S ..15, i Root Rev M. 32, t Ross, C. E ..15, i Rigby, Rev. N. L.... Russell, A. H Russell, C.W Randolph J. M. ..32, c .33, i ..33, i ..34, i .34, i ..34, i ..84, i i 4 '} Rider, W. H Ross, E ..15, i ..15, i Russell, J ..15, i Rutherford, P. ..15, 1 Rhea, W. T Hichards, C Richardson, R Rodgei-s, N. R Russell A E . .. Scott, B Scott, W Scott, W Scott, W Scott M .15, 1 .15, 1 .15, 1 .15, i .15, i Rodgers, S. A ..16, i Reynolds, L Rice, P ..17, i ..17, i Rice, J ..17, 1 Rider, S ..17, i Reader, Rev. J. K.. Randolph, P. J Redlern J ..35, c 35 i Shackford, G.., 15, i ..15, i .15, 1 Riley, A 17, i Sharp, S Smith, J M Riley, R ..17, i . 35 i Roberts, Rev. G Rading, J ..17, 1 ..IS, i Rich, J.b Roberts, J Koney, W. R Rigby, Rev. N. L. .. Riggs, J. D. S Read, Rev. O. B Read, A. L Read.I. W Reid, W Ryrie J M .35, i Smith, Rev. J. B.... .15, i ..35, i 35, i Smith, H Smith, D Smith D. .15, i .15, i .16, i Rice, F ..18, j Riley, C ..18, i .36, t ..30,. c ..36, ..36, i 36, i Ray, S Rodgers, Rev. J. H. Riley, J ..18, i ..18. 1 ..19, i Smith, D .15, 1 Springer, Rev. E... Stacy, Rev . G Stevenson, B ..15, i .15, i ..15, i Riley, W Rice, J. F Ryrle, J. A ..19, i ..19. c . 20, i ..36, 37 c Stuart, W. H Scarritt. I ..15, i ..16, 1 Rice, E. Y Riley, W ..20, c 20, i Reed, Rev. M Reed W. E ..37, 37 Sharp, J . R ..16, i Somers J W . 16, i Roach, H. L . 20, i Rhea, T. T .... 37 Spaulding, D. A ..16, i Rose, L. J Roberts, Rev. C. B.. Read, Rev G.W.... Reed, Rev. H. C Head, Rev. I. W.... Read, Rev . .1. C ... ..37, c ..38, c ..38, C ..38, .38 Starr, W ..16, i Rodgers, A F . .22, C Starr, L Staunton, M. A ..16, i ..16, i Rodgers, J. M... Handle, J. M Reed, A ..22, C ..22, i .22, i Street, C Smith, J ..16, i ..17, 1 Rader, W. A ..23, i Rhoads, M.D Robertson, J. C Regan, Rev. W. W.. Roberts, Rev. W. S, Head H. L ..38, ..38, ..38, C ..38, c .;;s ( Smith, S. M Sickle, J ..17, i ..18, i Russell, J. A Rodgors, W. L. .23, 1 23 C Smith Hev. J S. .. ..18, i Russell, W. H ...23, i Stamps, C Stearns, A ..18, i ..18, i Ritenour, J. R . .23, C Handle, I. B 24 i Roberts W, J. H. 38 C Seeley C ..18, i Rattan, 1). N ..'2-1, i Root H. T . 38 c Shemuel, J ..18, 1 Rice, W. M 24 i Read. H. P. . . 39 Sidle. E... ..18, i 56 INDEX. Sidle J 18 i Simmons, I. C 27, i Shaffer, G. D 35, i Sweet E 18, i Smith, S. J 27, i Shaw.G H 35, i Somers, J. . .18, i Steenstra, Rev. P 27, c Sanders, R. R 28, i Simmons, C 35, i Slater P 19 i Smith, F. W 35, i Smith J. ii 19 i Smith, O 28, c Stahl, C. S 35, i Smith, J. J 19, i Slater, S 28, i Starne, M 35, i Smith G 19 i Stocker. G. W 28, 1 Stifler J. B 35, i Smith M 19 i Stout, J. M 28, i Stryker.J.V 35, i Staples, C. E ... 19, i Sawyer, Rev. J 28, c Stifler, Rev. J. M 36, t Shook J M 19 i Scott, J W 29, i Stifler, Rev. W. H. . . .36, t Smith, W. A 36, c Stedman, Rev. W. H.36. c Stookey, L 36, c Simpson, J. K 19, i Spence, B. F 29, i Squier, L,. P 29, i Smith, J. W 19, i Stockton, I. D 19, i Summers, W 19, i Staley Rev D 19 t S.mger, H. A a9, c Sparks, J 29, i Stephens, N 29, i Seeley, F 36, i Snedeker, S. J 36, i Spence, Rev. J 20, i Scrogin, Rev. J. M...20, c Shurburne HP 20 c Stone. H. A 29, i Sutton, A. Y 29, i Stout, J. C 36, i Sumner A 36, i Smith, C 30, c Stone Rev. E. A. . 37, t Shurburne E 20 i Stelle, M. C 30, c Shuff. T. A 37, i Smith, D . . 20 i Swift, Rev. J. W 30, c Smith, I. A 37, i Smith, M T 20, i Sawyer. A. H 30, i Stephens, J. A JJ7, i Starkweather, J. N.... 20, i Smith, A. J 20, c Smith, Rev. T. G.... 20, c Stewart, Rev. O. G. . .20, i Sherwood, G. H 21 c Smith, T. L 30, i Spurd, G. W 30, i Smith, W. S. D 31, t Sawyer, Rev. H 31, c smalley, R. C 31, c Stobbs, J. B 37. i Simpson, W. C ....38, c Shanklin, A. L 38, i Sims. J 38, i Sutton, W.H 38, i Smith, J. S 22, i Smith, W. E 31, c Sawyer, B. fe 38, c Souther, L 22, i Sage, Rev. E. G 31, c Schweppe, W. E 31, c Squire, J 31, c Sell,.!. M 39. i Snell, C. E 39, i Slack, M. 39, i Spauldlng, G 22, i Squire, R 22, i Stewart W- G 22 i Street, H. M 31, c Stanley, E .. 39, i Shannon, J R 22 c Sawyer, J 31, i Stewart, Rev. T. M. . . .39, c Sebastian F O . 39 1 Sherman, Rev. O. J.. .22, i Spaulding, J. S... . 22, i Simpson. J. N. . 31, i spillman. J. W 31, i ShealT, T. M 39, i Stanley R . . 22 i Stephen, W 31, i Shelton, E. K 39 1 Stewart, W J. 22 i Stocker, A. S 31, i Shelton. A. W 39, i Scott, R J. W 22, i Stookey, L. P 31, i Silver, G. W 39, i Settlemyers, G. F 22, i Shaw, S. A . . . 22, i Sloan. Rev. M. B 32, c Slafter, O. L . 39 i Sampson, H 32, i Sparks, W. D 39, i Simmons, C. F 22, i Shaffer. J. D 32, i Squier, G. H 39, i Simmons D. F .... 22 i Sherr, H.F 32, i Stark, A. M . 39 i Sullivan, T 22 i Silver, W. E 32, i Scrogin, A, J 40, c Smith, R K 23, i Smith, J. H 32, i Simpson, B. F 40, c Smith, E. W 23, i Smith, W.S.D 32, i Sawyer, C. E 40, i Spears H C .. .23 c Sweet, D. E 32, i Schweppe. E . . 40, i Stookey, S. J 23, c Stiller, Rev. J. M....32, c Stiller, Rev. W. H. . . .32, c Sanders N. J 33, i Scrogin. A. H 40, i Savage, J. P 24, i Slack, M 4(1, i Se^ar J. A 24 i Stacey. A .... 40 i Souther, W A 24 1 Sanders, J. W 33, i Steen.E 40 i Stewart.S. W 24, i Sherwood, T. A 24, c Severns T J 24 i Sanaers, C. W 33, i Scanland, L. H 33, i Schott, A 33, i Stillwell, R. T 41, c Sargent, C. S 41, c Schott, E. .... 41 i Smith, W K.. . 24, i Shaffer, G. D 33, i Sergent, F 41, i Smith M. F 24 i Shaffer, R. R 38, i Slefkes J. W. L .... 41 i Smith G. A 24 i Shaffer, W. H 33, i Simmons, R 41, i Sanders, E. P 25, i Sippy, J. L 33, i Snyder, C ..41, i Shaw, S M 25, i Shuey, V. II . 25, i Sisson, J. F 33, i Sisson, H 33, i Slighton, A 33 i Stock, F. S il, i Stubert, J. M 41, i Sturgeon R . .. 41 i Smith B G . 25 i Smith, S. R 25, i Stowe, M. H 25, i Smith, J. H 33, i Smith. P. E 33, i Sutton C W .. 42 i Seckman, Rev. D 42, t Sheaman. J. T 42, c Stuart, W. C 25, i Snedeker, O. A 33, i Stookey, M. T 26, c Spaulding, T. B 33, i Stahl, J.H 33, i Schaper, G. H 42, i Sparks, C. W 42, 1 Scott, R. S 26, i Scott W . 26 i Stocker, C. F . . . , 33 i Snow B ' 42 i Sharpe, S. H 26, i Sippy, W 26, 1 Sawyer, R. S 34, c Stewart, R. M 34, c Squier, F 4-2, i Squier, H 4-2 i Smith, R. J 26, i Sisson, J. F 34, i Squier, H. M 42. i Somers, G. W 26, i Stookey, J. M 26. c Smith, H. H 34, 1 Spurgeon, R. M 34, i Stahl, D. L 34, i Stallings, W. H 4'2, i Stout, E. F 4-2, i Stookey, V. A 26, c Stratton, N. L 42 i Smith, R. B ... 27, c Sawyer, Rev. H . . . 34, t Sage, E. C 43 c Scott, E 27, i Sanders, G. B 35, i Sage. S. M 43 c Stan ton, J. H 27, i Sawyer, W. S 35, i Stanley. T. A 43. c Slater T. A 27, c Sawyer, W. T 35, i Stelle, H G . 4:? c Sexton, T. E 27, c Silsbe, A 27, c Scanland, G 35, i Schwendener, J. S. . . .35, i Seward. J. B 35. i Stookey, O. V...' 43,' i Sanford, T. J . . 44 i Sanders, S. R 27, i Sr.honak. fl. F._ INDEX. 57 Stahl S A. D .... 44, i Thanbyah, Rev .35, c Wood J 16 i .44, Taylor, O. D .35, i Wright W R 16, i Schultz H ... .44, Terry, T .35, i .35, i Wright D 1(5 i Scott A F ... .44, Tighe, T Wright' A J6, i Steiner J. A .... .44, Tilbury, C .35, i Wright M 16, i Stookey M E 44, Travis, J. J .35, 1 Wright S 16 i Stookey, C. A T .44, i 15 i Thomas, Rev. C Tolman, Rev. F. W.. Tharp, F. D .36, t .36, t .36, i Wright. J... ..16, i Wendell, J E ..17, 1 Whitesides, G. W.. Whltesides L ..17, 1 17, i Turner, T. H .38, i Tuscher, F .38, 1 Waite, C ..IS, i Thomas, C. S Thomas, C. W J5, i .15, i Terry, A. O Terry, T. F .39, i 39, i Warren, C Williams, R ..18, i 18, i Thomas, J Thomas W.S Thomas, J Thomas. J Thilm, C Todd, J. B. S Tosler, W Town, W 15, i .15, 1 15, i 15, i 15, 1 15, i 15, i 15, i Tate, Rev. H. W.... Thomas, J. O Tate, Rev. H. W Thomas, J. B Tibbltts, H. M a p T P L ; Trabue, M. B .39, i .89, i 40, c 40, c 40, i 40, i 41, c .41, i Walker, W. R Williams, R Wood, J. L Wood, D Woods, C Walker, L Walker, D Walker C. 18, 1 18, 1 18, i 18, 1 18, 1 19, I 19, i 19, 1 Tichnell, J Tichnell, C Tichnell. D Taylor, J Tool, W. C Tolman, Rev. J. N.. Trabue, J 16, i 16, i 16, i 17, i .18, 1 .18, i .18, i Tyson, K. E Tindall.M.L Tolman, J. C Tyson, S. E Tyson, E. E Tucker, G. S Tonsor, C. F 42, c 42, i 42, i 43, t 43, t 43, t .44, i Willard, S. A Wilkinson, A Wood, J. S Wood, L..' Wooldridge, N Walker, D. H Webb, H. W ..19, C ,19, 1 19, i 19, i 19, i 20, 1 . 20, 1 Toomer, S Trabue, F 19, i .19. i U Underwood, E. L .39, i Withers, W. P 20, i Terry, Rev. J Tully, J .19, t .20, i Wallace, W. H 20, i Tryon, F Taylor, B. F 20, 1 .21, c Underwood, M. D. ... Ulrich, O .39, i .40, i Wells, I. L 21, C Trabue, E 21, i 22, i 22 i Underwood, R V Vanmeter, Rev. W.C Van Brunt J. W . Vaughn, J. P 41, i ..19, i 22, i 22, 1 Wood, H. D ..21, 1 Wright. P ..21, i Trabue, 'B 22J 1 West, Rev. C. N . . Wood S C ..21, C 22 i Trabue, J. H Tandy, A Tandy, J.E Terry, J. W 22, i 22, i 22, i .22, i Warren, I. P Walker, C.A Walker, S 2vi, i 22, i ..22, i Terry, W. B Torrey, W. O Tunnell, M. L Trible, J 2-2, i 22, 1 i3, 1 .2H, C Vaughn, S Van Ardale, J. A... Van Home, J. W.. Vancll F M 25, i ..29, i .23, i 31 c Wilder, E. D Williams, L. A. Williams, W. D i2, 1 22. i 22, i oo i Truscott, J Temple, W. H Turner E Q 23, c .24, i 24 c Vertrees, Rev. J. E. Vertrees.C.D .31, C .31, i .I',-), i .30, 1 36, i Woodson, J. M Wooldridge, H ..V2, 1 ..22, i Trumbull, C. W , Temple, J. S Trabue. J. W 24, i 24, 1 .24, i Visseriiig. J. P. G... Volk.H. B Voorhies, G. R Wallace, T R Weisner, W. O Wade, A 23, i .. 24, i 24, i Tuthill, G. W Tolman, Rev. C. F.,. Teasdale, P. G 24, i 25, c V5, i 2-1 1 Vallette, F. P Van Hooser, J. E.. Vallette, C. A 40, i .40, 1 .42, i Wendell, W. H Whitney, P. J Wildeman, J. C.... 24, 1 24, 1 ...2i, 1 Tschirch, Rev.J.K.E Thomas, G. D Truscott, G ..25,' i J6, C .26, c Vaughn, L. O W Webber, S... Wesley, S 41, i ..15, i .15, i Willis, J Weeks. Rev. R. H.. Wiswell, J. M, Wetfall S 24, i ..25, 1 25, i 25 C Teague, W. M Thompson, N. B ..27, i 28, i .28, i Whitaker, J. K. Wooldridge, H. T.. Wilcox J F 25, i ...25, i 26 C Teasdale, A. S Terry, Rev. J. W Terrell, J L .29, 1 29. C 29 c Whitney, W Westfleld.W Westfleld W 15, 1 15, 1 ..15, i Ward, J. R Ward, W 26, i ..26, i Trabue, I. H.... Turpln, W. J Triplett.T. M 30, C .31, C .31, i Westfleld, R Westfleld, M. A Wilson, J. C 15, i .l- r >, i .15, i Wilson, /. C Wooldridge. F. C. Wilcox, J. L, 26, 1 26, i ...26, c Talley, W. E 1 Tomlinsou, Rev.A.B .34, i ..32, t Waddingtou, T Walker, J 16, 1 . .!, i Williams, T. J Webb W E 27, 1 27 c Terrell. I Theuer, C .3?, c vvaiicer. u .33, i Warnack, F Hi, : , Hi, i 16 i Wetrnore, R Whipple, N. A ...27, 1 ...28, C Terry, H. C.' Turner T J 34, 1 Watkins. J. W 31 j Woub-a W ..l(i', i 1C) 1 Ware, A. W Weyhrich. P. G... 28, i ...28, i Titterlngton, Rev. I. ' 35, c Wilcox', J ..16, 1 Winters,.!. W Wise. 1.. N... ...28, i .. .2s, i 58 INDEX. Woods J H 28, c Wilson. G.R... Woodruff. C. E. L.... Wilcox, Rev. C 31, i 34, i 35, c 35, c 36, i 36, i 36, i 36, 3 36, i Widaman, E. B . .41, i Wiswell A 28, i Williams, G .41, i Wollam, B. F .28, i Witt, M. J .. .41, i Wagenseller, A. ... .28, i Wilderman, Rev.J.H White J. C Worden. G .41, i Wallace. J. F. F W^arne, H. A .29, i .29, c White, W. W. 42 C Warder, W Waggoner. F .42, i Whvte R. H .29, c Warren. C D. W Willoughby, J. B.... Wise. J. W Wagner, H. F .42, i Wyckoff, T. II .29, C Walker, C. C .42, i WarnacK, G. L Walter,? 42, i Weyrich P G 29^ i Wood.J Waples W L. Whiteiord, J. C 3d, c Wilderman, Rev.J.H. Wheeler. J. A Weaver, Rev. H. D.. Whiting, Rev. L. M. Wamboldt, M. M..... Williams. J. M Wood, I. D 37 \ i 37, t 37, i 37, i 3*", i 37, C 38, i 3X, i 38, i 39, i 39, i 39, i 39, i 39, i 89, i 39, i H9. i 39, i 39, i 39 i Whittlesey, C. A 42 i Whiteford. J. C .30, i Whittlesey. E .42, i Ward.J .30, i Whitworth, J. F 42, i Whiteside, S. P .... .30, i Whitworth L. . . .42, i Williams, Rev. R. R Williams, T. J Wiswell, I. N .30, c .30, i .30, 1 Winkelmann, W.... .42, i Wise. W E .42, i Wood E 42 i Wear, M. D Wiswell. A .... .31, c 31, c Ware.S. H Wharton, S. P: ... . Wells, J. F Woolery I. C .43, o 41 i Wells. W 31, i Whitney, N. T Warren, L. C 44 1 Whyte.G. R 31, i Wilderman, W.H.... Walke. C Wham S. D ... 44 i Wilderman. .1. L... Wilkinson. D .81, 1 .31, i Ward R 44 i Walker, O. L .. Wham M. PI 44 i Williams, T. I .31, i Whitcomb.D.W.C.D.. Whittlesey, A., Williams, T. F Williams. R.G Williams. L. M. Williams, B. F 44 i Williams. L,. R 31, i Wood, B 44 i Wilson, J .31, i Wyss.S. H Y Yearsley, A .44, i 15, 1 Wilson C Wilson, H. 31 i Whitney. E... .31, c Wilson, S. H... Wilson, F. M . . 31, i Wright. F, E Winchester, W. M... Wood J A .31, i 31, i 32, c .33, c Wertz, Rev. H. J Wilson W N Yerkes, R. A .29, i Wise Rev D Worcester F S Yerkes, T. P .29, c Winters. L A Worden, F 39, i 40. i 40, i 40, i 4), i 40, i 41, i 41, i 41, i 41. i 41, i 41, i Yeager, Rev. G. I... Youn" W E .32, t S3 i Welch, R. S 33, i 33, i 33, i 33, i 33, i 33, i Whittlesev, II Young, Rev J. L. M. Young, W. A .34, C .34. i Weldon, W. W. G.... Williams L R Winthrop H H Wood E B Young, J. J .31, i Wilson, G. W. . . Wood, F. D Young, Rev. J. L,. M. Young, A. R .37, t .42. i Wood J. H Walter O Wyckoff, S.. Watkins, T. E. Z Zimmerman, W. J.. ::,-. i Wiswell. Rev. A 34, t 34, i 31, i Wehmier A. W Wetherbee, C Widaman, H Wheeling, C. S White, W. D... Wilkinson. D 31, i White, G. B, ERRATA ET ADDENDA- Since the publication of this Catalogue was commenced, Dr. B. F. Ed- wards, the sole survivor of the original Board of Trustees, of fifty years ago, has died; and, still later, since the Jubilee Anniversary Day and College Commencement, D. D. Ryrie and Isaac Snedeker, members of the Board, have also passed away ; and, last, too, the veteran, Hon. Cyrus Edwards, one of the seven constituting the first Board at Alton, forty -five years ago, has in like manner gone from earth, and therefore the * indicating deceased, should be prefixed to these four names, as found on pages 9, 10 , 11 and 58. It should also be prefixed on page 11, to the name of Thomas Pratt, who died several years ago. The year when Rev. Daniel Head, LL. D., retired from the Presidency of the College, should be changed to 1870, on page 12. LL- D. should be affixed to Prof. Orlando L. Castle, on page 13. The names *Hannah Bains; *Katie Lemen; Eli/a J. Norton (Pierson), Carrollton; * Alan son Norton; Elthan A. Norton, Carrollton, and Charlotte Sherman, Greenfield, should be added, on page 15, to the list of students who attended Rock Spring Seminary. And the name of Col. John Thomas, Belleville, should be changed to Thomas. The address of Ann Wright (Moore), page 16, is Standard, Mo., and of Susan Wright (Simmwell), is Auburn, Kan. The name of *Rev. Ellas R. Fort should be added to students of Alton College, page 17. On page 18 the name of John C. Bernard, Quincy, should be changed to "John O. Bernard, Paysou. The first five names, under head of Shurtleff College, page 18, and the first three names under 1840-1, page 19, being Theological students, should have been in largest capitals, as all in that department are so indicated on the subsequent pages of the Catalogue. The address ef Rev. Wm. H. Briggs, page 19, is Freeport. Of Jose Donaziano Martinez, page 21, is Coahuilla, Mexico. Of George Spaulding, page 22, is Omaha, Neb., and of H. S. Spaulding, is Vineland, N. J. Of Cyrus L. Edwards, page 23, is Deunison, Texas. Of Horace J. Loomis, page 24, is Chesterfield- Of Charles M. Kay, page 25, is Spring Lake, Mich. Of Henry C. Barnes and Thomas Duckels, page 27, is Vitden, and of Wm. T. Brown, is Carlinyille. Also Rev. should be prefixed to Joseph F. Corrington, same page. Of Wm. W. Hays, page 28, is Bunker Hill; of Byron P. Henderson, ia St. Louis, Mo.; Samuel Slater, Washington, D. C.; and of Rev. John Saw- yer, is Mai-tha's Vineyard, Mass. 60 ERRATA ET ADDENDA. Of Cyrus Lemen, page 29, Collinsville; John Gclder, Brighton; Alon/.o F. Hart, Greenville, and Peter G. Weyrich, Peoria; Rev. should be omitted before R. W. Coon and Editor affixed. Cyrus L. Cook, page 30, should be honored as A. M., and the address of J. C. Whiteford. is Chicago; of Rev. J. W. Swift, Butler, Mo., and Rev. M. M. Cooper, Mt. Venion. The name of W. T. Vandeveer, Taylorville, should be inserted among Scientific Collegiates, on page 31. The address of W. B. Beadle, on page 82, is unknown, and of Linn Bedell, is Trenton, and name, J. Chatham, should read J. R. Chatham, M. D., Xenia. The address of William Pool, page 35, is Isleton, California. The address of L. N. Scanland, page 38, is Florence, Arizona; and of Rev. C. T. Floyd, Elk Falls, Ks. Of Rev. Frederick Hill, page 85, isReetlsburg, Wis.; of J. L. Irwin, Jr., Indianapolis, Ind.; of Rev. James Buchanan, Yankton, D. T.; of Gideon J. Scanland, Eureka, Nevada; and of John B. St'irler, Galveston, Texas. Dyer Christy's full name is Rev. Dyer M. Christy, Byron, Ohio, and that of Beal Ives is Benjamin C. Ives. Rev. J. E. Ingham's address, page 36, is Exeter, Neb. A. B. should be affixed to Rev. F. W. Tolman, and A. B., B. D., to Rev. J. N. Hartmau. The address of Rev. O. M. Merrick, page 37, is Mossville, and of Rev. M. M. "Wamboldt, is Byron, Mm. Rev. should also.be prefixed both to Win. T. Cuppy and Isaac D. Wood, and A. M. affixed to Rev. C. A. Hobbs, Rev. J. L. M. Young, and I. D. Foulon. On page 38, Rev. should be prefixed to J. C. Robertson, and A. B. affixed to D. G. Perrine, and A. M- to Rev. Joseph Mountain, whose address is changed to Wauconda*. The true address of G. W. Guunisou, page 39, is Shenaudoah, Io.; of W. H. Bradt, Fremont, Min., and of Rev. John J. Keeler, Mt. Sterling. The name of Rev. Henry W. Tate, B. I)., Newton Centre, Mass., should be added to page 40, and B. D., Centre should be erased after J. T. Covcl, A. B., as he is not a graduate from Theology, and his address is New York city, N. Y. M. D. should be affixed to H. T. Burnap, and the address of Rev. A. H. Post is Victor, Io. A. M., B. D., should be affixed to Rev. J. B. English, page 41." The *, indicating decease, should also be prefixed to Hon. Win. B. Loomis, E. J. Bement and S. B. Henderson, page 23; to George Gilbert, page 24; Albertes Silsbe, page 27; Chas. F. Dandridge, and Rev. Thomas W. Greene, page 28; to W. Chatham, page 32; Rev. B. F. Goldsby, page 33; to S. Chatham and John E. Phillips, page 36; and to Hon. N. B. Shurtleff, page 45. Spauldiug, J. S., in index, page 56, should read H. S. After several months of extensive correspondence, sending out of proof sheets, and waiting for corrections, the foregoing are all the ERRATA we have been able to discover, and hence suppose the Catalogue to be, at this date, September 3rd, 1877, as correct as it is possible to make it, with any reasonable amount of time and effort. ' - CO O Z S w CO O PC a, w o O PC s ,_, z OQ O ffi o 1 3 f of CO So QX oo T-( u d p t ( t 1 2 a" W t "5 to fn 0> o? > o Z CD 00 ^ 8- H -T-l c d r ,_ c3 U i i o cT K [J ."2 M o t < P a: 1 i i 00 6 c ti V cS u t> ^ p z ^a u C p 00 "a u b i C r ^ ^* 05 V z I o a o i CC 0, H i S c p C/3 W i o P s o *y* o *^ ^ O P u IB "3 ix 1 "c o c" 7 H Oi 5 1 to o P 00 . ^ H O 1 = = W a s o: w " r 55 co w 5 = c ^ = ^ O a O h Z 5 :: -E p | '> Hi c a 5 _j 2 - 5= -5 < i i . j^ r o - : T JUBILEE ANNIVERSARY. HISTORICAL ADDRESS POEM, DELIVERED AT - ANNUAL COMMENCEMENT UPPER ALTON, ILL.. JUNE 10-14, 1877 ALT03, ILL.: DAILY TELEGRAPH STEAM PBIXT. JUBILEE ANNIVERSARY. The Fiftieth year of this Pioneer School of the West, and oldest Institu- tion of Learning in the Mississippi Valley, was celebrated with special Com- memorative exercises in connection with the Annual Commencement of the College, June 10-14, 1877. The Baccalaureate Sermon of the President of the College, Rev. A. A. Keudrick, D. D., delivered on Sunday morning before a large and apprecia- tive audience, befittiugly led the programme. It was an able exposition of the clause in the Lord's prayer : "For Thine is the Kingdom." At night Rev. Galusha Anderson, D. D., of Chicago, preached the An- nual Sermon before the Illinois Baptist Education Society, eloquently and forcibly setting forth the need of more and better educated preachers of the gospel. The Examinations of classes, that had commenced the previous week, were continued through the day sessions of Monday and Tuesday, and the competent committee appointed to attend upon them, pronounced the same highly satisfactory. On Tuesday occurred also a special, and on Wednesday the regular au- mttl meeting of the Board of Trustees. In view of the all-absorbing financial question, the chief interest of these meetings was centered in the report of Dr. G. J. Johnson, the Financial Agent of the college, who, for almost eighteen months had been devoting himself to raising funds for the relief and endowment of the college. From this report it appeared that subscriptions, cash and pledges had been secured to the amount of $85,370. Of this sum over $27,000 had already been paid in. Of the balance $33,000 were in interest bearing notes some of them however being at a low rate rate of interest, and for a long time. There were $25,000 in pledges, and much of this sum was promised upon condition that the $100,000 are secur- ed. It was the unanimous conviction of the Board, as expressed in their discussions of this report, that, in view of the financial stringency and gen- eral dullness in business prevalent throughout the country, this was an exceedingly gratifying exhibit, and all expressed an earnest desire that the Agent, that they believed was called of Providence to engage in the work, should continue in it, at least till the $100.000 were completely secured. The following were elected to fill vacancies in the Board of Trustees, to- wit : Prof. Ebenezer Marsh, W. T. Norton, Esq., and Rev. Thomas G. 66 JUBILEE ANNIVERSARY. Field, of Alton ; Hon. Silas L. Bryan, Salem ; Hon. Samuel Wood, Jackson- ville, and Rev. W. W. Boyd, of St. Louis. Hon. Daniel B. Gilham, of Upper Alton, was elected President of the Board, and Rev. D. Morrill, of same place, Secretary. On Monday evening an able Commemorative Address, as published fol- lowing, was delivered by Rev. Samuel Baker, D. I)., of the Alton Theologi- cal Seminary in the year 1837, at present of Russellville, Ky., and Tuesday night the Oration before the Literary Societies was pronounced by Rev. Daniel Read, LL. D., for fourteen years President of the College, and now resident in Brooklyn, N. Y., and a Poem read by Rev. C. A. Hobbs, of Mason City and Class of 1868. An able reporter of the occasion said : "Dr. Read's oration was an eloquent and masterly review of the duty and mission of the scholar. A pleasant mingling of eloquence and humor abounded in Mr. Hobbs' poem, which was greatly enjoyed and did credit to the author and the occasion." Wednesday was a day of deep and thrilling interest to a large collection of Alumni, patrons and friends of the College, old and young, who had gathered from far and near to attend upon the special Jubilee exercises, for whiclfthis day had been set apart. Dr. Johnson, by special request, acted as presiding officer of the day, and the devotional exercises were conducted by Rev. N. A. Reed, D.D., of Centralia, and Rev. A. Sherwood, D. D., of St. Louis. Dr. Johnson then presented a carefully prepared sketch of the origin of Rock Spring Semin- ary-, and its subsequent removal and location at Upper Alton as Alton Sent- inary, under the joint labors of Dr. Jonathan Going, of Worcester, Mass., and Dr. B. P. Edwards, of Edwardsville, 111. He next exhibited the pages of the 'American Baptist Magazine for 1826, containing a report made by Dr. Peck, of funds gathered by him in that year, in New England and Ne.w York, to the'amount of about $1,200, for the purpose of the establishment of the school, and also the Magazine for the following year, 1827, giving an account of t the organization of the Board of Trustees, January 1, and tfien a plain picture of the Rock Spring Seminary school building, sketched by Mr. Henry Peck, of California, youngest son of the founder of the school ; also a page from the registry of pupils, giving the names of the first four- teen pupils who entered : the school at its opening, November 1, 1827, and lastly a copy of Dr. Peck's paper, the Pioheer, the first newspaper ever published in the State of Illinois, and on the first printing press ever set up on Illinois soil. In this paper exhibited mention was made of the Seminary at Rock Spring as the first institution of learning established in Illinois above the grade of u a common or primary school. Dr. S. II. Ford, of St. Louis, gave a very interesting address on the "Character, Life and Educational Work of Dr. Peek," the speaker having known him well and been intimately associated with him for many years. Mrs. M. P. Lemen,'of~Salem, who was a member of Dr. Peck's family at the tune of the suspension of Rock Spring Seminary, and subsequently taught a private school in the building, gave a most interesting account of JUBILEE ANNIVERSARY. 67 the actors and scenes of those early clays, and of the transfer of the Sem- inary to the new location. Mr. Lewis H. Scanlancl, of Normal, and Mr. Wm. II. Rider, of Jackson- ville, both students of Rock Spring Seminary at its opening and for several years after, wese next introduced, and gave interesting reminiscences of the school and its teachers, and were followed by Prof. Wm. Whitney, of Granville, Ohio, who came, forty-seven years ago, from Dr. Malcom's church in Boston, 1,800 miles away, and a portion of the distance on foot, to attend upon the institution at Rock Spring. He was in the Seminary through its last years and until its suspension with reference to removal to Alton. A letter from Dr. J. G. Warren, of Newton Centre, Mass., was read, ex. pressing deep interest in Shurtleff College and its Jubilee, and regret at his inability to attend, and hoping that full justice would would be done to the memory of those giants, Drs. Peck and Going. An interesting paper on the "Educational Services of Dr. Jonathan Going/' prepared by Rev. Frank B. Cressy, of Detroit, Michigan, of the clas of 1865, and grandson of Dr. Going, was read by Dr. Castle, for twenty-two years a popular Professor, in Shurtleff college, and formerly a student of Dr. Going in Granville college. A touching tribute of the memory of Dr. B. F. Ed- waads was also paid by Dr. Johnson, as it was mainly through his influence, sustained by Dr. Going, that Rock Spring Seminary had been removed and the present location chosen. Dr. Edwards' loss was exceedingly deplored, as his connection of fifty years as a Trustee at the beginning and then cpn- tinuously on for about twenty-five years, and to the end a devoted friend of the college, would have made his presence on this jubilee 'day specially valuable. But, with all the other original founders of the institution, he was now gone. At this point an adjournment was made to the grove on the college cam- pus, where a liberal collation was enjoyed. In the afternon, Hon. Cyrus Edwards,. venerable and infirm, the now oldest living trustee, and one of the charter members of the school at Alton, first spoke, eloquently and grandly, and closed by proposing to give, in addition to his former munificent gifts, $1,000 more to make up the $15,000 yet wanted to complete the proposed $100,000. Rev. Mr. Boyd, of St. Louis, the last elected and youngest trustee, followed with words that cheered and thrilled all hearts. Rev. Adiel Sherwood, D. D., the veteran of over four- score and six years, and the first President of the college, in 1841-5, spoke congratulation and encouragement, and was followed by Dr. Read, President in 1856-70, on the patrons of the past, as H. N. Kendall, Elijah Gove, Dr. E. Marsh, Sr., who all were now dead, and of Cyrus Edwards and others who were living. Rev. J. Bulkley, D. D., of the class of 1874, and present Professor of Theology in the College, spoke of the teachers of by-gone days, honoring the names of Hubbel Loomis, President of the Alton Seminary, Zenas B. Newman, Professor in Alton College, Warren Leverett, of Shurt- leff College, as well as Dr. Sherwood and Prof. Washington Leveret, still living. 68 JUBILEE ANNIVERSARY. Rev. Henry L. Field, of class of 1866, spoke a few kind words of attach- ment for his Alma Mater, and volunteered the pledge of $1,000 additional contribution, if the whole $100,000 proposed should be early raised ; and was followed by stirring words from other Alumni, as Rev. J. L. M. Young, of class of 1868; Rev. M. D. Bevan, of 1865, Rev. George JQme, of 1864; Rev. J. H. Mize, and others. But it will not be possible to follow all the addresses made and letters read from students present and absent which crowded the three short hours of the afternoon session, nor even to give a list of the speeches made .or the letters read from friends representing nearly all parts of the land. Suf- fice it to say the Jubilee Day will long be a pleasant memory with all who enjoyed it. An Alumni Reunion occupied the closing hours at night session, intro- duced with an address by Willard A. Smith, Esq., of Chicago, and followed by a banquet, a general conference and congratulations that continued to a late hour. The Commencement proper on Thursday constituted the " last great day of the feast," and befittinsrly closed the Anniversary. After the orations of the graduating class, which were all of a high order, Rev. "William C. Richards, Ph. D., of Lawndale, read the Jubilee Poem. For nearly three quarters of an hour his melodious chimes rang forth for the entertainment of the vast congregation. Nothing could have been more suited as a finale to the grand occasion. The Farewell Address of the President to the graduating class, the con- ferring of Degrees in course, and the honorary A. M. upon Marshall W. Weir, Esq., of Belleville, and of LL. D. upon Prof. Edwin C. Hewitt, President of Illinois State Normal University, the reading of a telegram from Rev. W. W. Boyd, of St. Louis, proposing the give $1,000, if $15,000 more were raised and the whole $100,000 secured, with a benediction by Dr. Sherwood closed the Jubilee Anniversary of Shurtleff College. As the excellent reporter of these exercises for The Standard, of Chicago, happily concluded his account, so will all the friends say : "Long wave old Shurtle.$\ and may she live to see yet a thousand Jubilees more." HISTORICAL ADDRESS. BY REV. SAMUEL BAKER, D. D. In ray address on this occasion, I propose to give you some sketches of history relating to the progress of civilization, religion, and education in the Central Valley of the Mississippi ; with particular reference to the growth of religion and education in Illinois and neighboring States, among the Baptists, and the connection of this growth with the history of Shurtleff College. EARLY TIMES IN INDIANA, ILLINOIS AND MISSOURI. The history of any country will be very much influenced by the charac- ter of its religion. Much is said and written of the character of the Anglo- Saxons, of their wonderful enterprise, perseverance, success, of their wis- dom and grasp of plan, and their indomitable vigor to accomplish. But all history will bear out the assertion that it is their Protestantism, and not their Anglo-Saxonixm, that has been the source of their peculiar character- istics. In the uniform influence of Protestant principles is to be found the explanation of all that they have been and done. The tendency of Roman- ism has always been to degrade the manners, to keep men in ignorance, to empty their pockets, to check the noble aspirings of thought, and to extin- guish the holy ilanie of liberty. In the early history of this country, there seemed to be a strong proba- bility, that the predominant influence in the Great Valley of the Mississippi would be papal, and that Rome would have ample opportunity in this New World to compensate herself for her losses in the Old World. Next to. the Indians, the earliest settlers in the territory embraced in the States of Indiana, Illinois, and Missouri, were of that faith, and papal governments claimed to have the dominion in this vast region, and had that dominion continued, it must have given character to the population. Towards the close of the seventeeenth century, the French, from Canada, began to make settlements on this section of the Mississippi. Kaskaskia was founded shortly after the visit of LaSalle to the Mississippi, in 1683, by Father Gravier, a catholic missionary among the Illinois, and was the capi- tal of the Illinois country, so long as the French continued in possession of it. Cahokia was settled by the French- about the same time. Fort Char- tres, in Randolph county, Illinois, was originally built by the French, in 1720, to defend themselves against the Spaniards, who were then in posses- sion of the country on the Mississippi. It was rebuilt in 1756. Vincennes, hi Indiana, was settled by the French in 1735. By the treaty of Fontaiu- 70 HISTORICAL ADDRESS. blcau, the 3rd of November, 1762, between Great Britain, France, Spain, and Portugal, the regions east of the Mississippi, including all the various towns on the north-west, were given up to Great Britain, and in 1765, Capt. Sterling, in the name of the Majesty of England, took possession of Fort Chartros, and issued a proclamation, promising freedom of religious wor- ship to the western Catholics, a right to leave the country, if they wished, or remain, with the privileges of Englishmen. In 1778, the fort on the east side of the river at Kaskaskia, was taken by Col. George Rogers Clark. At a somewhat later period, the settlements were formed by the French on the western side of the Mississippi. Camndelet was settled in 1767. Ste. Genevieve was settled at an early day by the French, and in 1771, contained a population of four hundred and sixty, beside blacks. The present site of the great city of St. Louis was chosen by Laclede, on the 15th of Febru- ary, 1764. It was settled as a trading station for the trappers of the West. Up to 1820, the number of the people had not reached 5,000. It Avas Earned by Laclede in honor of Louis ,15th of France. In 1768 (August llth), Rious and his band of Spanish troops took possession of the place, in be- half of her Catholic'' Majesty of Spain, who kept -possession until it was transferred to the United States, March 26th, 1804. . What is now Missouri was formerly Upper Louisiana, and at an early period all the territory included under the name of Louisiana, was held to be under the dominion of the French. And the French claimed to include in this country of Louisiana, all the vast territory that lay west of the Eng- lish colonies. In April, 1763, Franca by a secret treaty, ceded Louisiana to Spain. On the 1st of October, 1800, a treaty was signed at St. Ildefonso, between France and Spain, by which Louisiana was to be conveyed to Na- poleon. This was confirmed, and reiterated in the treaty of Madrid, March 21st, 1801. France thus became master, a second time, of this territory. Bonaparte, to prevent the English from making a conquest of this terri- tory, determined to sell it to the United States. Without any knowledge of this intention, President Jefferson despatched Mr. Monroe to negotiate for Island of Orleans. On arriving in France, Mr. Monroe was surprised to learn that the French determined to sell the whole of Louisiana ; and the only matter to be settled was the amount to be paid for it. On the 30th of April, 1803, the treaty of cession was signed by the commissioners, by which, the United States gave eighty million ef francs, for the territory, deducting twenty millions for spoliations upon our commerce. When the deeds of transfer were signed, the commissioners, Barbi Marbois, Mr. Liv- ingston and Mr. Monroe, were so transported with joy, that they rose and grasped each others hands with the utmost enthusiasm. Mr. Livingston is said to have exclaimed, " We have lived long, but this is the noblest work of our lives. The treaty which we have just signed, has not been obtained by art, nor dictated by force. Equally advantageous to both parties, it will change vast solitudes into flourishing districts. The United States will re- establish the maritime rights of all the world, now usurped by a single na- tion. The instruments we have signed, will cause no tears to be shed. They prepare ages of happiness for innumerable generations of human HISTORICAL ADDRESS. 71 creatures." The Spaniards were-now required to execute the treaty of St. Ildefouso, and by the joint action of the representatives of the French and Spanish ^'governments, both Lower and Upper Louisiana were transferred to the United States, and became part of our common territory. In 1783, at the close of the Revolutionary war, the Illinois country was yielded to the Uuited^States, and by the ordinance of 1787, the whole pub- lic domain north of the Ohio river was erected into the Northwestern Ter- ritory under a single government. In 1800 the territory contained 50,240 souls. The same year, Ohio was erected into a separate State, and what is now Indiana and Illinois was formed into a Territory, called the Indiana Territory. In 1805, the Territory of Michigan was formed. The Illinois Territory at. that time, included what are now the States of Illinois, Wis- consin and a part of Minnesota. As these territories had been rescued from papal domination, and now were under a free government that protected all in the free exercise of their religion, they were rapidly settled by emigrants from almost every part of the United States ; and among the rest were to be found Baptist families, here and there scattered, in most of these remote and wide-spread regions. At the commencement of the present century, a few Baptists emigrated to the territory now included in the State of Indiana. Illinois in 1805 was erected into a separate territory. Virginia organized a civil government here, and Ninian Edwards, at that time Chief Justice of Kentucky, was appointed Territorial Governor. This opened the way for American emigration, and even as early as 178G, a number of families had settled on the American Bottom, and in the hill country of what is now called Monroe county. They came chiefly from Western Virginia and Kentucky. The Baptist were the first Protestant Christians to enter this region. In 1787, Elder James Smith, a Baptist minister from Kentucky, made them a visit and preached the gospel with, good effect. A few families from their first set- tlement, had been in the habit of keeping the Sabbath, governing their children, and holding meetings for religious purposes. At that period there were none who had been members of churches. Their method of observ- ing the Sabbath was to meet, sing hymns, and one would read the Scrip- tures, or a sermon from some author. In 1794, some of this number were baptiseu by Elder Josiah Dodge from Kentucky. Five brothers from one of these families became Baptist preachers ; and in 1796, the New Design Baptist Church was constituted of twenty-eight members, with Elder David Badgeley, (who had removed his family from Virginia to this land of prom- ise), as their pastor. And the Baptists were the protestant pioueers, and have an undoubted "pre-emption right" to Missouri. As early as 1796 and '97, a number of Baptist families emigrated from North and South Carolina and Kentucky to Upper Louisiana, now Missouri, and lived for several years under the Span- ish government. The Romish religion only was then tolerated by law, but the commandants, disposed to encourage emigration from the United States, did not molest them. John Clark, Thomas R. Musick, and a man by the name of Brown, and perhaps other ministers, penetrated to the frontier set- 72 HISTORICAL ADDEESS. tlements, and sought out and fed these scattered sheep in the wilderness. They were frequently threatened with the Galaboza, (the Spanish prison,) but through the lenity of the commandants were permitted to escape. Their little meetings were quite refreshing to the pilgrim settlers, surround- ed as they were by the rites and laws of Romanism. In these times of re- striction, Abraham Musick applied to Zeno Trudeau, the commandant at St. Louis, an officer quite friendly to the Protestant emigrants, for leave to have preaching in his house. The commandant was inclined to favor the Americans secretly, but compelled to reject all such petitions openly, and replied'promptly, that such a petition could not be granted. "I mean," said he, " that you must not put a bell on your house, and call it a churcJi, nor suffer any person to christen your children but the parish priest. But if any of your friends choose to meet at your house, sing, pray, and talk about reli- gion, you will not be molested, provided you continue, as I believe you are good Christians." He knew that as Baptists, they would dispense with the rite of infant baptism, and that plain "backwoods" people, as they were, could find their way to their meetings without the sound of the "church going bell." This was quite liberal for a Romanist, but fell far short of the liberty which the early Baptists of Rhode Island gave to those who differed from them. In England, from whence they came, dissenters from the Establish- ed Church, have ever been forbidden the use of bell or spire. Rhode Is- land Baptists laid claim to no such monopoly, and when the First Baptist Church of Providence had erected the first elegant structure owned as a meeting house by the Baptists of America, they had cast, and suspended in that building a bell on which was inscribed the following motto : " For freedom of conscience the towi^was first planted, Persuasion, not force, was used by the people; This church is the eldest and has not recanted, Enjoying and granting J>ell, temple, aiid steeple." Catholics sometimes baptise their bells before they suspend them in their churches, and in one of the prayers used on such occasions, they pray that the sound of these bells may drive away tempests, make the fiery darts of the devil to fiy backwards, and that the devil may always flee before the sound thereof, and such an important means of grace should not be denied to any. THE EARLY PREACHERS OF ILLINOIS AND MISSOURI. For a considerable time after emigrants began to settle in this vast terri- tory, the religious institutions of this region remained in a rude and irregu- lar condition. Public religious worship was observed in any neighborhood only at long intervals, and then under charge of roving preachers, who, ranging over immense tracts of territory, and living on their horses and in the huts of the settlers, called the people together under trees or cabin roofs, and spoke to them simply of the great truths of Christianity. The preach- ers themselves were peculiar persons, made so by the peculiarity of their circumstances and pursuits. And the simple addresses of these humble and devoted itinerants were often blessed of God in a most remarkable manner. HISTORICAL ADDRESS. 73 In most respects, the Baptist Ministers of that period are worthy of all honor. Deficient as they were in a liberal education, the Baptist ministry in this region, at that time, as approved by the whole community, did by their self-sacrifices and arduous labors, accomplish great things for God. They spread the truths and influences of the gospel into every settlement, and to the remotest frontier. These pioneers in a vast multitude of cases, performed this warfare at their own charges. The Baptist Ministry of that period, with some exceptions perhaps, were pre-eminently adapted to those times, and to the people, and the condition of the country. In their pri- vate character they were distinguished for their piety and good practical com- mon sense ; as preachers they were faithful and laborious, and some of them were endowed with talents, which had they been cultivated, would have raised their possessors to the highest degree of eminence. Springing directly from the bosom of the people, they did not forget or despise their origin ; they mingled familiarly with all classes, understood the prevailing habits of thought and feeling, and with brotherly interest entered into whatever af- fected the humblest individual among the simple-hearted settlers. No course of academical training, peculiar to themselves, and needlessly su- perior to 'that of the most favored among their hearers, elevated them above the reach of the popular sympathies, and made them a distinct and uncongenial class in the community. At the same time they were far from being deficient in native "energy of mind, or insensible to their weighty responsibilities as the public servants of Christ. Some of them were hard students of the One Book, wonderfully enlightened in the Scriptures, closely observant of characters and events, and habituated to reading and meditation. They kept in advance of their flocks in useful knowledge, and were clear in doctrine, rich in experience, and "apt to teach." The sensible piety, the ardent zeal, the laborious benevolence of these men, gained them universal confidence. "The common people heard them gladly." Their shrewdness, sagacity, and foresight, were of incalculable value in shaping alike the social and the religious system of the infant com- munities. The influences of their healthful counsel? are seen all around us, even at the present day. They planted the churches which you now water. They labored, and you have entered into their labors. They, under God, laid the foundation's of our social and religious prosperity, and the names of those good men should be had in everlasting remembrance. Such hav- ing been the character of the Pioneer Ministers of this region, it was quite natural for them to disperse abroad. The yeomanry of a people in a new country naturally move onward until they .have spread themselves over the whole face of the country, and such precisely was the course of our minis- ters. As cultivation and refinement advanced, their ministry became less acceptable in town and city, and consequently, they naturally moved on- ward with the tide of population to the more newly settled parts of the country. And thus we account for the fact, that the Baptist denomination are dispersed over the whole territory of the United States. In this part of our history we mark the hand of Providence, and see in it special designs of mercy. Had our ministry possessed a different character, though en- 74 HISTORICAL ADDRESS. riclied with the choicest stores of learning and refinement, they might not have been either willing or able to encounter the necessary hardships atten- dant on their keeping pace with the march of population. The circumstances of the country have now become changed, and conse- quently, the prospects of an unlearned ministry, have been reversed. The progress of intelligence and of general improvement in this region has been inconceivably rapid; this State, (and this is also true of the neighboring States,) has outgrown, with marvellous rapidity, its ruder conditions, and become populous and powerful. In sections of this State, which but a few years since were an undisturbed wilderness, cities and villages have sprung up with unheard of frequency, and have become centers of wealth and in- telligence, and of cultivated taste. An educated community will have an . educated ministry, and if one denomination will not supply the demand an- other will, and that denomination which fails in this work, must yield the ground it now occupies to others. Hence, there is left to us as a denomina- tion, but one alternative, which is either to cultivate our ministry, or to re- tire and leave the field to others. If we would go forward and prosper, we must have a pious and an intelligent ministry. ALIENATION AND DIVISION AMONG THE CHURCHES. Prior to 1820, the early pioneer preachers in Illinois held almost undispu- ted sway over the religious portion of the people. Soon after, when a more refined and better educated ministry settled in the country, sustained to a considerable extent by the missionary societies and associations at the East, and essayed to establish churches, bible and tract societies and Sunday schools, they encountered no little opposition. It is true, that among the Baptists this opposition did not develop itself all at once. The "Illinois United Baptist Association" was formed as early as 1812. and the subject of both Foreign and Domestic Missions was introduced into this Association in 1818, and met with approbation, and a social organization for mission and educational purposes was recommended to be formed in conjunction with the Bethel and Missouri Associations west of Mississippi the same autumn. This organization was called "The United Society for the spread of the Gospel." Its object was "to aid in spreading the gospel and promoting common schools in the western parts of America, both amongst the whites and Indians." The missionaries employed to preach to the destitute in Illi- nois were David Badgley and William Jones. Elder Jones engaged in this work for a short period, and Elder Badgley labored as an itinerant mission- ary for two months, and received" for this service sixteen dollars per month* Prejudices, however, soon sprung up, and these good brethren, with many others, were brought to occupy anti-missionary ground, and the Illinois As- sociation, to which they belonged, declared non-fellowship with all engaged in missionary operations. When one of these opposers of missions was called upon publicly to state his objections to missionaries, it is said he re- plied to the following effect: " We don't care anything about missionaries that's gone amongst the heathen, 'way off yonder. But what do they come among us for? We don't want them here in Illinois. You know, brother HISTORICAL ADDRESS. 75 Moderator, the big tree in the wood overshadows the little ones ; and these missionaries will be all great, learned men, and the people will all go to hear them preach, and we shall be put down, that's the objection." The lender of the opposition party to missions in Indiana and Illinois, was Daniel Parker, a native of Lawrence county, Tennessee. He was the author of the "Two Seed Doctrine," as taught in his writings. He sets out with the postulate that God never made a creature that will suffer eternal misery. All the elect were created in Christ Jesus from eternity; consequently when they fell in Adam, Christ was bound by covenant engagement to pay their debt or redeem them. These were the children of the kingdom the good seed and they would be saved from sin and all its consequences, and be happy forever as the bride of Christ. The non-elect are literally, and in fact, the children of the devil, begotten in some mysterious manner of Eve, as manifested in the person of Cain. These constitute the bad seed, and with their father, the devil, will perish without mercy or hope. On these leading principles Mr. Parker built a tolerably extensive system. Of course the devil, as the. author of evil, always existed, yet God, as the Supreme Be- ing, has him under his power, and will destroy him and all his works. The parable of the tares and many other passages of Scriptures- were relied on to support this strange doctrine. These notions, though somewhat modified, have been propagated to some extent in several Western States, but are now almost forgotten . Parker, ambitious to distinguish himself, sought to pub- lish his views in the Columbian Star, a paper then published in Washington City, associated in the conduct 'of the missionary enterprise. The editor not only refused to publish his views, but ridiculed them as immodest and preposterous. This gave Parker mortal offense, and from that time forth he became the foe of missions and ministerial education. These vagaries, of course, had the effect of causing dissensions in the ministry. According to Parker, the mission principle is the prophetic beast, which as described in Revelation, chapter 13th, John saw coming up out of the earth, and which "gives life or law power to the image it is making, to the first beast and it arises as out of the Bottomless Pit, makes war with, and kills the church and her ministry, which will lay the spirit and the word, (the two witnesses), inactive and dormant. Then no doubt there will be great rejoicing with all the workers of iniquity ; but in a short time, to their sad surprise and eternal confusion the God of Zion will raise his two witnesses to more splendid light, power, and glory, to the final over- throw of all their enemies." (Benedict's History of Baptists, p. 788.) Such were the sentiments preached by Baptist Ministers in Illinois fifty years ago. But few men have exerted a wider influence than that, which for a series of years, Parker exerted on the lower and less educated classes of frontier people. In 1818, he removed from Tennessee to Crawford county, Illinois. It is said of him, by one who knew him well, " he possessed a mind of sin- gular and original cast. In doctrine he was an Antiuomian from the first, but he could describe the process of conviction, and the joys of conversion, and of dependence on God, with .peculiar feeling and effect. This kind of preaching was calculated to take a strong hold on the hearts and gain the 76 HISTORICAL ADDRESS. confidence of a class of pious, simple-hearted Christians, of but little reli- gious intelligence and reading. He fully believed, and produced the im- pression on the others, that he spoke by immediate inspiration. At times, his mind seemed to rise above its own powers, and he would discourse for a few moments on the divine attributes or some doctrinal subject, with such brilliancy of thought, and force and correctness of language, as would as- tonish men of education and talents. Then again, it would seem as though he was perfectly bewildered in a mist of abstruse subtleties. But with a zeal and enthusiasm bordering on insanity, firmness that amounted to ob- stinancy, and perseverance that would have done honor to a good cause, Daniel Parker exerted himself to the utmost to induce the churches Avithin his range to declare non-fellowship with all Baptists who united with any missionary or other benevolent (or as he called them, new f angled) societies. The blighting influence of his ministrations was widely felt both in In- diana and Illinois, producing alienation and divisions, both in churches and associations. By his influence in 1824, the Illinois Association declared a virtual non-fellowship with missionary operations and similar declarations were made by other Associations at subsequent periods. Colleges a'nd theo- logical seminaries, and, as he called them, " men made preachers," were shown no mercy by Parker, but how different might have been his own history, had he, while a young man, enjoyed the advantages of higher secular and theological training. It would have saved him from the wild vagaries that characterized his ministrations, and given a right direction to his ministerial influence. JOHN MASON PECK AND MISSIONARY OPERATIONS. How striking the contrast between the life of Daniel Parker and the life of John Mason Peck ! John Mason Peck enjoyed the advantages of a lit- terary and theological training only in a very limited degree, but what ad- vantages he had, he sought to improve to the utmost. He received his ele- mentary education in the common school in his own native Connecticut, he made farther advance in the several branches of an English education, while devoting himself to the vocation of a school teacher; he endeavored, with- out the help of an instructor, to gain some knowledge of the Greek and Latin languages, and for a short period he received instruction in these lan- guages from a very able teacher, Mr. Barnes, then of Poughkeepsie, New York. After this, far several months, he received literary and theological instruction from the distinguished Dr. Staughtou, of Philadelphia, than whom no man ever had more capability for bringing out and strengthening and polishing whatever there was in his pupils susceptible of improvement. But it does not turn altogether upon the amount of time spent in college halls, whether a man is an educated man or not. If one is ever really edu- cated at all, in one sense, he is self-educated. It is only in the voluntary exercise of his mental powers that he gains development and discipline of these powers. John Randolph said, "Put a blockhead through college, and the more books you pile on his head the bigger blocktead he will be." A man has to educate himself, no matter how numerous and advantageous his helps. And then, in another sense, no man is self-educated. Even those HISTOKICAL ADDKESS. 77 who never had a teacher, if they really become educated men, have been educated by books, (teachers who, being dead, yet speak ;) by the men with whom they converse by the events which lead them to think, which draw out their powers into active exercise, by the ideas which are abroad in the atmosphere of their time. This self-education in most cases, is acquired very slowly, and the great advantage to be derived from our colleges and schools of learning is, that the facilities they afford and the mental training they give, secure that mental development and discipline in three or four years, which otherwise it would, in ordinary case?, take more than a score of years to acquire. John M. Peck was an educated man his mind was widened out instead of being narrow-minded, he could take broad views he could see the dif- ferent sides of a question he had the power of patient thinking he could fasten his mind on a subject and hold it there at pleasure his judgment was sound, he knew how to reason to right conclusions, and so to argue as to convince others that he was right ; and he could express his thoughts clearly and forcibly. He was then, truly an educated man, as this educa- tion had much to do in qualifying him for that eminent usefulness to which he attained. "A wise man," said Solomon, "is strong; yea, a man of knowledge increaseth strength." (Prov. 24: 5.) From the beginning of his public career till the close of his life, John M. Peck was willing to labor any where, in any department, and with anybody, if he might be useful. At the commencement of 1818, we find him in St. Louis, where, in connec- tion with his true yoke-fellow, James E. Welch, he begins his pioneer la- bors, under -the auspices of the Baptist Triennial Missionary Convention. These two brethren, at that early period, taught a school in that city, and preached the Gospel there, and soon a Baptist church was constituted. Af- ter two or three years, Mr. Peck commenced school operations in St. Charles, Mo. But he never confined himself to teaching ; his principal work was to preach the gospel, and in carrying on this work much time was spent in missionary explorations, in itinerant labors among the destitute, and preaching Christ to the scattered pioneer dwellers in the wilder- ness. After two years labor, the Board of Triennial Convention dis- continued their mission at St. Louis; and in March, 1822, Mr. Peck received an appointment as the missionary of the Massachusetts Baptist Missionary Society. In 1832, the American Baptist Home Mission Society was formed and its Executive Board was located in New York, and Mr. Peck became the missionary of that Society. But the pioneer work of John M. Peck was so much wider and more enterprising than could be indicated within the limits of any commission, that it was impossible for any one organiza- tion to monopolise his labors. After residing for some time with his family in St. Charles and tts vicinity, he came to the conclusion that it would best promote the interests of the mission and cause of Christ for him to settle his family in Illinois. Accordingly in April, 1822, he removed to Rock Spring, which henceforth became his family residence. But his powerful personal influence could not be limited by State lines. He has done more to mould the character, not only of the State of Illinois, 78 HISTORICAL ADDRESS. but of the Great Mississippi Valley, than any other man v.'ho ever lived. Possessed of wondrous native energy, his powers of mind thoroughly de- veloped by contact with all classes of men, well informed on almost all sub- jects, a man with an indomitable will, accompanied with incessant activity, unflinching perseverance, and untiring devotion to the cause of the Re- deemer; he made himself felt in every department of Christian, educational, and social enterprise throughout the whole West. Was it important in the interests of civilization, that this vast region should be settled by an indus- trious, enterprising population ? He prepared and published those popular books ''Peck's Guide to Emigrants," and "Gazetteer of Illinois;" and Dr. Lyman Beecher used to say of him, forty years ago, that " he had led more families into the West as permanent settlers that any other ten indivi- duals." He did not believe in mixing up politics and religion; but when his duties as a citizen demanded that he should take active part in the poli- tical controversies of his time, he did not shrink back ; and Gov. Reynolds and Gov. Coles, regarded him as the most efficient instrument in prevent- ing Illinois from becoming a slave State in 1823. In his extensive mission- ary tours, as the country became settled, he found an alarming destitution of the Scriptures, and of every thing like Christian instruction ; and in this wide and fearful moral- destitution, he saw not only danger to the souls of men; but also danger to the free institutions of the country; and he sought to do all in his power to supply this deficiency of moral and religious instruction. As Agent of the American Bible Society, he explored Missouri, Illinois, and Western Indiana, and supplied county after county, with the Sacred Scrip- tures. As Agent of the American Sunday School Union, he devoted nearly as much more time to planting, reviving, and supplying with requisite books the Union Sunday Schools needed in the sparsely settled districts. He found scattered all over this vast region many of God's people, destitute of the bread of life, and multitudes of others not enjoying the preaching of the Gospel, which God has made ordinarily necessary to the salvation of men; and " in labors more abundantly," and "by journeyings often," he sought, as far as he was able, to supply -this Gospel destitution ; and as new and feeble churches were constituted from time to time in this destitute field, the care of these churches came upon him daily. He became the de- nominational leader hi the Mississippi Valley, in all departments of denom- inational enterprise. The paper which he founded, " The Baptist Pioneer," was the able advocate of every form of benevolent enterprise ; and he en- gaged with equal readiness in the labors of a pastorate, an agency, an edi- torship, or authorship, with little regard to the exposure and fatigue in- volved in the enterprise, or the meagreness of its pecuniary reward. When- ever duty seemed to demand it, he could travel on horse back if necessary, all the distance to New York and New England, to repout to Christians the pressing religious wants of the great valley of the Mississippi, and to plead for men and means for the enlightenment and evangelization of the mighty West ; and then he would return to encounter again all the hardship of frontier life, on his chosen field of labor ; and to wear himself out in the service of his master. While, as we have seen, there were some Baptist HISTORICAL ADDRESS. 79 Ministers, who turned to him the cold shoulder, and declared non-fellowship with him because of his advocacy of missions, there were other frontier preachers who sympathized with him, and rejoiced to co-operate with him. This was the case with James Pulliam, the brothers Lemen, and others among the pioneer preachers. And at a later period, Alvin Bailey, Gardner Bartleff, Joel Sweet, Jacob Earner, E. Dodson, Calvin Greenleaf, Thomas Powell, Isaac Taylor Hinton, and a host of others, too numerous to name, were welcomed by him in the Illinois field, as true " fellow-helpers to the truth." And in Missouri, at an early period, John Clark, Thomas R. Mu- sick, Lewis Williams, Thomas P. Green, Jeremiah Vardeman, Ebenezer Rogers, and many others, were his fellow-laborers in the Gospel. But, with all their excellencies, John M. Peck must always fill the chief place among these missionary pioneers. "And what has God wrought," by these instrumentalities? In 1818, when Illinois was admitted into the Union, she had a population of 50,2li ; when the census was taken in 1870, she had a population of 2,539,891. In 1835, one year after I came to this State, there were in Illinois, 21 Baptist Associations, 250 churches, 151 ordained Ministers, and 7,112 members. In the American Baptist Year Book for 1877, we have reported for Illinois, 43 Associations, 939 churches, 693 ordained ministers, and a total membership of 67,271. In 1835, there were in Missouri, 16 Baptist Associations, 206 churches, 99 ordained ministers, and 7,831 members. In 1877, Missouri re- ports 69 Associations, 1,443 churches, 771 ordained ministers, and a total membership of 90,364. In 1835, there were in Indiana, 24 Baptist Associa- tions., 358 churches, 162 ordained ministers, and 13,058 members. In 1877, the Baptist Year Book reports for Indiana, 30 Associations, 562 churches, 349 ordained ministers, and a total membership of 40,015. Illinois is no longer an uncultivated waste. No other State in the Union has a larger proportion of rich arable land, and it is no wonder that her ter- ritory has been filled up so rapidly. This State has become a power in the land, and its influence for good or evil must be great in the nation at large. Her own growth in social improvement, and her own influence in exalting the character of the nation, depends upon the prevalence and power of righteousness for righteousness alqne can exalt a nation. The "Anti-Mission," or "Hard-Shell Baptists," have long since become a declining people, and there is every probability that they will continue thus to decline to complete extinction, or to an existence which is a living death. Their history gives evidence of the trnth that faith without works is dead, and that high orthodoxy without the grace of diffusiveness is barren. The mission cause, to which John M. Peck cheerfully devoted forty years of hard service, is continuing to wax stronger and stronger. It is the cause of God, and His word and oath are pledged that it shall live and prosper. PROGRESS OF EDUCATION IN ILLINOIS AND VICINITY. The cause of education is closely connected with the healthy existence of civil society, especially in the form which such society has assumed with us. There is no good ground for faith or hope in the future of this country, 80 HISTOKICAL ADDRESS. only BO long and so far as the people are both intelligent and upright; nor is it possible to preserve the honesty and simple virtues of Republicanism with- out the means of early mental discipline are provided for all ; and, if neces- sary, their use should be made compulsory by the successive generations, during the tender and irrepressible years of childhood and youth. The troubles connected with our last Presidential election had their root in a want of popular intelligence and popular virtue. It is a terrible strain upon any free government to have to carry millions of voters, utterly unqualified by lack of culture and political training, for the proper exercise of the right of suffrage, and so ignorant as to be controlled by unprincipled demagogues. It is absolutely necessary f or a maintainance of the civil order under a sys- tem of universal suffrage, that the masses should be educated ; and hence, the common school, supported by taxation, is necessary to the well-being and permanence of the State. But while the State, in defense of its own life, has a right to support, by taxation, common schools and normal schools to furnish teachers, its right to go further than this may be ques- tioned. Education, at the expense of the State, should be carried only so far as the great body of tne tax -payers can make it available for their chil- dren ; and hence, it should net extend beyond those common branches which every child can acquire, or be made to acquire. The Illinois Su- preme Court has decided that pupils cannot be compelled, in any public school, to study any branch not prescribed by the law which establishes the common schools. The studies so prescribed are, orthography, English reading, writing, arithmetic, English grammar, geography, and United States history. That principle of self-preservation which warrants the State in educating at all, cannot be made to sanction the higher education of the few at the expense of the many. And common school education should be so administered, as far as possible, as to do no injustice to the religious convictions of any tax-payer. Minorities have rights, and every shade of opinion must be respected. When the State has done what is necessary for its own life, private enterprise must do the rest. A magnif- icent field is thus left open for far-sighted Christian beneficence ; and those academies and colleges which owe their origin to the voluntary principle, can prosecute the work of instruction free and untrammelled. When volun- taryism in higher education gives us schools under the direction of Christian men and liberally endowed, Christianity will waken up and invigorate all the intellectual energies of our youth, and our colleges will maintain the highest character and become the most useful. But while education is so important to create the character a free nation so much needs, how is it possible for parents to secure this education while settling a new region of country ? It is hardly possible for us, in our cir- cumstances, to properly estimate the difficulties encountered by the early settlers in Illinois and the neighboring territories, in attempting to educate their children. It is very difficult for any one bred in the older communi- ties of the country to appreciate the extreme humility of border life, the meagreness and meanness of its household appointments, and the paucity of its stimulants to mental growth and social development. As a specimen of the HISTORICAL ADDKESS. 81 rude condition of the early settlers, take the description which Dr. Hol- land has given us in his "Life of Abraham Lincoln," page 28, of the furn- iture of the rude log cabin of Thomas Lincoln, the father of Abraham Lin- coln, when he resided in Indiana. Dr. Holland says : "The bed in which the elder Lincolus, and on very cold" nights, the little Lincolns, slept during their first years in Indiana, was one whose radeness will give a key to the kind of life which they lived there. The head and one side of the bed- stead were formed by an angle of the cabin itself. The bed-post standing out into the room was a single crotch, cut from the forest. Laid upon this crotch were the ends of two hickory sticks, whose other extremities were morticed into the logs, the two sides of the cabin and the two rails embrac- ing a quadrilateral space of the required dimensions. This was bridged by slats "rived" from the forest log, and on the slats was laid a sack filled with dried leaves. This was, in reality, the bed of Thomas and Nancy Lincoln ; and into it, when the skins hung at the cabin doorway did not keep out the cold, Abraham and his sister crept for the warmth which their still ruder couch upon the ground denied them." EARLY SOCIAL AND POLITICAL CONDITION. In the " Life of John M. Peck," pp. 101, 102, Mr. Peck gives us a de- scription of a log cabin and its furniture, that he came across in Missouri, that in its structure and household appointments, was very far inferior to the early home of Abraham Lincoln. Another characteristic of these prim- itive settlers was to be found in their dress. The men were seen wearing the coon-skin cap, buck-skin breeches, linsey hunting shirt (secured by a belt, from which hung the inevitable hunting knife), and coon-skin mocca- sins. The women wore their home-made woolen and cotton frocks, their heads were covered with handkerchiefs ; and if they went to the religious meeting, some would go barefooted, and if any of them were so rich as to own shoes, they would often carry them in their hands until reaching the vicinity of the sanctuary. . And we are told that the early judiciary system in Illinois, was also quite in keeping with the primitive simplicity of those early days. Judges were not necessarily prodigies in learning or law ; all that the people seem- ed to require was common sense, and a little sagacity. It is related of a certain Judge, that in a case when asked by the lawyers for information, he replied: " Why, gentlemen, the jury understand the case; no doubt they will do justice between the parties." At another time, when sentencing a man to be hanged, this same Judge said : " Mr. Green, the jury in their verdict say you are guilty of murder, and the law says you are to be hung. Now, I want you, and all your friends down on Indian creek to know that it is not I who condemn you, but the jury and the law. " And, then, having asked him what time he would like to be hung, the prisoner replied he was ready to die at any time the Court would appoint, the Judge told him he would give him four weeks to prepare for death. The Prose- cuting Attorney reminded the Judge that it was necessary for him to state to the prisoner the particular reasons for sentencing him to death, and ad- monish him to prepare for the solemn event. " His Honor " replied : "Oh, 82 HISTOKICAL ADDRESS. Mr. Green understands the whole matter as well as though I had preached to him a month ; he knows he's got to be hung this clay four weeks you understand that, don't you, Mr. Green ? " to which thr- prisoner replied "yes." When Judge Reynolds afterwards Governor was on his first cir cuit, the Sheriff proclaimed : Come in, boys ; our John is going to hold court," and court was held. This was before the days of legal circnlocu- tion. In this primitive state of things, it is not to be wondered at, that but little was done, in the way of educating the young. Some of the early settlers had never received any education themselves, and they did not know its value, and they contended that learning only qualified men for dishonesty ; and hence they were quite willing thnt their children should grow up to be men and women without it. The father thought it much more important that his son should be taught how to use his rifle than how to read or write. Some of the early settlers were more enlightened, and sought every oppor- tunity to educate their children ; but in doing this they encountered great difficulties. I have already alluded to James Lemen, Sen., a native of Vir- ginia, and one of the pioneer settlers in Illinois. Josiah Dodge, when vis- iting the country on a species of missionary tour, baptised this Mr. Lemen, and this is believed to have been the first administration of the ordinance within what is now the State of Illinois. A few years subsequent to his bap- tism, Mr. Lemen became a preacher; and five of his sons became ministers of the gospel. One of his sons, Robert Lemen, gave in "The Pioneer and Western Baptist," for 1835, "a sketch of the difficulties- encountered by the early settlers in Illinois, in attempting to educate their children." He says : "In July, 1786, my father moved to this country. A few days before his arri- val at the place intended a family was murdered by the Indians. This dis- tressing occurrence made it necessary for the inhabitants, being few in num- ber, to collect together in a small fort, and the only subject in discussion was, how- to devise the best possible means to secure themselves from danger, while they procured the necessaries of life, which was with great peril, on account of the sword in the wilderness. In this state of things, nothing was said, and but little thought of, about education. It is also to be recol- lected, that the early settlers in Illinois were chiefly what is called " back- woods men," who had but little or no education themselves, having been raised on the frontiers. FIEST SCHOOLS OF THE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY. The first school of which I recollect was taught at Bellefoutaine, near Waterloo, by a man by the name of Francis Clarke. Unfortunately for himself and the children, he was an intemperate man, but the people were under the necessity of doing the best they could. The next school was taught by one Charles O'Hara. He was, by profession, a Roman Catholic, and loved a dram, but all this had to be encountered. Another difficulty was the scarcity of books. Dillworth's spelling book the one most in use cost one dollar, and the currency consisting of deer skins, (specie being out of the question), it was difficult to make change, and children were neg- lected for the want of books. Some of the reading books were those that HISTORICAL ADDRESS. 83 were- ill suited to the youthful mind, such as the Arabian Nights' Entertain- ment, Robinson Crusoe, and the Seven Wise Mistresses. . . The man from whom I received the principal part of my small share of education, was by the name of Thomas Halfpenny. He was an honest, industrious teacher, but a poor scholar. This was unfortunate, as he taught a con- siderable length of time." The difficulties of which Mr. Lemen wrote were common to all the early settlers in Southern Indiana, Southern Illinois and Southern Missouri. Some of the schools at that period were really a public nuisance, and did the people more harm than good ; others about balanced the account, and some were advantageous to the community in various degrees. "Not a few drunken, profane, Worthless Irishmen were perambulating the country, and getting up schools , and yet they could neither speak, read, pronounce, spell, or write the English language. These agents were encouraged by the priests to go among the people. They loved their poteen dearly ; and fre- quently negotiated with the youngsters fora treat." [Life of J. M. Peck, p. 123. I have already spoken of a society, formed in 1818, in connection with the Illinois United Baptist Association, and the Missouri and Bethel Asso- ciations in Missouri, whose object was "to aid in spreading the Gospel, and promoting common schools in the Western parts of America, both among the whites and the Indians." In connection with this United Society, Brethren Peck and Welch directed their efforts to find out well-qualified teachers, and to recommend them to such settlements as would sustain them a measure fraught with no small benefits to the people. But Mr. Peck was not satisfied with this. For a long time he entertained the con- viction, "that one prime essential for the religious welfare of the West, was the establishment of a seminary, of a comprehensive and somewhat unique character, where the elements of a good, thorough, practical En- glish education should be open to all on very economical principles, and where teachers of common schools could receive better instruction than many of them had enjoyed; but especially and that was to be its grand peculiarity where ministers of the Gospel, whether young, or farther ad- vanced in years, could come and spend more or less time, according to their several circumstances and exigencies, in learning those things in which their deficiencies were the most painfully felt, pertaining to their great du- ties in preaching the Gospel and building up the churches aright." (Life of Peck, p. 225.) As one illustration of this want of education, Mr. Peck tells of one worthy brother and successful preacher at the West, so ignorant of our language that he would speak of our Savior as descending into heaven, and pray that the Lord would degenerate the hearts of sinners. (Bap. Me- morial, 1842, p. 157 ) "I cannot bear," said Mr. Peck, "that our preachers in Illinois and Missouri should continue as ignorant as some of them now are. There are some who wish to improve their minds, and gain useful learning. Young men who commence preaching with very inadequate ed- ucation will avail themselves of such a school, with immense benefit to themselves and the cause." Mr. Peck, therefore, continued to urge the im- 84 HISTORICAL ADDRESS. portance of such an institution in the West, and the result of his continued agitation of the subject was that in January, 1827, a meeting of the friends of such an enterprise -was held at Rock Spring, a Board of Trustees was chosen, and the seminary was located at that place, on land given by Mr. Peck for this purpose. By the end of May a seminary building was erected, and early in September a boarding house was raised, and the first of Novem- ber, 1827, a seminary was opened for the admission of pupils. The venera- ble father, Rev. Joshua Bradley, was made Principal, Mr. Peck, Professor of Theology, and other professors and tutors were secured, so that very soon the number of students flocking to enter and enjoy its advantages far ex- ceeded their most sanguine expectations. The seminary commenced with 25 students of both sexes, which number in a few weeks was increased to 100- At that period no school for boarders, under Protestant direction, ex- isted in Illinois or Missouri. "Rock Spring Theological and High School" was the first literary institution in the State of a higher order than a com- mon or primary school, and continued four years. During its continuance, 242 youth, male and female, attended as students for various periods of time. Of these, 33 professed to be converted while at the Seminary, and 20 more after leaving it, who received their first serious impressions in the Institution. Including such students as have since commenced the Gospel ministry, with those who were licensed preachers when they entered the Seminary, and the number is eleven. (Allen's Baptist Register, 1836, p. 83.)* In 1831, the school was closed with the view of its removal to Alton, as the commencement of a college. The Institution opened again in 1832, un- der the name of "Alton Seminary." A charter for a college was granted by the Legislature during the session of 1834-5, under the name of the " Alton College of Illinois.'" In consequence of the liberal "donation of ten thousand dollars made in 1835, by Dr. Benjamin Shurtleff, of Boston, Mass., the name in the charter has been changed to that of " SHURTLEFF COLLEGE OF ALTON, ILLINOIS." The subsequent history of this Institution has been written by Prof. Bulkley-and Dr. G. J. Johnson, who were better prepared to do the subject justice than I am, and hence I shall pass it over. HUMBiE BEGINNINGS GKAND RESULTS. God often employs feeble means to produce great effects. "Behold,"' says James, how great a matter a little fire kiudleth ! " " The kingdom of heaven," said our Savior, " is like to a grain of mustard seed, which a man took and sowed in his field. Which indeed is the least of all seeds ; but when it is grown, it is the greatest among herbs, and becometh a tree ; so that the birds of the air come and lodge in the branches thereof." (Matt. 13 : 31, 32.) In 1814 the Boston Baptist Association formed an Education * An interesting fact, illustrative of the state of society, and the sentiments prevailing in that day, is narrated by Mrs. M. P. Lemen, who was, about that time, a young lady teacher, residing in Mr. Peck's family. Soon afterthe open- ing of Bock Spring Seminary Mr. Peck applied to the (State Legislature for a charter for the Institution, but the granting of it was bitterly opposed and de- feated finally, through the influence of the Lieutenant Governor, who was a Hard Shell Baptist preacher. He argued that there was great danger from it, to the State. "Those Yankees," said he, "are moving into this Stale very rapid- ly, and, if we give them a charter for all these monopolies, our liberties will all soon be gone." x x x HISTORICAL ADDRESS. 85 Society. We are told that " An Address from the pen of Rev. Dr. Chap- lin, then pastor at Danvers, contributed materially to the formation of this society. The Address proved, in the providence of God, a most fruitful agency. The society, which it so much aided in forming, sent young min- isters for education to Dr. Chaplin ; the Trustees of the Maine Literary and Theological Institution, having located it at Waterville, appointed him Pro- fessor of Theology, and his removal to Waterville with his students led to the chartering of the institution as Waterville College. The society also had an intimate connection with the founding of the Newton Theological Institution, and for several years supported one of its professors. The Ad- dress exerted a potent influence also in Western New York. In March, 1864, Dr. T. J. Conant wrote to Dr. H. B. Ripley : "Soon after my con- nection with the Hamilton Literary and Theological Institution, in 1835, I had the pleasure of meeting with the Rev. Daniel Hascall. During the in- terview he spoke of Dr. Chaplin and of the Address written by him and presented to the Boston Association on the subject of forming an Education Society. Its arguments, he said made a deep impression on his mind, and first suggested to him the idea of forming such an association for promoting the education of the ministry ; and that this led to the formation of the New York Baptist Education Society. The formation of that society oc- casioned the founding of the Hamilton Institution, and this led to the char- tering of Madison University ; and in these originated the University of Rochester and Rochester Theological Seminary. Thus the seed, cast abroad by one earnest effort of 'a good man, full of faith and the Holy Spirit,' has taken root and brought forth a thousand fold." (Missionary Jubilee, pp. 334, 335.) And alike fruitful have been the earnest efforts of John M. Peck. In " The Baptists and the National Centenary," p. 161, Dr. Smith, of Chicago, says of John M. Peck : "A characteristic incident is related of him in this connection. One day a young Presbyterian minister, Rev. John M. Ellis, a graduate of the Andover Theological Seminary, and who had then recently come into Illinois, was riding on horse back, in "the Sanga- mon Country," as the central portion of the State was then called. As he was making his way over the lonely prairies, interspered here and there with patches of " timber," he came to a clearing in the midst of hazels and black- jacks, and was arrested in his purpose by the sound of an ax. Observing the woodman near by, he called to him with the question, " What are you doing here, stranger ?" " I am building a theological seminary," was the reply. " What, in these barrens ?" "Yes, I am planting the seed." The woodman was John M. Peck, and the " seed he planted sprang and grew as the Rock Seminary, transplanted, subsequently to Alton, and is now flourishing and fruitful as Shurtleff College. But Mr. Peck was planting seed for even more than he himself knew ; for the thoughts suggested by this interview grew in the mind of Mr. Ellis himself, and resulted in the foundation of Illinois College, at Jacksonville.* * And it is affirmed bv living witnesses that Lebanon Seminary, which was opened Nov. 24, 1828, a little over one year later than Rock Spring Seminary, at Lebanon, in sight of Rock Spring Seminary, and which has since become McKendree College, was brought into existence by our Methodist brethren in their laudable zeal not to be outdone by the Baptists. x x x 86 HISTORICAL ADDRESS. No hurnau being can tell the full influence, direct and indirect, of the planting of that seed at Rock Spring, and the subsequent transplanting to Alton. One honest effort of that kind prepares the way for many others. In the Bethel Baptist Association to which I belong in Kentucky, we have two flourishing literary institutions the Bethel College; at Russellville, and the Bethel Female College, at Hopkinsville. In the minutes of our last Association, Prof. Waggener gives the history of the origin of these two Institutions, and he says of one of the former students of Shurtleff College : "He was the first mover in establishing the two literary institutions of Bethel Association. And although these enterprises were successfully car- ried out by the persistent labors of others, yet the Association to-day owes to him the conception and happy inauguration of the schemes which have given her two well -equipped colleges." OTHER RESULTS FROM THIS BEGINNING. David Benedict, in his new "History of the Baptists," published in 1848, p. 844, says: "As yet I do not discover that our people have made any progress toward founding a college or theological seminary in Missouri. The Shurtleff College, at Alton, Illinois, is so close alongside of them, and the water c ommunications from almost all parts of the State concentrate so generally at that point, that their students, I believe, avail themselves gen- erally of the advantages of that institution. At no distant period our Mis- souri brethren will no doubt have an institution of their own somewhere on the great river which gives name to their State ; and somewhere in the Boone's Lick Settlements, in my opinion, would be a good location." The next year after Benedict published this, 1849, the William Jewell College was founded by the Baptists in Missouri, through the action of their General Association ; and although it has had to struggle hard with pecuni- ary embarrassments, it is doing good service in the cause of education. Its theological department has been organized as a school of the college, and a large number of young ministers have availed themselves of the advantages of that institution. And La Grange College, at La Grange, and the Baptist Female College, at Columbia, known as Stephens' College, are doing a good work in that State. In his edition of 1848, Benedict says of Iowa and Wis- consin, p. 849: "The Shurtleff College at Alton, Illinois, I see in some of their documents, is recommended as a suitable place for their students, until they can get up institutions of their own." But Iowa has now her Bur- lington Collegiate Institute, her Central University at Pella, and the Uni- versity of Des Moines, and is no longer dependent on Shurtleff College. And the Baptists of Wisconsin have their Wayland University, at Beaver Dam, as a suitable place for their students. And since John M. Peck planted that "seed" at Rock Spring, in 1827, how many literary institutions, even within our own denomination, have sprung into existence ! In 1881, the Baptists of Ohio established what is now known as Denison University, at Granville, in that State. In 1834, the Baptists of Indiana founded Franklin College. In January, 1857, an act incorporating the University of Chicago was passed by the General Assembly of the State of Illinois. But though the field formerly occupied by Shurtleff College is far more limited HISTORICAL ADDRESS. 87 than formerly, the density of population now in the field that yet remains to her, and the vast increase of Baptists in that field, go far to compensate her for her loss of territory. She still occupies a good field, a commanding site, a good location, and has a "warm place in the hearts of the people. Solomon says : "In the morning sow thy seed, and in the evening withhold not thine hand : for thou knowest not whether shall prosper, either this or that, or whether they both shall be alike good." Eccl. 11 : 6. Not all the seed which even John M. Peck helped to plant, was by any means as pro- ductive as that which he planted at Rock Spring. "Of the Western Theo- logical Institution at Covington, Kentucky, whose plan and whole purpose he largely aidec 1 , he was deservedly reckoned one of the founders. And when it split on the rock of sectionalism, he mourned as the true mother of the Irving child before King Solomon, in view of the cutting asunder. This Institution was originated by the Western Baptist Education Society, formed at the meeting of the General Convention of Western Baptists, at Cincin- nati, in November, 1834. Valuable property was purchased in Coviugtou, Kentucky, which rose rapidly in value, and the Institution was put into operation under the most flattering circumstances. A correspondent of the American Baptist, in 1836, speaking of the contemplated Institution and its location, says: "It is near Cincinnati nearer, I believe, .than the Lane Sem- inary, and cannot fail of receiving the sympathies and patronage of the whole State of Ohio. Still it is in Kentucky, and will doubtless be regarded by her, so generous in her dowries, as her own and most cherished daughter. Indiana favors the selection, and will not be backward in adopting the In- stitution as her own. The Churches in the East will not only pray, but contribute for its success. It will clash with none of their Institutions or interests ; but it will be a powerful means of promoting that for which they labor and pray the diffusion of knowledge and pure religion through- out the immense valley of the West. Let it maintain the character of a purely theological institution ; let it be trammelled by no appendage ; let it interfere with no political or feverish question, which so often agitates and distracts human society ; let it be eminent for sound knowledge arid sound religion, as taught by Christ and His apostles, and it will be, and long con- tinue, a bright and shining star in the West." This Theological Institute was chartered by the Legislature of Kentucky, February 5th, 1840. For thirteen years it was in Covington, having an efficient Faculty, and a respectable number of students. "The Board of Trustees was composed partly of Southern and partly of Northern Baptists, and the students were drawn from the South as well as from the North. It was a period of intense feeling on the subject of slavery, and it is by no means surprising that dissension appeared, and the location of the school became unsatisfactory. In 1853, the funds and effects were divided by a compromise between the Northern and Southern Trustees." The half that went to the Northern Trustees was put into the Fairmouut Theological Seminary, near Cincinnati, of which nothing now remains. The other half of the funds and property was transferred to Georgetown, Kentucky, and amounts to about $48,000. The Western Baptist Theological Institute, 88 HISTOKICAL ADDRESS. holding this property, is a corporation distinct from that which holds George- town College, yet many of the same men are members of both Boards, and they may be looked upon as working together for the same end. But this is the meagre and stinted fruit^of what promised to be an abundant harvest. THE GLORIOUS FRUITAGE AND HARVEST. The seed planted at Rock Spring has not issued in any such mortifying disappointment. Transplanted under the guidance of Divine Providence, God caused it to take root, to blossom and bud, and fill the face of the country with fruit. Located from design on "Free Soil," the agitation of no politiqal or feverish question has ever marred its growth or worked its destruction. If its growth has not been rapid it has been a healthy growth, and the fruit it has borne has been good fruit. At every step of its progress, tokens of Divine approbation have marked its history. The refreshing rain, and the gentle dew from heaven, have descended from time to time, and converts have "sprung up as among the grass, as willows by the water courses." The sons of Shurtleff have been "as plants grown up in their youth." full-grown, well-formed, stout, strong and vigorous, even in early life not stunted in their growth, but of full and manly proportions. The* students of this College have distinguished themselves by their patriotism and bra- very in the service t>f their country. Some of them have acquitted them- selves nobly as jurists, statesmen, teachers and editors ; a large number of them have entered the Gospel Ministry. Some of them rank among the first Christian ministers in this laud, and others are now missionaries of the cross among the heathen in foreign lands. And then, too, some who were once students in this College have finished their work on earth and have gone up on high to receive their reward. And among the departed are the names of some that will not soon be forgotten, for they are worthy to be had "in everlasting remembrance.'" The Baptists of Missouri will long hold in grateful remembrance the name of Noah Flood, and not soon will the Baptists of Kentucky cease to cherish the memory of James M. Frost. We have an interest hi cherishing the memory of such men ; being dead, they yet speak to us by their examples of piety and devoticn, and we will remem- ber them as righteous men. The root, then, transplanted from Rock Spring to Alton has not been as rottenness, and its blossom did not go up as dust. Heaven has furnished the moisture and the suitable juices for the support of the plant, and it is now a goodly, stately, fruit-bearmg tree, with abundant promise for the fu- ture. And had John M. Peck been blessed with the gift of prophetic vision, when he planted that seed at Rock Spring, with reference to that seed and the cause of education which he represented, he might have sung the lines of Dr. John Ryland : ' ' This little seed from heaven Shall soon become a tree, This ever blessed leaven Diffused abroad shall be : Till God the Son shall come again; It must go on Amen, Amen!" QUINQUAGENARIUM. REV. WILLIAM C. RICHARDS, PH. D. I know an adage old and terse With which I may begin my verse : And nothing as I've come to know it- So much embarrasses the poet As how to make a good beginning, And thus its first applauses winning With just a sip or two of sense Carry his easy audience thence, Into the desert, thinking still They get of sparkling wit their fill ; And, drinking, call the nonsense fine Because at first they tasted wine ! Be mine the fortune at this time To fashion thus my opening rhyme, And with some happy trick beguile Your friendly favor all the while. All this by way of preface meant I turn at once to my intent, The adage old and terse, whose wit The budding of my verse shall fit. You've said and felt it often, brother That "One good turn deserves another." You smile, and yet you know not why, Nor in my parable descry The happy hit that is to make Through half an hour just for its sake, The dullness of my task^less dreary And save your ears from growing wear}-. This is my riddle, then, or yours ; No matter whose, so it secures Its own solution, and you see How pat the proverb seems to me. Ye sous of Shurtleff, here to-day, At Alma Mater's shrine to pay The honors of your hearts and voices While every heart to heart rejoices And kindles to its old-time passion, In speech and song and festive fashion, May wonderjwhy au alien lyre 90 QUINQUAGENARlUM. IB struck to-day with alien fire, When Shurtleff's altars are ablaze With the hot fires of ancient clays, And through the shades of fifty years In their red light her fame appears ; May wonder why a stranger stands Before your mustered, marshalled bands, Without their ichor in his vains To mock you with his foreign strains, And veil in unknown shibboleth Themes that befit a brother's breath. Ah, if your eyes indignant burned Like these sharp rhymes my muse has turned, If you but felt as I have sung Your frowns had hushed my timid tongue ; And the old adage in my verse I had not waited to rehearse, To which I come at last to show What wit lies hid its words below. 'Twas eight years since, as I count back, Along life's swift receding track, I heard my own dear Mother* say I use the word in college way "My son, when next the roses blow, "And June's bright smiles around me glow, "I shall have come, through smiles and tears "To number fifty rounded years. "Then I shall gather at my feet "As doves around their windows meet "My noble sons from far and nigh ; "And oh, what Mother proud as I, "To sit and see the grand array "About me that auspicious day. "My heroes ; first the white-haired few, "Who hi my smiles their youth renew ; "Next, the long ranks of stalwart sons, "Grudging yet glad ! to leave their guns, "Those weapons of their strength and skill "They train God's foes and man's, to kill. "And, last, my boys just fit to go "With hairy cheeks from Jericho ! "But in each hand a sword to wield "And over every breast my shield." "My son," the mother said again "All these will need some music strain, "Some anthem wrought from out the years, * Madison University, Hamilton, N. Y. QUINQUAGENARIUM. 91 "And woven" well of smiles and tears "To mark our~eras as they go ; "Slug such a strain the best you know." With faltering tongue and fainting heart, I wrought at that high feast my part ; And heedless what I had to'earn, I did my Mother "one good turn," Which, sous of Shurtleff, your good Mother Made up her mind "deserved another" 'Gainst Kendrick's wish and Johnson's must In what proof -armor could I trust ? My judgment to their pleas said, "no," The while my lips belied it so. But hence I'm warned ; and never more I'll do as I have done before. "One good turn" from my hand not reckoned; The first will not deserve a second. Had Death, insatiate Archer, missed His aim when to her starry list Shurtleff' s first Hobbs his shaft transferred, My voice this Jubilee, unheard, Had been as needless, in the flow Of his sweet strains who, long ago, Sang, while he trod her classic way?, Her quarter-century's song of praise. And had I known how yet his fire Electric thrills a brother's lyre, My deep reluctancy had grown Into denial's ruthless tone ; And left the younger Hobbs to fill With melody this June-decked hill. Since who so well last night could siug, This song of Jubilee should bring. He envies not my task, perhaps, But bides his time, and waits the lapse Of half a hundred years, when he Shurtleff' s centennial bard shall be; And older than our Bryant now, With whiter locks upon his brow, Ten thousand Shurtleff sons shall throng To bless her name, and praise his song. THE GATHERING. We have heard our Mother's call "Come, my children, one and all, "Gather at my ancient hall." And we come ! 92 QUINQUAGENAEIUM. We have conie that we may greet, One another at her feet, And that fifty years may meet As we come ! Some with heads as white as snow, Who the farthest back can go ; Many for the first to know, Since we come! We have laid our toils aside, Hast'ning o'er the prairie wide, Floating down the giant tide- Here to come. Only once could we obey Such a call, on such a day ; Love would not let us stay away ; And we come ! God be with us, as He stood With our fathers in the wood ; Then for good, and only good, Are we come. EETEOKSDM. Fifty long years to come and go, Of all their lapse 'tis nought we know ; But fifty years behind usjshine In many a bright, historic line. Thy cycle, Shurtleff, sweeps around, A hundred memories, and profound, Of daring deeds, heroic names, Of human glories, and of shames ; Of falling thrones, and thrones that rose, Of kingdoms rent by battle's blows ; Of nations crushed by tyrants' greeds, Of shifting crowns and changing creeds ; Of commerce whitening every sea, With wings of thrift and industry ; Of daring emprise that has won An empire reaching toward the sun ; , Of marriage bonds of glittering steel, That link twain oceans heel to heel, And belt the continents they sever With human sympathies forever. I may not sing in this brief hour, Th' unnumbered trophies of man's power ; The mysteries scanned and marvels wrought Out. of his cunning cells of thought, That curb the fleet electric steeds And harness them to humble deeds ; QUINQUAGENARIUM. , 93 Or bid their feet obedient run, Swift as the ceursers of the sun, O'er deserts drear, and under waves, Where once man nothing found but graves ! Where thy first germ of life was set In soil that lies prolific yet, Then by the threacherous savage trod, But vowed and 'consecrate' to God By one who in the wilderness, Owned and invoked His power to bless, No fiery steed on iron track Beat the red warriors' ambush back Beyond that flood, whose tide to-day- Divides a heritage half way, That, East and West in happy strife- Throbs to its core with boundless life. THE GERM. While in great London's splendid mart And nigh its busy beating heart, They laid with stately form and rale The corner-stone of far-famed school And builded well for men to see, The London University Another school, unnoted sprung E'en while the ducal trowel rung Upon the polished stone in place, Wrought with nice skill and carved with grace ; Another school, beneath a sky Whose lightnings "scared the red man's eye, And in a wilderness, whose gloom Lay thick as shadows 'round a tomb. No corner-stone with pomp was laid, No speech of courtesy was said, No vivas rose from eager throng, Or swelled in dedication song ; Yet in silence there, was set A germ that broadly bourgeons yet For through the forest rang the strokes That bit the breasts of stately oaks, And laid their leafy crests at length To droop above the shattered strength. A single arm that ravage wrought, Nerved by one bosom's holy thought. No woodsman he, of common fame, But bearing an Apostle's name Who swung his axe, nor paused to heed 94 QUINQUAGENAKIUM. A pilgrim's challenge from his steed, But answered him between' the strokes He dealt upon the stately oaks ! And thus the challenge rang, they say- Fair legend of that shadowy day "Why, Brother Peck, what do you here ? " And thus the answer, sharp and clear "I hack and hew for sacred knowledge ; I fell time trees to found a College /" WHO AEE LIFE'S HEEOES? Who are life's heroes ? Whom shall we crown When their sun has gone down ? . Are they princes of war, whose red plumes Cast their shadows on tombs ? Who are Earth's great ones? Whom shall we praise At the end of their days ? Are they masters of wisdom, whose lore Is of time, and no more ? Who are the sovereigns ? Whom shall we greet With our knees at their feet ? Are they tenants of thrones ? Do they play With their crowns for a day ? Who are Earth's heroes ? Whom may we bless At the last of Life's stress ? They are servants of God ; and their throne Is as sure as His own ! He was a hero that John of the wood, And he stands as he should With his axe, in our memory to-day, First to strike and to pray ! KOCK-SPEING 'SCHOOL. Where the savage trapped the deer, Nigh a rock-spring gushing clear, Of the stalwart trees that fell, When the woodman smote so well, To the music of his blows, Soon a citadel arose ! Not so true that myth of old, Of divine Amphion told How the Theban walls upgrew, As his tuneful fingers flew O'er the strings of the new-born lyre Quivering with Citherean fire. Wondrous music of the steel QUINQUAGENARIUM. 95 Lo ! the forest monarchs feel, And to beams and rafters spring Of that citadel I sing ; Though less proud the name it bore, Just a Sclwol, and nothing more, Hallowed, though, by high intent, To one sacred purpose bent, Prophets of our God to teach Dialects of heavenly speech ; Tongues to voice the sweet evangels Earth-ward dropt from lips of angels. Through a lustrum, song and prayer Blent with ardent study there ; Stealthy savage of the wood By its holy spell tabooed, On it drew no bow in wrath From his hasty hunting path. For a lustrum, as I sung, Hary woods with life grew young ; Here and there, in bosky glade, Studious wood-nymphs, unafraid, Learned "to love" tho' but in Latin (I'm reminded to put that in !) And incipient Websters spoke To some leafy, listening oak. Happy days ! but brief as fair ; Shadows gathered unaware, And the lustrum fled the woods Won back their old solitudes ; While a fairer spot beguiled Learning's forest-cloistered child, Nearer the great river's flow, And a cradled town below ; This domain with foresight planned, Where these halls of Shurtleff stand. SHADOW AND SUNSHINE. v The good apostle's heart fell sore, When over Rock-Spring silence fell, His happy dream, too brief, was o'er, And with that dream his hope as well ! In vain upon the thick trees, he v The sharp prophetic axe had laid, His "College" he should never see Communing with his fears, he said. 96 QUINQUAGEXARITJM. And when the newer home was found, And hope in other breasts grew bright, Wrapt in his sense of loss profound, His eyes were slow to catch the light. It broke for his faint soul at length, With a clear promise in its ray, As the old School, with new-born strength, At Alton heights, pursued its way. And ere its second lustrum filled, His dream among the oaks came true; His doubts dissolved, his murmurs stilled, As Alton School a College grew. Trophies enough for one decade, The generous gift of ShurtlefE crowned ; Presage of victories here displayed Now fifty years have run their round. 'Twas thus this seat of learning sprung Prom one twice-planted, feeble root, Set when this populous State was young, And only Faith foresaw its fruit. Set where the wilderness stood thick, For many a weary league abroad ; With inward light their eyes were quick, Who planted it for men and God. On Shurtleff's classic annals stand, Their honored names with stars anigh ; Our chief apostle and his baud, Old Rock-Spring's grand decemviri ! MEMORIES. Ten years of the fifty I am to review, And half of my poem already run through ; The College, I trow, will shine less in my verse, Than the germs it has sprung from I stop'd to rehearse. The leisurely pace of my muse hitherto, For the rest of her journey 'tis plain will not do ; How's this, that she's going at now allegro ! She couldn't have galloped, among the graves, so. But before we get out of a second decade, There's an item of credit that ought to be made To the State Legislature, of date 'forty-one, For the deed of its sage predecessors undone. QUINQUAGENAKIUM. 97 While yet they were Vandals Vandaliam I mean, Those Soloiis had infinite dangers foreseen, In granting to Alton's judicious trustees A charter to do whatsoe'er they might please. Those seven wise men sought a franchise," to frame Two schools with one charter and only one name ; A terrible plot to those Vandals it loomed, To unite Church and State, and the Charter was doomed. With a change of venue, came another of thought, And the Charter untrammelled to Alton was brought ; So in Letters and Science and Art and Theology, Shurtleff, became at a bound, very Colleg-y. My own Alma Mater her struggles and strife Come back to my mind with the colors of life, As I ransack the records of Shurtleff to glean The facts for these verses, and fancies between ! I shut from my vision the poem I read When the blossoms of fifty years flushed her fair head, Lest the lays of this hour unconsciously grow Too much in the manner of that in their flow. From the plow-tail and work-bench she summoned her boys, As did Shurtleff, I trow, from the young Illinois ; Poor fellows were both, in a dollar-ous sense, Of more weight in pounds, I'll be bound, than in pence. I sung of the fashion in which we were fed, At a dollar a week for our porridge and bread ; And my notes of your ancient "Refectory" hint That it wasn't in lessons the boys suffered stint. Memorandum: "Boys raided on pantry and kitchen," Not added if Abigails' there were bewitchin'; So I'm left to infer it was cookies and pies, That sharpened their wits and affected their cj r es. In those primitive days if the viands were scantj', And the chapel or hall just a hut or a shanty, There was pluck in the boys and the making of men, And one wishes at times, they would come back again ! When if luxuries lacked, there was logic to spare, And matter none ventured with mind to compare; When brain had not bowed to the lordship of muscle, Nor scholarship turned on a mill or a tussle. 98 QUINQUAGENARIUM. In corpore sano mens sana perhaps ! The adage is good with a possible lapse ; There are caputs so sound, that they echo like brass, And there's nought else within or beneath them alas ! But honor to Shurtleff, her day is not gone, When brain is still lord over muscle and brawn ; "When her wisdom moulds wit and virtue stamps knowledge And Religion and Law are the guards of the College. Not her's be the woe of old Harvard to-day, Whose sons are fast flinging her honors away ; In orgies of lust, and in Bacchanal rites, Defaming their days with their revels of nights. Ah, mother of colleges in this new world, Dragged down from thy throne and to infamy hurled. Rase, rase from thy 'scutcheon the legend we see Deep graven there "CHEISTO ET EOOLKSI^R !" made mrtute ye fortunate youth, Drink deep at the well springs of knowledge and truth : Like deacons be grave, or like men you may see, With tags to their names, the inscription M. C. Let no wild heats of blood, or indulgence, e'er rage In your scholarly veins, and oh, never engage In raids, most unseemly, on innocent chickens When a tell-tale's at hand, who will just raisethe Dickens. Give ear to a tale of a far-away College 1 credit the legend on second-hand knowledge Of how when the chapel lacked water and paint, And was sweet to the smell of nor sinner nor saint; The wrong-headed boys, from the top through each grade. Their surplus of wit and of ardor displayed ; Turned the chapel clean out on the campus, and set The old stove to belching, there, thick clouds of jet. Then with faces like monks, at their benches they sat, With wayward side glances, now this way, now that, To catch the first glimpse of the then regnant Vice, And their eyes then to drop on the ground in a trice. I was told on that morning that prayers were not said; I hope it is true that the young sinners shed Floods of tears, that both washed out their crime in their fall. And left enough over to wash out the hall ! QUINQUAGENARIUM. 99 The College makes men, but it happens sometimes. That the case is reversed both in fact and in rhymes, And a man makes a college by wisdom and zest Circumspice reverendm magintei- adest. He came to the chair when the chair was a throne, And the pestilent morals of Harvard unknown ; His boys came to time both for task and for trial, For he carried in front of him ever a dial.* Not always his name marks the force of a man, As I found while I chanced Shurtlcff's annals to scan ; And noted of Presidents there named, a Head, Who for fourteen long years was a ruler indeed. From the sea on the east to the great river's side, He came as your guest at this Jubilee-tide ; And his step and his smile and the words he has spoken, Are the sign and the seal that this reed is unbroken. Here's Kendrick the king of your councils to-day How the name stirs my heart as the wind stirs the *sea ! Nathaniel, of Hamilton, grand among men, May this Adin, of Alton, revive him again. While your Presidents thus in procession pass by, There is one whose white crown rises up to mine eye ; Who has stood in the breach (I might have said breaches, But even the bard must beware of his speeches !) Ecce Jwmo, juvenes, et puellce formosa>, His cheek had grown furrowed ere your's was yet rosy ; Think how long he's been patient with folly and bosh, And keep in your hearts a warm place for Prof. Wash.t You looked for these verses from me Monday night, But mine would have been but a pitiful plight, Bringing "funeral baked meats," like some grave undertaker, When yon'd supped on a very large loaf from your Baker. J Were this Jubilee day like one of the six, So long they get Science and Faith in a fix I'd sing for you, Fairman, Hodge, Dodge, Clark and Castle, And Bulkky besides but I'm Time's humble vassal ! *Rev. Adiel Sherwood, D. D. Now in his eighty-sixth year. tProf. Washington Leverett, LL. D., twice acting President, and for thirty- two years a Professor of the College. ' 'Prof. Wash" is his familiar soubriquet. IRev. Samuel Baker, D.D., one of the first graduates, and Historical Orator of the Jubilee. 100 QUINQUAGENAEIUM. So I leave them unmcntioncd, (as Paddy would say) Awaiting their chance on next Jubilee day ; When Hobbs with his Century -plant in full blow, Will fill ii]> that hole* where he says it should grow ! ALLEGRETTO. Flow now Avith soberer course, my verses, ^llow, * The end is nigh to which your currents go ; An allegretto movement suits the thought To which my wandering fancies here are brought. There beams, to-day, on all this labor done, No mortal eye that smiled when it begun; Or what delight would in such vision dwell, And with our Jubilee raptures rise and swell. Too soon to our impatient thoughts and sighs Sunk in unwaking sleep his friendly eyes, Who only, of the ancient ten, we said, Might living, represent to us the dcad.t Death lets the Doctor sometimes balk his will, But takes a sure revenge upon his skill. Dead I dead ! hew close the stars shine on the leaves Of the half -century book Death's clustering sheaves ! Her faithful guardians, counted by the score, Her generous benefactors Heaven send more ! Her Kendall, Gove and Marsh replaced, she'd build New monuments to fame, the old regild ! Not Johnson's zeal though crowned to all his dream, And the full rim of his Centennial scheme, Would make your Alma Mater's means exceed Your wish, good Sons, or her most urgent need. Measure her worth, by unremitting ami, To keep unstained her pure, religious name, To shield her sons from gilded charms of sin, To teach them virtue and to root it in .' To make them rich in all of earthly lore, And wise to value heavenly wisdom more. To give again to Church and State their gold x Minted in men of worth, a thousand fold. TO THE GIELS. I cry your pardon, Shurtleff s daughters fair, That in my song you shine not anywhere ! How can I make excuse both true and meet, The basement of a new College-hall, whose foundations have waited [and wanted] for years the superstructure. fDr. B. F. Edwards, who died May, 1877. QUINQUAGENAKIUM. 101 Save, only, pleading that a theme so sweet I held reserved until its length should make My verse too tedious, save for your dear sake ? Ah, when I went to College, boys and girls Were kept apart like pebble-stones and pearls ; Except when sometimes pretty pearls would glide, Or pebbles roll, to one another's side. Had they been polished then in one sainc mill, Though bashful once, I had not stayed so still ! I own the problem oft my mind perplexes, If wisely we co-educate the sexes ; Though I forbear my pros and cons to state ; I could not in your presence put them straight. My cons, I fear, might somehow serve to tease you, When all niy present puipose is to please you; And equally I must my pros withhold, Since all my tale, in verse alone, is told. I greet you, maidens, and congratulate The boys, who hear your dimpling lips narrate The pretty legends of the Virgil classes, And play. ./Eneas to young Dido lasses. Yet shall this loftier thought my verse inflame, With tribute fit to woman's hallowed name, That manhood nurtured from its youth with you, Were false to allwJien not to honor true. A SONG TO UKAK WOMAN. / Here's a Jubilee chant to dear woman, She's the light of our homes ; And who does not love her is no man, Wheresoever he roams. Here's a beaker of f praise to our mothers, All the good in us their's ; All the evil our own, or another's They would wash out with tears. Here's to our wives, 'our devotion, "Until death do us part," As the river flows into the ocean Flows their love in our heart. Here's a cup to our dutiful daughters, Their sweet mothers twice ours ; As fountains renew their own waters, And their margins their flowers. 102 QUINQUAGENARIUM. Here's honor and love to true maidens, What they make men they are ; Life's deserts they turn into Aidens, Where each shines as a star ! IMPROMPTU. A moment here, my muse, I pray, Linger a tribute sweet to pay To Monticello's queen,* whose smiles Have Hashed like sunlight down these aisles. We give her welcome here to-day, And bless her for her work alway. In Monticello's charming shades She trains a host of lovely maids ; And with God's grace and light upon her, Makes them her happy maids of honor ; And fits them each at length to rule, Mistress and queen of home's dear school ! EOLL-OALL. Now call the roll of fifty years ! But stay, the list too long appears. We'll play the great procession's passed, Three thousand from the first to last ! And each one answering to his name, The pageant closes with acclaim ! Nor we can all the work renew, And weigh its worth in balance true ; The Master's hand must hold the scales, He settles what succeeds or fails ; And failure or success with Him, Lies hid from us beyond the rim Of finite knowledge, where alone, Unerrinf Wisdom holds the throne. The record lies before His face ; Prostrate, we leave it to His grace. THE JUBILEE SONG. Fifty years of hope and toil, Fifty years of toil and faith, Great the labor, rich the spoil, So each grateful toiler saith ; *Miss H. N. Haskell, Principal of the Monttccllo Fcm.ale Seminary, situated five miles from Sliurtleff College. QUINQUAGENARIUM.' 103 Many voices sweet there be Mingling in our Jubilee. Some grown dumb of mortal speech, Sing in tones we may not hear, Though we strive in vain to reach Some soft cadence haply near ; Oh, the rapture if but we Heard their song in Jubilee. All along the fifty years, Silence fell on sainted lips, Folding earthly hopes and fears, In the gloom of life's eclipse ; Now they sing more sweet than we On this day of Jubilee. What a throng upon the Earth, What a group in Paradise, Join to-day in sacred mirth, Blending songs of earth and skies. Never earthly strain can be Sweeter than our Jubilee. Other tongues than ours will sing Fifty years from this glad day, When Centennial shouts shall ring O'er our unawakencd clay ; Hut from sin and sorrow free, We sfiall keep Heaven's Jubilee ! CENTENNIAL-JUBILEE MEMORIAL ROLL-BOOK OF UPPER ALTON, ILL. CONTAINING THE NAMES OF ALL oNTRIBUTOI\S, WITH POSTOFFICES, AND AMOUNTS GIVEN TO THE COLLEGE, IN CONNECTION WITH THE jDEN TENNIAL AND JUBILEE EFFORT OF YEARS 1876 AND l87Ji ARRANGED UNDEJ\ THEIR RESPECTIVE JR.OLLS, WITH PAYMENTS, so FAR AS MADE, AND GENERAL SUMMARY. ALTON, ILL.: DAILY TKLBQKAPH STEAM PRINT. 1877. EXPLANATORY. When the effort, that was commenced in 1874, under the direction of the President, for paying off the debts of Shurtleff College, had made a degree of hopeful progress, and then, in 1876, under the superintendance of a Special Agent secured, was enlarged to a movement to raise, at least, if possible, $100,000, a sum sufficient, not only to pay all debts, but to so in- crease the Endowments as to furnish henceforth ample income for the sup- port of the College, hi its present organization, and possibly, also to add one or two new Professorships, it was promised that, if the effort should be successful, the result should be published in detail, in book form, and a copy be fnrnished to each contributor at bare cost of the publication. In compliance with that promise this issue is made. All new contributions that have come to the College, since the commencement of the effort, and whether or not specially designated as Centennial or Jubilee gifts, are in- cluded in this report. It is not claimed that the aggregate, herein reported as secured, is a full equivalent to that amount of money in hand ; for, while about $30,000 have been already paid in cash, a portion also has been, or is to be, paid in lands, lots,, railroad bonds, or life insurance policies, that may not, in all cases, be of present equal value to the money they nominally represent ; and quite a large sum is also in promissory notes, running for years, on moderate inter- est, or without interest till due ; and several thousands, too, are in mortuary notes, bearing very small interest until after the death of the givers. It is, however, claimed that there are no pledges or obligations of any kind herein published (unless a few may be excepted, whose conditional features are indicated in writing,) but are positive in their promise provided only that $100,000 or more should be raised, and hence all are fully expected, sooner or later, to realize for the College the amounts they represent.- In accordance with the plan announced, at the beginning of the Centen- nial year, each contribution is arranged under its respective Roll always in keeping with the wish of contributors, when known, and at other tunes, according to the best judgment of the Agent. The credits that appear for payments made, set opposite to each pledge of larger amounts than the Dollar Roll, though exactly correct on the day that the account is given to the printer, still are frequently changing on the books of the Treasurer by additional payments made, and, therefore, must not be regarded as necessarily correct at any subsequent date. "; And it is proper here to add that, it is expected, that any parties who have made pledges that they have not yet paid or secured, will promptly attend 108 ROLL BOOK. to the same upon receipt of the information that .$100,000 have been sub- scribed, as all pledges, not] previously paid or secured, became due for pay- ment or security as soon as that amount was obtained. In addition to those contributions, that appear on the following pages, made for the general purposes of the College, as for the paying of debts and increase of endowments, and to the special contributions designated for the Alumni Professorship, some twenty Scholarships also, of $1,000 each, have been created, generally upon the condition that, when not in use by their owners, they may be applied by the Faculty to aid of worthy and needy students; and especially, also, two Memorial Funds have been established, one, by payment of $6,000 by Mrs. Stephen Griggs, of New York City, as the "Griggs Memorial Fund," for aid of Ministerial Students, under direc- tion of the Faculty; and the other, by Mrs. Thomas Pratt, of St. Louis, who has secured $5,000 as the "Pratt Memorial Fund," for general support of the College and education of the Gospel Ministry. These Memorial Funds, like Professorships and Scholarships, are to be forever preserved as Trust Funds the annual interest only to be expended, and that for the purposes designated. In connection with the foregoing, it is appropriate to call attention to the interesting'fact, which an examination of the following pages will sustain, that the ladies have contributed over one-third of the entire amount raised during this Centennial-Jubilee effort. All honor to the noble Christian women whose names are herein recorded. And, in closing our report, we may also append, for the encouragement of friends, that we regard as not least among the good results, that have been attained by this effort the wide diffusion of information concerning the College, its history, work and prospects, and the awakening of a deeper interest in its present behalf, and a higher faith in its future all of which will be sure to yield more or- less of fruit before many days. Indeed, it is believed that already much has been actually secured to the College addi- tional to what is herein reported, through personal promises and wills that have been made. One single friend, who is abundantly able, has faithfully pledged that $30,000 shall be secured by him through his will and be paid to the College at his death, and many other smaller amounts have jlso been equally positively promised. But as none of these amounts can, before- hand, be considered certain, they cannot, of course, be at present made public or be counted; and, still, thev will, very likely, sooner or later, bring to the College a degree of valuable help. With devout thankfulness to that God who has sustained His servants while prosecuting this prolonged and arduous effort, and to the many benev- olent friends who, in the "hard times" that have characterized these years, have given so liberally, the report is respectfully submitted to the patrons of the College. MEMORIAL ROLL-BOOK. UNIVERSAL DOLLAR ROLL, THE FOLLOWING ARE PAID : ALTON, ILL. John L. Blair SI Mrs. M. E. Pierson 1 Miss E. M. Cheney 1 George H. Barrows 1 Charles H. Cheney . . I. M. Rilea . 1 1 Mattie E. Mclntosli 1 S. P. Mclntosh 1 Mrs. J. L. Blair 1 C. L. Crossman . 1 Harriet Blair 1 Richard Flags. ... 1 P. Dowues 1 Annette Blair 1 Mrs. Bichard Flagg 1 Frank P. Hopkins 1 Benj. Teasdale 1 J L. Blair, Jr 1 O M Adams 1 Edmon Blair ] Miss FannieK. Hopkins 1 Mrs. Bachel D. Hopkins 1 Prof. E. A. Haight 1 Mrs. E. A. Haight ... 1 George O. F. Adams... A. G. Wolford . . 1 1 Lilian Blair 1 - Sarah Blair 1 G. Roscoe Cutter.. . ] 17 I Edith Blair 1 Unnamed Miss M. N. Ballinger ] D D. Byrie . ..1 Addle Gill 1 ALEDO, ILL. T. J. Merriman .... Jane Gill . 1 J. M. Byrie 1 Lyuia Hayden l Jane Hood 1 Thos. Gaukrodger 1 Mrs. Thos. Gaukrodger. 1 Hartley Gaukrodger 1 Ann Gaukrodger 1 P. G. Shanklin ... 1 Mrs. Elizabeth Smith ... 1 IraH. Keiser 1 A. J. Merriman . l C. B. Wood Tr . i W. E. Pattison 1 Mrs. Minnie Hindman. Win. M. Hindman Airs. Callie W. Holmes. Miss Nellie Holmes Nannie Campbell . 1 . 1 . 1 . 1 1 1 Lizzie C. Pattison 1 Boston W. Smith .... 1 Mrs. P. G Shanklin 1 Miss K. Blackburn 1 Mattie E. Bowan 1 Miss M. E. Emerson ] Miss Hattie Emerson.... 1 B.H. Flagg ; 1 Hattie Parker 1 Alice Diamond 1 Mary Keiser 1 Kmma .Patrick '. .''ilia Keiser 1 Charles Gill , 1 Marion Patrick . i Fannie M. llartson ALTAMONT, ILL. Sally K. Bradley 1 . l Laura Gates 1 Mrs. Anna Hayden 1 \Vm. M. Pieribu 1 Mrs. Win. M. Pierson. .. 1 Mrs. B. S. B. Pierson ... 1 Miss Anna Gates 1 Jennie Hyndman 1 Elizabeth Houston J Margaret Stetson 1 Lizzie Gale 1 ARCOLA, ILL. C. H. Renfrew . 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 James H. Forbes' 1 A. P. Dodge 1 Mrs. James H. Forbes.. 1 Alex. E. Forbes 1 Robert M. Forbes 1 Geo. K. Hopkins 1 Mrs. Geo. K. Hopkins. . i George E. Hopkins 1 Mary A. Hopkins 1 Mrs. C. H. Benfrew Isaac Corler Helen B. Forbes 1 Bessie Forbes . . 1 Sophia E. Hopkins .. 1 C. Wall'ng Bev. G. J. Johnson 1 Mrs. G. J. Johnson 1 Emma E. Johnson 1 George T. Johnson 1 Melvin J. Hopkins 1 James M. Beal Florence H. Hopkins... ] Ilev. Thomas (J. Fi,^ld.. 1 .Mrs. Thos (i. Field ... 1 S. B. McCarty ARTHUR, ILL. ):. Mi'i-ritt .. Sarah M. Johnson 1 Kendall W. Johnson. . . 1 Gove G. Johnson .... 1 Willie Field .. ..1 \V. H. Woodruff . . 1 Mrs. W. II. Woodruff 1 Mrs. E. Merritt Carrie Camion 1 L. J. C'awson . J ' ASHLEY, ILL. Mrs. Maggie J. Short . . Miss Emma Alice Short .KTNA, ILL. MVK . Wilson . Mrs. M. E. Emerson 1 Mrs. E. G. Emerson .... 1 John Bob! n son 1 Sarah Robinson 1 Miss Sarah Emerson.... 1 Dr. Bobert Gibson. . 1 Charles Stetson 1 H. M. Carr 1 Mrs. Robert Gibson 1 Mrs. H. M. Carr 1 Lizzie Bakor 1 NellieS. Carr 1 Harvey Veach 1 H. A. Cheney . . 1 Louisa A Veach 1 Mrs H A Plifmpv 1 " 110 ROLL-BOOK G W Wilson . ..1 BATH, ILL. Charles A. Straham 1 BARNHILL, ILL. Rev. D. S. Mix 1 BASSEIN, ASIA. Rev. Melvin Jameson . . . 1 Mrs. Melvin Jameson... 1 Allen Jameson 1 John J. Wyckoff . 1 MayW^ Jones 1 Nancy Wyckoff . 1 L. M. Castenens 1 Sarah N. Wyckoff... . 1 A. T. Castenens 1 Elizabeth A. Wyckoff. . . 1 Obadlah Ewing 1 Amanda Castenens 1 Joseph Walter 1 Narcissa Y. Ewing.. 1 John McCartney 1 ATLANTA, ILL. Miss Stella M. Chambers. 1 Mrs. Nancy Turner 1 Medora J. Ewing 1 Mary E. Ewing 1 Edgar S. Ewing 1 Miss Alicia M. Ewing. . . 1 Wm. Perry 1 Miss Jane Johnson 1 Lina Planis. ... 1 David L. Coleman 1 Hugh Jameson 1 BERWICK, ILL. Unknown Friends 30 Mrs. David L. Coleman. . 1 Harvey Coleman 1 Melvin M.Jameson,.... 1 BERLIN, ILL. L. G. Boynton 1 Freddie Coleman 1 Cora Coleman 1 BLANDINSVILLE, ILL. G. W. Butler 1 Mrs. Harvey Turner .... 1 AUBURN, ILL. Elisha Stout 1 Mrs. El ish a Stout 1 Mrs. Maria Boynton 1 C S. Boynton... . 1 C. E. Boynton 1 Mrs. P. H. Butler 1 P. N. Boynton 1 E. D Boynton 1 Wm. Pennington 1 Mrs. Luella G. Grigsby.. 1 George E. Grigsby 1 Elisha T. Stout 1 E P Boynton . . 1 Charles H. Stout J John Oder 1 Rev. Wm. Hobbs 1 T. Black 1 Rev. W. I. Price 1 Mrs. Viva Price 1 Fred. Abe 1 Shift Sim on ! J. W. Fee 1 J. Tucker l Martha Black 1 John W. Hart 1 Hettie Hart 1 J. Logan l L. P. Spencer l Lorinda Watson 1 J. D. Cox 1 George Winmer 1: Julia Harris 1 BLOOMINGTON, ILL. S. Bishop, M. D 1 Mary A. Winmer 1 ATn.rvMhiifF I Jane Hill 1 Lizzie Smith 1 D. H. Starkweather 1 E. W. Starkweather 1 E. A. Starkweather 1 Homer E. Bishop 1 Thomas Foutch.. 1 Frank W. Bishop 1 Sarah Foutch. . 1 Albert E. Ayers 1 S. A. Starkweather . 1 BELLEVILLE, ILL. (' Goodin ' . .... 1 Lottie V. Ayers 1 AUGUSTA, ILL. Mrs. E. A. Davis. ^1 Mrs. Francis H. Roach. . 1 Amos Kemp 1 Unknown Friends 21 BOURBON, ILL. P. Chandler 1 Lena Chandler 1 Eugene A. Davis 1 BARRY, ILL. Rev. Charles Mason 1 Mrs. Charles Mason 1 W . A. Badger . . 1 Susan C. Steven ger 1 Mary Heinsalmari . , 1 Robert Goodina 1 Olivia Gooding. 1 D. C Chandler 1 James P. Slade . J R P Snyder 1 E. Chandler 1 G. Chandler 1 Mrs. M. G. Patterson 1 H V Harris 1 Mary A. McConnell 1 Mrs. C. G. Fiske 1 Mrs. Lizzie Long 1 Dr. J. H. Apperson 1 SusieMiske% l Hiram H. Post 1 Mrs. H. Post J Violet A. Post . 1 Walter ^ pperson .... 1 Sarah Apperson 1 Jesse Apperson 1 Sallie Gruelle 1 Eugene Smith 1 Will McDaniel 1 Mrs. J. D. Post 1 Miss Anna C. Post 1 BETHALTO, ILL. Dr E W Reid. ... 1 Rev. G W. Clark 1 Mrs. K D.Clark 1 George Clark.' 1 J. C. Gregory . . 1 A. T. Klnne 1 Mrs. Mary Ferry 1 BRIDGEPORT, ILL. Leander Lackey. . l Dr. P. M. Parker 1 N. V. Hadsell 1 Lewis AiT'le 1 Mrs. K. W. Reid 1 Wm. Rosin 1 Mrs. H. C. Angle J Miss Alice Angle ' George Taylor. 1 Mrs. Caroline Taylor 1 George S. Kirkpatrick.. 1 BRIMFIELD, ILL. Mrs. Sarah Stansbury... 1 Miss M. Stansbury 1 Miss Delia M. Angle 1 Mrs. J. T. Ewing 1 Miss Emtna Jrandall 1 .Mis. M. E. Clarke 1 BERNADOTTE, ILL. A A Williams 1 S. P. Whitaker 1 Miss Susie Stansbury 1 Miss Jennie Stansbury.. I Miss Lizzie Stausbui-y.. . 1 Miss Dursilla Stansbury 1 Miss Mollie Stansbury.. 1 D.iniel Stansbury 1 Mollie House 1 BIG STATION, ILL. Harriet Moulden ... 1 C. E. Gray 1 BASCO, ILL. W. P. .Mason . ..1 BOIS D'ARC, ILL. George A. Hollowell 1 Rev. Albert Guy 1 Mrs. Amelia Guy 1 \V. P. Diuaron 1 ROLL-BOOK. Ill BtfNKER HILL, ILL. Mrs. George Drew.. . 1 CHICAGO, ILL. Robert Harris 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 J 1 1 ] 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 CHENOA, ILL. Unknown Friends 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 l 1 1 . l J. Flannagan 1 Mrs. Robert Harris CHRISMAN, ILL. Charles H. McKee Mrs. Kate Flannagan.... 1 Frank A. Campbell 1 Miss Jennie Browii 1 Rev. J. A. Smith, D. D. Mrs." J. A, Smith Willie Smith Linis Johnson 1 Rev. I. N. Hobart, D. D. Mrs. J. N. Hobart Joseph McKee IBURNT PRAIRIE, ILL. Ezekiel Hunsonger 1 BUSHNELL, ILL. E. B. Hunt 1 John W. McKee A. H. King George McKee .... A. J. Hobart Frank McKee Charles N. Hobart Mrs. Martha Smith Mrs. M. M. Carpenter... CORDOVA, ILL. Mrs. Mary Brown Jo Stanefleld John Hoult. E. A. Hoult J. R. Hoult Mrs E. B. Hunt 1 Thomas Hoult H. Fewler 1 COLLINSVILLE, ILL. W. D. Gardner W. S. Walthrop Dr. J. R. Kay 1 John W. McKee, Sr Mrs. N. B. Kay ... 1 Mrs. J. W. McKee S. P. Oegood 1 J. S. Hartley Ella Osgood 1 Lizzie Gardner Mrs. J S. Hartley George Osgood. 1 Frank Wilson Nellie Hartley Fred. Osgood 1 Hannah Wilson... Willie Hartley Harry Osgood . . 1 Wm. H. Bowler Susie Hartley Eddie Osgood 1 CEDAR FALLS, IO. F. I. Merchant Maggie Hartley May Osgood 1 Z. Riley Mrs. N. Raime . 1 Lewis Riley Mrs E Seibert I Kate Riley W L Sheaff I CENTRALIA. ILL. L. C. Pullen Ning Kiley Mrs C Sheaff 1 George Riley Mrs. R. Barnes . 1 Flora McKee T Nebergall. l Marion McKee Mrs M E Griffith 1 Mrs. L. C Pullen Orion McKee L Winkler 1 B. Pullen L. W. Thayer 1 1 1 W H Greene 1 Charles Mills 1 1 I 1 1 1 J 1 1 1 1 1 J ] J J 1 1 1 Robt. McKee CAMBRIDGE, ILL. Rev. John H. Cairns.... 1 Cora D. Perrine Minnie J. McKee G. H. Perrine CHARLESTON, ILL W. W. Brown... . l D. W. Perrine Mrs. C N. Perrine C. E. Townsend Mrs. J. Cairns 1 Lizzie H. Cairns 1 Jas. M. Garretson George L. Petinger Mrs. Wm. Lee Wm. M. Lee W.D.Roberts W. W. Tyler B. M. Hutch eson . 1 . 1 . 1 Nellie C. Cairns 1 Maggie A Cairns 1 Permelia Hutcheson... Anna A. Mitchell . 1 . l Wm Talbot I J. S.Taylor Mrs. S. W.Richardson.. 1 CARMI, ILL. Charles W. Henry 1 R. Barnhurst Alice Tinkey 1 John Wm. Barnhurst. . . G-. S. Barnhurst Hannah E. Said . l CLINTON, ILL. Henry Crong 1 1 . l John Wm. Barnhurst. . . R. Trevor Mrs. E. J. Bridwell Miss Mary L. Reed Alfred Hyde CARROLLTON, ILL. Louisa Robinson John Bowers David E. Henry 1 Mrs. Sarah Bowers . l CARTHAGE, ILL. Mrs. L. G. Kelley 1 Miss Kate Kitchen . l R. P. Hill 1 Ada Robinson 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I J 1 1 1 1 1 Benj, F. Hill... . i Frances Robinson. . Ralph E. Hill . 1 CAZENOVIA, ILL. Jesse Hammers 1 Richard B. Robinson Lee G. Robinson Hurbert W. Hill... . 1 Lillie May Hill... . i Henrietta Robinson Georgiana Robinson Mrs. Frances McFadden Mrs. Amanda Smith CHILLICOTHE, ILL. O. M. Merrlck... Ellen Hill 1 Howard Winslow 4 Ruth F. Hammers... 1 James A. Hammers.. 1 Mrs. S, L. Hammers. 1 Mrs. Mary Winslow DANVERS, ILL. A. H. Skaggs . 1 1 1 Wm. B. Hammers... 1 Bertrice P. Hammers 1 Miss Gretta A. James 1 Gwly m James 1 T. J. Tinsley S C. Merrick... John W. Skaggs 1 Thomas Hough Susan A. Skaggs . 1 A. Judson James 1 Carodoc O. James 1 E. R. Reed Abe Marberry Lewis E. Skaggs 1 1 . 1 Arlanda P. Skaggs Calista V. James 1 Mary J. Marberry... Sarah E. Skaggs F. Way land James 1 M. H. Hall Mattie C. Skaggs 1 J. Wade James 1 Bertha M. James 1 C.S. Hall John F. Skaggs 1 J. A. Ewins . 1 Joseph L. James 1 P. H. Vance . 1 112 ROLL-BOOK. L. A. Vance . . . 1 David Evans J ! 1 1 i 1 1 i 1 1 1 Neal Monroe 1 Minnie Vance . . 1 Mrs. Thompson Miss Louisa Foster .... 1 Mrs. P. H. Marshal 1 Christie Vance .... 1 Rev. S. B. Gilbert C. E. Vance... .. 1 EFFINGHAM, ILL. Mrs. T. A. Brown Mrs. Barnuni 1 J. V. Vance . 1 Miss Belle Barnum . 1 Nay Vance 1 Mrs. Wm. Flsk 1 Cora Vance . 1 Mrs. A. Taylor . 1 Mary P. Vance 1 Andrew Vance ... 1 Mrs. N. E. Flack Mrs. W. C. Wright Mrs. M. B. Camm ... 1 Miss Katie Fish 1 Eliza G. Vance ... 1 S. B Carlton Henry Fish... .. l DELAVAN, ILL. Baptist Church. 6 Mrs. S. B. Carlton W. P. Surrells W. A. Surrells Mrs. C. A. Fish 1 Rev. Joel S. Fish l Miss Annette Fish. 1 John R. Surrells Mrs. J. Duncan 1 DELAVAN, WIS. Mrs. J. J. \Vatson 1 Elry O. Surrells 1 \ i I i 1 1 1 1 1 1 i J 1 1 1 1 1 1 ! 1 J 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 J i 1 J 1 ! : i ] i 1 i l ] l l l G.C.Arnold 1 Charles E. Surrells 4rs. D. Burns ... 1 Lon. E. J. Surrells Mrs. W.Humphreysville 1 Alfred Thomas 1 B. B. Minor DECATUR, ILL. George \Vood 1 Mrs. B. B. Minor Henry Bailey 1 FAIRVIEW, ILL. E. Merit... Mrs. E. Merit Wm. Addison l Mrs. Wm. Addison 1 Rev. J. B. English 1 David L. Allen 1 Julia E. Allen . 1 Mrs. J. B. English 1 Two Unknown 2 DELHI, ILL. Mrs. E. Myers 1 FIDELITY, ILL. Wm. T. Shannon FAIRMONT, ILL. Mrs. E. Holliday 1 DIXON, ILL. H. J. Stebbins, Jr 1 Elizabeth Shannon Samuel E. Shannon Edgar Shannon ^ FRANKLIN, ILL. R. E. Shannon Frank C. Brodur ] Mrs. Cook 1 T. G. Shannon Margaret L. Mayfleld. . . 1 Isabella Mayfleld 1 Jane Wiley 1 George W. Berkley 1 Rebecca Flatt Henrietta Mayfleid 1 Rev. J. H. Pratt ] Charles A. Todd 1 J. p. Hooper Ripley Mayfleld 1 William E. Mayfleld 1 Rowell Mayfleld 1 James H.Todd 1 Mrs. J. H. Todd 1 James Norman Nancy Hunter Henry L. Todd 1 Anna M. Todd 1 Elmer and Emma Todd. 1 Samuel Rich H. E. Rich K. T. Rich Frankie Aiayfleld 1 Francis Mayfleld 1 E. C. Smith ] Aaron Moore . 1 Wm. F. Rich FREEBURG, ILL. Miss Lina Stookey 1 Mrs. A. Moore . . 1 Anna C. Rich Alice Moore ] Addie Meacham 1 Mrs Ooddington 1 James H. Rich C. G. Rich Mary E. Ferguson GEORGETOWN, ILL. Samuel A. Vann 1 J. W. Boardman 1 Airs. Mary Bebee FLORA, ILL. Nannie Davis Mrs. S. A. Carnahan 1 Win. L. Carnahan J GREENVILLE, ILL, John J. Smith 1 Charles W. French. 1 Miss Mar5 r Hamilton ] Unknown Friends. 5 L. Fortune llev. Jas. Osborn Eliza A. Smith 1 DUNDEE, ILL. Baptist Church 17 Martha Osoorn C. J. Smith , . 1 D. L. Stover Thomas N. Smith .... 1 George Foster James M Smith 1 William White John T. Smith 1 EDINBURG, ILL. John R. Hill 1 FOSTERBURG, ILL. H. Schultz Charles C. Smith 1 P. N.Smlth 1 Peter L. Smith 1 James Harris 1 Margaret R. Hill ... 1 Charles Chiste Nancy Harris 1 EDWARDSVILLE, ILL. Mary Wilson 1 Wm. Frohbore GIRARD, ILL. B. Boggess 1 Philip Newhouse . . B. V. Jinkinan John Kreig Mary O'Hara 1 K. (irieole Mrs. Boggess 1 F W Burnett . . 1 Mrs. Carrie Huffer.. . Sidnie Boggess ... 1 G. B. Biekelhaupt 1 EL PASO, ILL. Miss Ruble Gilbert 1 M.,E. Miller Herbert Keiser L.May Boggess 1' Laura Trabue 1 FORT HOWARD, WIS. W. H. Gray Mrs. A. U. Magoon 1 GALESBURG, ILL. Baptist Church 94 James Howard McConn 1 Willie E. Gilbert 1 Susan Richardson KOLL-BOOK. 113 QALVA, ILL. David Bell 1 Miss Kate C. Rider 1 O. Tucker 1 Arthur W. Kider 1 George Mann J Moore C. Goltra 1 GRIGGSVILLE, ILL. H L. Hunt 1 HORD, ILL. James Anderson 1 Evaline P. Goltra 1 Ella L Goltra 1 \TRml ft (-toltrn. . 1 Eddie F. Goltra 1 HUDSON, ILL. Mrs. L. A. Hubbard 1 S. Hubbard 1 George W. Gentry 1 Mrs. E. Hunt 1 Leoretta A. Gentry i Emma Cassron 1 Hannah Cox 1 Mrs. C. W. Simmons 1 Lillie C. Brakefleld 1 Lizzie Cox 1 Ettie J. Brakefleld 1 Daily M. Hubbard, 1 Hattie Sample i Miss Lucy J. Eastman. . 1 G. W. Monroe 1 S. P. Monroe .... 1 JERSEYVILLE, ILL. Robert Newton 1 Mrs. Sarah Gray 1 INDIANOLA, ILL. John H. Mann 1 George E. Eastman 1 Miss Maria A. Love 1 Henry E. Love 1 Mrs. Sarah Newton 1 Elvin Armstrong 1 GLASFORD, ILL.. Mrs. Sarah Glasford 1 Mrs. Elizabeth Startch. . ] GREEN VIEW, ILL. Nancy D. Rule 1 S. Mendanhall 1 Rev. C. R. Lathrop 1 Eph. Butler 1 Nix. Smith, Sr 1 Miss C. Butler . . l Nix. Smith, Jr... 1 S. F. Butler 1 Mrs. Nix. Smith 1 Charles Hall 1 Isaac R. Combs 1 M. L. Porter 1 Sam'l Snedeker 1 Lydia Beard 1 Jerome Miller 1 INDUSTRY, ILL. John a.. Corey 1 Geo, I.Foster 1 Wm. Pening 1 Mary J. Rule 1 Rebecca Montgomery... 1 N. Y. Denton 1 IOLA, ILL. S. Saunders 1 Ludlow Squires 1 Miss Mary Brown 1 HAVANA, ILL. G. G. Blunt 1 Mrs. 'Madison Ferrell. . . 1 Daniel R. Stelle 1 J. T. Rapp 1 ulrs J. T Rapp 1 Mrs. D. R. Stelle 1 Miss Hattie Stelle 1 Alice E. Blunt 1 Rev. I. H. Klkin 1 Mrs. H. R. Perrine 1 Mrs. E. M. Mitchell 1 Rosenah Mitchell 1 Anna Elkin 1 I. H. Elkin, Jr 1 Miss Mattie Perrine 1 Mrs. Ford 1 KateD. Mitchell 1 Judson McC. Mitchell... 1 HILLSBORO, ILL. Mrs. Mary A. B. Fish... 1 Albert Fish 1 Mary F. Elkin I L C. Elkin 1 Mrs. Sarah Sturdevant. . 1 Jacob K. Stelle 1 IRVING, ILL. M P Irving 1 Mrs. J. K. Stelle 1 Miss Cretie Stelle 1 Miss Maria Batty 1 LeviHolliday 1 IRVINGTON, ILL. H. A. Whitney 1 Mrs L Holliday 1 HOLT'S PRAIRIE. J. H. Harris .. 1 Levis Randolph 1 Mrs. L. Randolph 1 George Randolph 1 A F Pitt 1 L. W. Harris 1 W W. Harris 1 JACKSONVILLE, ILL. Mrs. Belle M. Pitt 1 KILBOURNE, ILL. Charles L. Eby... ..1 Ida J. Eby 1 Julia Harris 1 Jennie Harris 1 E.N.Harris 1 Edmund Dry 1 Clarinda Redburn 1 I. D. Strait 1 HORACE. ILL. Cynthia A. Johnson 1 Minnie Johnson 1 Dortha E. Sample 1 Marion C. Davenport 1 Justus V . Read 1 Lora M. Eby 1 Edwin D. Eby 1 Arthur W. Eby 1 C. Ernest Read 1 Mrs. E. C. Spencer . 1 [. B. Reardou 1 N. B. Reardon 1 Mrs. Burnett i \iis^ Mnllv Floirsrs- 1 C- J. Reardon .... 1 Anna L. Reardon 1 Albert Johnson 1 .T W. ftnlt.ra 1 S . A. Reardon 1 Dillard Johnson 1 George R Mann ... 1 Mrs. Goltra 1 Mabel H. Goltra 1 B. F. Reardon 1 KINDERHOOK, ILL. S B. Gaines 1 Mrs. S. B Gaines..*. 1 Sallie ^Tucker 1 Mrs. Fannie Reynolds. . . 1 Libbie Reynolds 1 Polly Tucker 1 Nettle Collins 1 Emma Reynolds 1 Ralph Reynolds, Jr 1 Hichard C. Reynolds.... 1 Charles Reynolds 1 Robert Collins ... 1 Sue M. Collins 1 Miss Lydia Gaines 1 Jennie ^Collins 1 Amos Collins ... 1 Sylvester Gaines 1 W H. Rider 1 Eddie N. Gaines 1 Ellen Mann 1 Mrs. C. E. Rider 1 Rev. Charles Cross 1 Sarah Bell 1 MissE. F. Rider 1 Mrs. H. M. Cross 1 114 ROLL-BOOK. KINMUNDY, ILL. W. T Eastland. i i i i i i i i i i Charles A. Nicholson. . . . Mira J. Evans 1 ] i l l ! i 1 1 ! 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 J 1 ] i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 J J LITTLETON, ILL. John Wheat 1 John S Munday S. N A. Rinival Laura B. Joseph Julia Ann Wheat 1 > Mrs. Nancy Clark Ella N. Latham Wm. Wheat 1 1 . W . Foereste Dora Wheat 1 Elizabeth Snelton Mary Foereste Lula Wheat 1 M. Waugh Lawrence S. Wilkinson. A. E. Brown Lolla Wheat. 1 G. F. Craft LITER, ILL. H B.Baxter ... . 1 S N Fuqua C. Hoskins Mrs S. N Fuqua J. T . Cadwallader Martha E. Fuqua M. A.Joseph Rev. G. Pattern i i i i i ! 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i \ 1 L 1 1 ! 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 19 1 1 1 Charles R. Bone David Sample . 1 Mrs G Patton Margerie C. Poe Sarah Sample 1 LATHAM, ILL. Andy Simpson . Louisa Kosnitzky Ketura McKee . 1 Lydia A. Tibbets LITTLE INDIAN, ILL. J F. Bergen 1 Henry Neel Minerva Simpson. Isabella Neel Bmmett W. Simpson... Laura Simpson Clyde O. Icenbarger J. W. Icenbarger Elizabeth Bergen 1 LULA. ILL. Elizabeth Guthrie . . 1 Mary O. Glrard Arm! n da Simpson Minnie Simpson LEXINGTON, ILL. James Hays CoraTurnbull MACOMB, ILL. J. B. McLean 1 Charles F. Hubbard .. Mrs. J. T. Hubbard Henry Hall Violet C. Hall Frank R. McLean 1 Gideon Hall L P Scrogin A lex. R. McLean 1 Abigail P. Hall Fred R. McLean 1 Mary F. Hall Edgar R. McLean 1 Hattie Hall Rev. J. L. M. Young 1 .\Irs.J.L.M.Young 1 Ida Bell Hall... Oliver R. Hall Wllberforce H. Young. . 1 J. W. Willis... . 1 Henry W. Hall Nellie Holbrook Rev J L W^atson L.R.Willis 1 Verna Holbrook Levi Pott Mrs. Alice Waters 1 Sophia Joynt Mrs Sarah Pott Mrs. J. D. Walker 1 J. S. Waddle Miss Ida E. Albert. . . I Rev. S. Robinson A M Stark Prof. L. C. Donaldson... 1 H. P. Barker 1 Mrs. C. Robinson J. T. Houston S R Claggett Hannah A xford 1 Wm. Hacke William Claggett John Herron 1 B J. Clago'ett %. Clayton Ross 1 F . Michener Charles H Preble Miss Cornelia Wilson... 1 L. A. Whitmore I Rev. W. H. Wilson.... J. S. Whiteslde Miss Edith Preble II. A. Whitmore 1 Wm. Becket Miss Lillie Preble F. L. Whitman 1 Rev. W. Hadlock F. A. Whitman 1 Mrs. H. Hadlock Willard Hadlock'. Dea. W. A. Stark LITCHFIELD, ILL. J. Q. Musgrove Unknown Friend 1 MAHOMET, ILL. Mrs. Ida Abbott '. . 1 Richard Hadlock Ernest Hadlock Walter Hadlock Per D. B. Harwood LACLEDE, ILL. Walter Wllklns Rev. Wm. S. Roberts. . . M. B. Savage Miss Smizer 1 Sophia Savage 1 Moses Savage E L Wilteins Julia L. Savage Aliss N Balinger 1 L E. Wilkins Marcia A. Savage MASON, ILL. Alexander Wilkins . . J 1 Sophie L. Burns Willie S.Burns Alex F. Byrd LEE, ILL. John Douglass 1 Fannie S. Burns Mrs. Irwin 1 Mrs. Lydia Marquis 1 W H. Deites 1 Miss Jane Irwin Susan Davenport \ Mrs.W. H. Deites. 1 Amanda C. Horndill 1 Rev. O. W. Whitford. ... 1 MASON CITY, ILL. Moses H Cease 1 i Julia Keithly LOUISVILLE, ILL. J W Davis 1 Lillie McNeil Willie Mock Mary Miles Lucv Miles. . . Sarah Davis l W. 8. Palmer LINCOLN, ILL. Darwin Wilson 1 Wm. J. Zimmerman . . . Mrs. Ash more. . 1 Clarence Lamoreaux 1 Miss Lilla Cook., 1 Mrs. Susan Von Loon. . . 1 ROLL-BOOK. 115 .Miss Tuliett A. Hobbs. . . MNs Mary McCormick.. .Miss Helle Clark 1 J 1 1 1 1 1 ! i i i i i : 1 1 I 1 1 8 i I 1 1 I I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 J J 1 ] 1 i 1 ! ! 1 1 | 1 J i i 1 1 Miss Laura Mann 1 Miss Jennie Mann 1 F. P. Perry l Sarah A. Spencer 1 John Mann 1 J. W. Sanders l Mrs. Abigail Clark Mrs. Manila Samara... . W. C. Collingham Mrs. Mann 1 W. D. Morehead 1 Tom Pickard 1 Wm. Goodell i Mrs. M. Morehead 1 Mrs. Goodell . l H. N. Hoffman Miss Hannie Morehead. 1 Wilson Owen . . 1 Mrs. Mary Smith 1 David Powell Jacob Farnsworth l Mrs. S. E. Farnsworth . . 1 D B ^Farnsworth 1 Mrs. Mary A. Powell Clara Powell B. E.Punipelly 1 Miss Carrie Spence 1 Arthur Powell Laura Powell Mrs. Wm. Tavener 1 Mrs. S. Van Ess 1 Isaac- Staples l James A. Simpson 1 Flora Powell Miss Anna Van Ess 1 Mary Belle Simpson 1 Lena Simpson 1 Joseph Silvey Mrs. S. Wilcox l E S. Hubbard MERRITT, ILL. Nancy J.Robertson l Esther Mays . 1 John Simpson. . 1 Mrs. D. H. Curry Lizzie Simpson . 1 T. W. Miller Mrs. M. P. Smythe 1* Mrs A Miller Mrs. A. E. Bates 1 James Ridge 1 Miss Anna Miller Bobt. H. Miller MILLERSBURG, ILL. Mrs. Luella H. Wood. . . . 1 MONMOUTH, ILL Wm. F. Smith 1 Martin Parker . 1 Per D. B. Harwood Mrs. L. A. Parker . 1 MATTOON, ILL. Kliza Robinson MORRISON, ILL. Mrs. Cyrus Chapman 1 Mrs. Elizabeth Russell. . 1 W. D. Strunk 1 Harriet Morton Lewis Morton Mrs. B. Rice S. J. Wilson Mrs. F. Smith 1 Mrs. Mary F Dunbar. . . 1 Mrs. Inez E. Soule 1 Mrs. M. B. Miner 1 W. H. Judd 1 MORRISONVILLE. ILL. J. Sanford 1 DowSmith MARISSA, ILL. - M W Border Wm. B. Smith 1 Miss Ella M Smith 1 Lauacelotte G. Smith. . . 1 Miss Carrie K. Smith.... 1 Miss Lizzie A. Smith 1 Benj. H. Smith..., 1 D. F Salander 1 H J Steinheimer Sarah E. Salander 1 MEDORA, ILL. Mrs. J. A. Campbell James M.Arnold 1 E. C Babcock . . 1 Elizabeth Arnold 1 Mrs. L M. Reed ... 1 Selena L. Sanford 1 Miss Ida Reed J Miss May Reed . 1 C.E.Craig 1 F. J. Sanford 1 MCLEAN, ILL. C S Beath Miss Belle Webb 1 Mary Sanford 1 Wm. Perrin 1 Q. M. Tarrill 1 Susan G. Perrin 1 R N Homer 1 Leonard Cole 1 Mrs. C S. Beath Louisa A. Cole 1 Mrs. Bingham. T. H. Porter 1 Gray Salander. 1 Frank Gadwallader Mrs. O. P. Cunningham. E. L. Clark Mrs. H. Clark G C Cheathani 1 Miss Z. Z. Salander 1 A. Brookes . . .1 W. H. Brooks 1 C. C. Brookes 1 Mrs. G. B. Doolittle 1 Miss Inez Hawkins 1 Sarah A. Wall 1 V. R. C. Wall 1 G. N. Burington 1 Willie Clark Mrs J. E. Dillon MOORE'S PRAIRIE, ILL. James Shirley 1 Adaline Burington 1 Miss F Davison J. B. Thompson 1 Ehroy Fay ... Additional 10 Mrs. H. Fay MURRAYVILL, ILL. Mrs. V. Fay MT. ERIE, ILL. Lucas Wright 1 Hattie Fay R E Gifford . Jannette Sorrels 1 Mrs E Gifford W. D Stacer . 1 Milton F. Sorrels 1 Mrs M A Gifford MINONK, ILL. Miss I.Illa C. Bell.. .. 1 Sipy Belle Sorrels 1 Miss Cilia Gifford Unnamed Infant, Sorrels 1 Wm. T. Henry 1 L F Gifford E W Gifford George Gifford Frank Gard M. A. Gushing 1 Martha Gushing 1 NILWOOD, ILL. Charles Dix 1 Miss Hattie Gard M. J. Gushing 1 Austin Gilberst 1 ! 1 1 ! 1 1 1 ! 1 I J J. L. Winteer 1 G A Glotfelter .S A. Shreeve .... 1 Mrs. Helen Dix 1 Mrs. G. A. Glotfelter. . . . Miss Almeda Holmes... Mrs. Klamroth S. I. Leach , H Simpson 1 Bessie Dix 1 Mrs H. Simpson . . 1 Mrs. Julia M. Rider 1 Mary B. Staples . 1 Miss Eva M. Rider 1 James Huxtable 1 James Justus Rider 1 Mrs M A. Smith 1 Miss E. Lewis Mrs. K. Lewis G. M. Simpson 1 Freddie Regan 1 Miner D Forney 1 J. S. Jones 1 N. J. Jones 1 Alfred Maxwell Miss Jennie Maxwell... Miss Sallie Maxwell David Mann J. K. Perry 1 Mrs. O. A. Perry 1 |kturphy... 1 116 ROLL BOOK. NORMAL, ILL. J. Chipman i I J i ] i i i i i i i i i j i i i i i i i i i l L 1 J 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ] 1 ] 1 1 J 1 1 1 1 I 1 J 1 1 1 1 ] Mrs Sarah Arnold 1 Willard Mclntosh .. 1 1 Fanny Jones .. 1 I. C. Evans. 1 Rev. W. W. Regan .. 1 Mrs. J. Chipman J E Evans 1 .. 1 Miss Clara E. \Vatts Mrs. Lottie McMurry .... Miss Lottie C. Blake Miss Flora Fuller NORRIS CITY, ILL. James M. Henson Mrs M J Abbott John Turner .. 1 Robert J. Evans 1 G. Barnard .. 1 1 Charles Abot .. 1 Lewis Evans . ) 1 Mary Atkinson .. 1 Ida Fisher .. 1 PALERMA. ILL. H. J. Thomas Mary E. Bradfleld Mr Eradfield .^1 . J 1 Eva Barnard .... .. 1 LtllieTebow .. .... .. 1 Freddie Kestler .. 1 O'FALLON, ILL. G. W, Darrow W. H. Ward Emma Gills .. 1 .. 1 Flo r a Barnard .. 1 William H. Thomas. . . Mary Orr William A Scott . 1 . 1 1 Josie L Goodheart. . . . .. 1 Mrs. G. W. Darrow Mrs. Hannah Fisher.. Ubbe Ubbens .. 1 .. 1 Alice M. Darrow Lizzie Darrow David A Reinhart l James Mclntosh .. 1 Heber Darrow 1 Mary Hoppe .. 1 . Mrs. Malvina Darrow... Wm. Elijah Darrow Geo. L. Darrow F. S. Magoon 1 John Glover .. 1 PAN A. ILL. Mrs. C. Stockbridge... Miss Anna May Coon . PARIS. ILL. Benjamin Camerer . Mrs H. Camerer Eliza W. LeSure Miss Ellen Sheets .. 1 . 1 1 1 1 1 Cornelius Rha .. 1 W. J. Braden .. 1 Addie Darrow A H Evans . . . 1 Fannie Darrow Rosa Dideot .. 1 Lora Darrow J. A. Hall Mrs. E. S. Hall .. 1 .. 1 CharlesJ. F. Bridges.... OLNEY, ILL. H. J. Sheets. Mrs. C. J. Allison J G Johnson .. 1 Mrs. F. M. Savozze, , . Isabella Robinson . , , Mary Caldw ell Minnie Barr 1 1 1 .. 1 OGLESBY, ILL. J. T. Roberts... James Hossack Martha G. Hossack Clifton Hossack James Gordon Catharine Hand Joshua Davis Mrs. Jonathan Davis. . J. W . Apperson Susanna Apperson , Mrs. Joseph Wood 1 1 1 .. J 1 1 1 James Robinson Mary Robinson Minnie Robinson Mrs. Nathan Leonard. Sarah Woodford Elmer Robinson 1 1 1 .. 1 1 1 1 OREANA, 1*L. Alonzo Thrift Mrs. A. Thrift Mrs. E. Gray Jere Griffith W. H. Judson Mrs. W H Judson Mrs. T. H. Guthrie 1 1 1 1 1 Julia S. Corey Mary Newkirk John Mussolman J. E. Larimore 1 , 1 1 , 1 1 S.M. Thrift G. T. Thrift Charles A. Thrift Darsfler Thrift Sarah E. Short G. B. Short Lina Short, Mrs. A. Smith Joseph W. Smith J . Barnett Mrs. L. A. Sykes Mrs. T. M. Kauffman . . Mrs. M. A. Long Miss Sarah Long Mrs. Sam J. Mann Adam Mann Mrs. L. H. Guthrie Mrs. F. Buchanan Mrs. Sarah McLean Nancy Reed D. S. Schenck i .. J 1 1 J 1 1 1 1 1 1 Rachel E. Regan PEORIA, ILL, Frank Todd 'C. A. Haring David Muir Mrs. David Muir Hattie Milliken W. C. Dinock 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 G. M. Bower M. A.- Bower M. S. Bower E. A. Bower H. C. Bower James M. Bower M . C. Anderson Olive Davis>. Jack Morgan '. "P.m m St. Kh or t.fii r\ , , , Frank Wood James Collins PAYSON, ILL. Unnamed Friends Gabriel Kay PAW PAW, ILL. Wm. C. Runyon l ., 1 i7 L 1 Eddie Dinock Ethel Dinock Lettie Kichardson W. H. Mills P. A. Rowe Lulu Trundale Mrs. W. Garrett John Grieves Mrs. J. Grieves Mrs C. Hiliard. 1 1 1 ... 1 1 1 , 1 1 1 1 May Shorteid PALESTINE, ILL. Rev. Jacob Clements. . . . PANOLA, ILL. Martha Runyon G. R. McBride D. M. Harris I 1 1 Mrs. Cbas. Kellogg M. Hutchinson 1 I 1 J.E.Hunt Edwin Gates 1 1 Mrs. M. Topping Belle Topping 1 ... 1 Sarah Stonton Hattie Stonton 1 1 Arthur Topping Edward Topping J Thompson . 1 1 1 . Miss Orpha Evans Miss Laura Arnold Rev. H. R. Hicks PEKIN, ILL. .. 1 I Edwin Phillips J. B. Hammat I .. 1 Miss M. A. Patterson Miss Katie Johnson Stephen Cox .. 1 Mrs. L. Cox .. 1 BOLL-BOOK 117 Mrs. J. Hall... .. 1 POCAHONTAS, ILL. L. B. Long Sarah Long i i i i i ! 1 ROSEVILLE, ILL. Mrs. Annie Evans 1 J. E. Pillsbury 1 Mrs. H. Pillsbury 1 John Hunt 1 E. J. Wickershain 1 Mrs. M. Hunt 1 Mrs. L. Harrison 1 N. A. Stallings Mary Plog W. A. L. Wickersham.. . 1 Burton Wickersham l Freddie Stem l Amanda Hamilton 1 J. H. Paine Mrs. J. Phillips 1 Elizabeth Paine. Miss Grade Stem 1 E. J. Brown A. S. Wahm 1 W. Ross Stine 1 John Davis , Aaron Long 1 J 1 1 J 1 1 J 1 ] 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 J J 1 1 1 1 I 1 Mrs. Mary C. Pratt 1 E. J Thompson 1 Frank Lewis 1 G. W. Avery 1 Mrs. Q. W. Avery 1 Marv E. Long. .. William Reed Frederick Lewis ] Mrs. Abble Youmons 1 Mrs. E. T. Emans 1 Mrs. V. T. Lathrop 1 Charles B. Day 1 Mrs. Lucia A. Day 1 Mrs. E. Reed Jesse Bean Miss Gertrude Day 1 Wm. File Mrs. M. H. Waters 1 Miss Flora Day 1 S. J. File A Roseville Friend. 1 Miss Ella Day 1 Rose File H. A. Hateling 1 Mr. Shepherd 1 Grace F. File . . Lucy A. Gray 1 PHJLO, ILL. D. J. Moury 1 J. M. Ray Julia A. Gray 1 Sarah Ray Alice M. Gray l Anderson Geer Mrs. M. Geer Flora B. Gray 1 Miss Rhoda A. Byarly. . . 1 A. F. Byarly 1 Mrs. D. J. Moury 1 Jennie Geer PINCKNEYVILLE, ILL. Wm. McNeil 1 E. H. Lemen 1 H. 8. Brown . . 1 James Clauz N.E Byarly l Nancy A. Clauz Frankle Byarly 1- T. C. Maxey May Byarly 1 Mrs. T. C. Maxey S. M. Jett Agnes E. Jett John Wallace 1 G. W. Thayer 1 Jenette Thayer 1 C. L. Cruse 1 POPLAR CITY, ILL. J . S. Mendeck . . . . J. W. Thayer 1 ' A B. Haggard 1 B. L. Thayer 1 George S. Smith .. l C. A. Thayer 1 Mrs. G. S. Smith. .'.. . 1 D. N. Thayer 1 Mrs. Friend Smith 1 John K. Chancy.. . I. L. Thayer 1 W. S. D. Smith 1 Mrs. W. S. D. Smith 1 PLEASANT PLAIN, ILL. J. W Beekman 2 Missouri Chaney . Nettie fcJ. Thayer 1 Charity J. Chaney Seth P. Stem l John R. Chanev . 1 1 I ! J 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i 1 a i i ! i i i ] i i i i i i i Mrs. Seth P. Stem 1 Missouri A. Chaney... Emily J. Scott Elsie L. Stem 1 Nellie B. Stem 1 RARITAN, ILL. Mrs. Louisa Tharp Rev. E. C. Cady 1 Andrew Douple 1 ROSETTA, ILL. Lewis Duke, Sr 1 PRAIRIE CITY, ILL. J. S. Barnes 1 Henry S. Johnson ROANOKE, ILL. RANGOON, ASIA. Rev. John Packer 1 Mrs. J. S. Barnes 1 Joel C. Barnes 1 Eddie Barnes ; 1 Sheldon W. Snidy 1 J C H Read Mrs. Francis P. Packer.. 1 Juliette Biuuey Packer.. 1 Bessie E. Packer 1 Eva F Packer 1 R. Currier 1 H A Her wig Mrs. Rebecca Currier. 1 Rev. S. H. D. Vaughn. 1 Mrs. S. H. D. Vaughn . . 1 Miss Carrie R. Vaughn 1 Miss H. Effle Chase. . . 1 Miss Mary L. Vaughn. 1 M.L. Fuller Mrs. David Snyder SALEM,, ILL. Hannah Oglesby 1 John Snyder Miss M. J3. Snyder David L. Snyder PLYMOUTH, ILL. Mrs. Margaret Cook 1 Thomas Talbot 1 Martha S. Marshall A. S. F. Marshall Mrs. B. Haney 1 Mrs. A. Patticany 1 Ira E Marshall J. B. Smith 1 Rolla Marshall Martha W. Bran ton 1 s. s. Chance 1 Orpha A. Marshall. Mrs P A Orr - 1 D. H. Fielding Mrs. Martha Peard E. A. Fisher Mrs. S. S. Chance 1 John Thomas 1 Mrs. M. Pryor 1 J F. Young 1 Rev L Osborn . 1 Mrs. E. A. Fisher C. C. Herwlg Mrs. J. F. Young 1 SAXON UNION, ILL, Unknown Friends 1(> Daniel Parks 1 Arthur Parks 1 ROODHOUSE, ILL. Martha Jackson Rev. S. J. McCormick... l Mrs. Barbara McCormick 1 Kitty E McCormick.... 1 R. L. McCormick . 1 SANDOVAL, ILL. A Andereck 1 Eliza Martin Isaac Andereck 1 i 118 ROLL-BOOK. W. B. Andereck 1 Mrs. Mary E. Rames 1 A. L. Converse 1 STONINGTON, ILL. Andrew C. Chapman 1 A S Peabody i John Andereck 1 S Aleredith . . 1 Christopher Krum J J R. McClellan 1 Mrs. C. Krum J Jonas McClellan 1 Miss Marcia L. Field 1 S. W. Richardson 1 Walter Johnson 1 L. B. Ford 1 Mary F. Johnson . 1 SADOEUS, ILL. A H Ga^e 1 Mrs. E. D.Richardson... 1 George Hoole 1 Mertie Johnson 1 Ray F. Johnson 1 Harry Hilton 1 Curtis Palmer 1 Isaac Kevs... . 1 Amos Peabody ... 1 Herbert Craw . 1 Mrs. I. Keys 1 Alfred Brigs 1 C A. Craw . 11 Annie E. Kevs... Mrs. Alfred Briggs 1 Hannah Craw 1 E.D Keys 1 TABLE GROVE, ILL. Wilfred Boger 1 J . A Craw . . 1 D. F. Randolph 1 J. W. Fields 1 Mr. Murch 1 STERLING, ILL. Dea. Whitmore 1 Edward Russell Johnson 1 Rev. M. H. Worrall 1 Lizzie Allen 1 John F. Miner, Jr 1 TALLULA, ILLS. John L A Spears 1 Miss Lizzie Hardeiiburg. 1 Mrs. M. Miller 1 Mrs. E. Sherman 1 W.D. Whitmore 1 JohnNiles 1 Mrs. Sarah M. Niles. 1 Enoch Johnson 1 Martha Rebecca Spears.. 1 Wm. Henry Spears 1 James Judy Spears. ..... 1 John W. Niles 1 Wm. S. Bacon 1 Mrs. M. E.Gould 1 Florence Bacon. 1 STOKES' STATION. \V H Stokes ! May Bacon 1 Charles Spears 1 Geo. E, Copland 1 THACKERAY, ILL. G. W. Mangis . 1 Wm. Lewis 1 SAN JOSE, ILL. Rev W H Brings 1 Mrs. M. McTaggart 1 Wm. R. Maxwell 1 Mrs. M. E. Maxwell ) A. M. Gardner 1 TISBUHY, MASS. Rev. J. Sawyer 1 D. W. Witrnan 1 Ella K Brings 1 Mfs. M. A. Witman 1 Mrs. A. Schobert I Mrs. M. S. Sawyer . . 1 James L. Powell 1 Miss Mary P. Sawyer... 1 TOLERANCE, ILL. Rev. T. M. Griffith 1 Charles Forsyth 1 Grover Ayers 1 Salinda Forsyth- 1 Miss Mattie Conneil 1 John Seeders 1 E. H. Seeders l Alice Parmenter ) Mrs. E. J. Fry 1 Martha A. Griffith 1 Win Trollope ] Wm. L. Stone 1 Louisa Griffith 1 Miss M. Dresser 1 MayGriffith 1 Hattie Shurtz ] A. Reid 1 Willie Griffith 1 J. C. Drake 1 Wm. Mayhew 1 Mrs. B. Buchanan 1 Rosie Griffith 1 Viola Griffith 1 W D. Bower . 1 Jay Bower 1 Miss Clara Watson 1 TOUNGOO, ASIA. H. M. Eastman 1 Mr. Newman 1 Miss Libbie Pritchard... 1 .Mi'ss Anna Roberts J Joseph Day 1 T f* Knapp 1 Mrs. C.Roberts 1 George Pearl 1 E. A. Eastman 1 S J. Bower ' 1 Dr. G. W. Morgan 1 L. G. Love 1 Hellinora O'Brien i Wm. Bacoa 1 TROY, ILL. Mrs. Sarah E. Hill 1 Bertha L. Dillon . i Mrs. C. W. Bacon 1 Lillie M.Dillon 1 SCIOTA. Mrs. Alletta Perrine 1 Mrs. Maggie Head J Miss M. L. Sower 1 Miss Anna Clinton 1 Mrs. Walgamot 1 Mrs. Emily Jarvis 1 URBANA, ILL. N. A. Riley ". 1 Hjiiima Kiley I Ozias Riley 1 F:. S.Walker 1 Peter Crossman 1 Lafayette Smith 1 VI rs Lufayette Smith... 1 F. B. Smith 1 E. F. Smith 1 Mrs. Mary Shouse 1 J. Mailer ] ST. LOUIS, MO. Lewis E. Kline 1 H. L. Smith 1 Miss M. E. Lynchard 1 J. D. Weldon 1 Mrs. S. Riley....:...., 1 GustaBusy l A. Glover l Joseph S. Green 1 R. G. Barns 1 Mattie Hucky 1 Mrs. A. McLean l Charles McLean l Uv ttr\ht T Will Mrs. C. H. Chrisham 1 Mrs. Chamberlain 1 Miss Flora Barr 1 J. C. Hall 1 Ida McLean l John fierget l Mrs. A. Busy 1 Mrs. E. Busy 1 Bettie McKenzie 1 W. H. Moore 1 O. A. Hanson 1 SPRINGFIELD, ILL. H H Beecher . 1 Nelson Nehr 1 Mrs. C. E. Bacon 1 L. A. Lain l Mary Lain 1 Miss Emma Shaule 1 Anna Lain 1 Mrs. J. C. Decker 1 Mamie Lain 1 A . R. Latham 1 John O. Rames . . 1 Mrs. W. H. True 1 Unknown Friends. .. S Allen Lain 1 T. Hollister... ROLL-BOOK. 119 J. W. Cushman 1 Hrs. Harriet Leverett... 1 Hiss Susan L. Leverett.. 1 E. L. Rising 1 lohn Willier , . 1 Mrs. E. Allen 1 Thomas Tagg 1 Mrs. A. Allen 1 Mrs. Anna Tagg 1 Alice P. Rising 1 Miss Jennie Tagg 1 Mrs. H. Gear 1 Nettie E. Rising. . 1 Sarah M. Willier . 1 UPPER ALTON, ILL. Rev.A.A.Kendrick.D.D. 1 Mrs. M. J. Kendrlck.... 1 Albert J. Kendrick 1 Edward A. Kendrlck 1 Martha Kendrick 1 Chalmers N. Kendrick. . 1 Prof. George B. Dodge. . . 1 Mrs. Mary R. Dodge.... 1 Mrs. Elizabeth Dodge.... 1 Frank 8. Dodge 1 J. B. Hovey... .. 1 Rev. J. M..Stifler, D.D. ... 1 Mrs. M. J. Stifler 1 P. S. Green 1 Mary J. Green 1 Wm. Luth. 1 Gertrude C. Stifler 1 Nellie R. Stifler 1 M. A. Luth 1 J. M. Bvonough ..... 1 James M. Stifler Jr. 1 L. J. Bronough 1 A. R. Stelle 1 Alma Rees-e 1 VIrs. M. M. Stelle 1 Sarah M. Stelle . . 1 Wm. J. Shanklin 1 R. Buckels 1 Nellie G. Stelle 1 Vlice Buckels 1 O. G. Stelle 1 Mrs. C. Newman 1 G. H. Cox 1 Frank Gates 1 Mrs. S. B. Beardsley 1 Mrs. H. L. Schofleld 1 Rev. H. L. Field 1 Mrs. Mary L Field . 1 L. S. A. Sparks 1 L. C. Hughs 1 J. W. Stilwell 1 Cvrus Edwards 4 Mrs. Sophia Edwards 1 E. L. Edwards 1 Wm. G. Wilson 1 Mrs. E. L. Edwards 1 Mable B. Field . . 1 J. J. Cox 1 Sarah Baker 1 Rev. J. Bulkley, D.D. ... 1 Mrs. H. G. Bulkley 1 Mrs. D. Seaver 1 George S. Munach 1 VIRGINIA, ILL. Charles E. Turner 1 J F Shearman .... 1 Fannie N. Bulkley 1 T M Stewart 1 Emma C. Bulkley. . . 1 Robert T Stillwell . 1 Alvy W.Turner 1 Clara M. Bulkley 1 Bertha Bulkley 1 Olive C. Bulkley 1 H. E. Mills 1 Ruth C Mills 1 Philemon S. Turner 1 Tacy L. Turner 1 Mrs. Delia Mills 1 Minnie M. Turner 1 M. C. Cooley 1 Mrs. Sarah J. Cole .... 1 WAVERLY, ILL. Edwin Batty 1 Louisa Cooley 1 Eliza M. Cooley '. 1 Cora V. Cole 1 Grace Cole . . .... 1 Harry Cooley 1 Hermon Cole 1 Walter Cooley 1 Newell Cole 1 Nathan Cole 1 Mrs. F. O. Batty 1 John N. Batty 1 Prof. O. L. Castle, LL. D. 1 Mrs O. L. Castle 1 Rev J D Newell J Ella Wood Batty 1 L. M. Castle i Mrs. Grace Newell 1 L. F. Castle 1 Miss Nora Newell 1 Willie Batty 1 John Leverett. 1 W. P. Harris 1 Aaron Butler 1 Mrs T. C. Cofley . 1 Wm. Amald l Mrs. Jane Butler 1 Charles H McKee 1 Charles Jackson. 1 Wm. D. Hodge . . 1 G C Hulbert 1 Elizabeth Jackson i Nelson B. Hodge 1 A Jones .... .1 Charlie Jackson 1 Fred. H. Hodge 1 Maria C. Hodge 1 Mrs. A.Jones 1 Mrs Wylder 1 Freddie Jackson 1 Mary Harris 1 Jona. T. Hodge 1 Miss Alice Roberts 1 J. H. Goldsmith 1 Anna Buscheted , 1 Mrs. Mary A. Greene 1 Rev. D. T. Morrill 1 Nannie B. Goldsmith. ... 1 J. Bertha M. Goldsmith, i W. C. Waters l i'll i /a. Waters.. 1 G. C. Willet 1 Mrs. D. B. Gilham. . . Mrs. A. L. Morrill 1 G- L Morrill 1 Mrs. J. B. Riley . . 1 John Bates . . 1 J S Morrill . . . 1 Tilford C. Waters 1 Susan Rhoads 2 D. T. Morrill, Jr 1 Mary Helen Waters 1 O. E. Badger 1 K. N. Morrill 1 William D. Waters 1 Mrs. W. E. Smith 1 Mrs. George Smith 1 F. H. Morrill 1 H. S Morrill 1 Wealthy Waters .... 1 Palmer Waters l E. E. Tyson 1 H. B. Morrill 1 WALKER'S POINT, ILL. .1. A. Bantry 1 Mrs. E. N. Coggeshall ... 1 Mrs. M. A. Leverett... 1 Prof. J. C. C. Clarke 1 Mrs. Francis E. Clarke. ; Edward J. Clarke : \ Jennie F. Clarke 1 A. A. Morrill 1 VERSAILLES, ILL. Ruth Hurd 1 B. J. Bantry 1 Mary N. Bantry 1 VIRDEN, ILL. P. G. Shanklin 1 Mrs. P. G. Shanklin 1 K. V. Shanklin 1 Eliza McFarland 1 John G. Clarke . 1 N. M. McFarland 1 Prof. C. Fair man, LL. D. 1 \V. L Fairman 1 J. McFarland 1 M. McFarland 1 Grace E. Fairman... R. A. Rodebush 1 H. N. Kendall Marion Cost 1 Luther O. Kendall. 1 S Edith Humphrey 1 Julia Carbly 1 George J. Kendall .. i Geo. Turpine 1 N. G. Carbly 1 Hiram N Kendall Jr 1 Mrs Clara Turpine ..... 1 H. A. Dolby I Daniel R. Kenuall. 1 Mrs. P. Rodders 1 J. W. Utt 1 Jasper Cox .... 1 .lames M Stearns 1 Seneca Stearns l TTarry K, T,fitnf>t> 1 J. C. Nicholson 1 WASHBURN, ILL. A. B. Vaughn 1 Thos. W Lemen Samuel Welsh. 1 Rev. W. Leverett. LL. D Cyrus W. Leverett ... Miss Mary Proudflt 1 P. Ewing 1 Mrs. Eliza A. Leverett J C. Wai worth 1 Mrs. A. B. Vauehn 1 120 BOLL-BOOK. Miss Cora E. Vaughn .... R. J. Vaughn 1 l l 1 1 1 i 1 1 l 1 1 1 l i l 1 l 1 i 1 1 1 1 1 l l 1 1 S. P. C. Puffer. . . I 1 1 1 WINDSOR, ILL. Theodore Prideman 1 J. C. Davis 1 Sam'l W. Puffer Wm. K. Simpson Mrs. F. A. Milhous Peter A. Coen Wm. Milhous Mrs. A. Coen Dr. F. E.Hanson 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 J 1 1 J 1 ] 1 1 Ann Davis 1 Geo. H. Coen George Hard wick L. H. Turner 1 Edward B.Coen Mrs. G. Hardwick Mrs. L. H. Turner 1 Mary Coen J. A. Edmonson . . . J.B.Turner 1 Charles M. Coen W. C. Gibbs Nancy J. Turner 1 Ruth Coen Mrs. S-. R. Simms L. W.Turner 1 WEBSTER, MO. P. H. Abrams Nellie E. Simms Charles A. Turner 1 Ida H. Simms Laura E. Turner 1 Mrs, Kmily Cheatham.. Dr. W. Starrett Arthur Turner 1 Grace F. Field 1 WOODBURN, ILL. Malinda Greer John Coon XENIA, ILL. F. A. Davis 1 Mrs. S. Watt Mrs. Nellie Wilson.... M. Smith James E.Grecr William Frost Mrs. Sarah Frost Rev. J. J. W. Place Airs. Place.. Miss Olive Place S. J. Davis.... 1 M. E. Davis 1 L. Davis 1 S. M. Wood J. W Place Solon Delaney 1 K. H. Wood :Ylrs. M. Collins YOUNGBLOOD, ILL. Isaac Hill... .. 1 Sarah K. Hill 1 Thomas King Mrs. Lou Lathrop . . . G. R. Frost E. W. Frost S A Frost Miss Lucy Miner Miss Bertha Miner N. P. Frost Martha Ella Snedeker. . WOODSON, ILL. David H. Sorrels George A.-Sorrels Wm. Cooper Daniel Smith Martha A. Hill 1 George M. Hill 1 Charles R. Hill 1 WHITEHALL, ILL. Samuel Martin MinnieB.Hill 1 James D. Henry 1 Margaret Henry 1 Wm. T. Spizes 1 Airam W. Sorrels Oliver N. Sorrels Lilla B. Sorrels WOOSUNG, ILL, John H. Anderson Eliza F. Anderson Charles F. Anderson Matilda Spizes 1 Marinna Spizes 1 UNKNOWN And unnamed 21 WINCHESTER, ILL. Dr. G. W. By water Total Paid on Dollar Roll $2,361 00 THE FOLLOWING ALSO ARE TO BE PAID: ALEDO, ILL. A. W. Cole $10 Wm. J. Manor 1 EUREKA, ILL. Cyrus R. Marshall 8 Thos. Wharnall 3 James H. Daniels 1 James Hobbs. ... 1 E. B. David 5 BERLIN, ILL. John Rhea 9 AUBURN, ILL. Rev. M. C. Clark 9 GREENVIEW, ILL. Edward D. Taylor 2 F. M. Sturgeon 1 Others with Rev. L. Goff 4 BETHALTO, ILL. Mrs. W. J. Pre witt 4 ELLIOTTSTOWN, ILL. Rev. G. W. Barcus 7 BARRY. ILL. Per Dr. P. M. Parker 11 BATH, ILL. J.L.Rochester 4 T. J. Robertson 1 JACKSONVILLE, ILL. Samuel Busey 5 James H. Smith 1 ROLL-BOOK. 121 LATHAM, ILL. Wm. A. Dingmnn W. A. H. Hadlock LITER, ILL. S. E. Ennis 1 ;; :; _' i i 5 c. '' MURRAYVILLE, ILL. Wm. Reed 1 George W. Nichols 2 MASON CITY, ILL. Per. Rev. C. A. Hobbs. . 6 PARIS, ILL. Rev. G. W. Riley, Agent, 50 SCOTTVILLE, ILL. Samuel White . . . 11 TOLERANCE, ILL. A. F. Dunlap . 6 Rev. T. M. Griffith 5 WATSON, ILL. G. S. Elliott 5 Geo. B. McKee WAVERLY, ILL. John G. Ashbaugh S F. M. Coard '2 Sarah and Eva Johnson Mary Stephenson Fanny Stephenson Theodore Sample MARISSA, ILL. Rev. J. M. Bennett . WINDSOR, ILL. L. W. TURNEB 1 SPRINGFIELD, ILL. With Rev. C. W. Clark. 2(i STAUNTON, ILL. Rev. W. C.Harvey.... 2 Per R C. Wyllie Lizzie Rouse 1 MINONK, ILL. D. P. Kenyon By D. B. HARWOOD, Treasurer Central Cen- tennial Com. of 111,. 40 J. F. Burt... Total to be paid on Dollar Roll $ 288 00 Graiicl Total of Universal Dollar Roll $2,041) 00 SUNDAY SCHOOL ROLL, THE FOLLOWING ARE PAID : ALTON, ILL. First Baptist Church $19 00 MACOMB, ILL. Baptist School 11 00 MARISSA, ILL. Union School 1000 PAW PAW, ILL. Sunday School 7 25 PEORIA, ILL. First Baptist School 37 CO ST. LOUIS, MO. First Baptist School 1 75 TROY, ILL. Baptist School 5 00 UPPER ALTON, ILL. Sunday School 12 00 VANDALIA, ILL. Baptist Association 11 00 SUNDRY. Other Friends and Schools 58 50 Total paid on Sunday School Roll $173 00 Yet to be paid per J. W. Stuart, Marissa, Ills 15 00 (J rand Total of Sunday School Roll $188 00 LADIES' $10 MEMORIAL ROLL, ALTON, ILL. Pledged. Paid. Mrs. Mary Marsh $10 $10 Mrs. J. H. Austermell 10 10 Miss Allie L. Austermell 10 10 Mrs. Wm. M. Pierson 10 10 Mrs. Mary F. Platt 10 10 Miss Laura Clement 10 10 " Mary Daple i 10 10 Mrs. Mark Pierson 10 10 Mrs. M. E. Pierson, Phil., Pa. 10 10 Mrs. Ann Gaukrodger 10 10 Mrs. Ann Hayden 10 10 Miss Lydia Hayden 10 10 Miss Rebecca Danforth 10 10 Mrs. Sarah A. Cheney 10 10 Miss Etta Cheney 10 10 Mrs. G. J. Johnson 10 10 Miss Emma E. Johnson 10 10 Miss Sarah M. Johnson 10 10 Mrs.T. W. Newman, Burling- ton, Iowa..... 10 10 Mrs. T. S. Griffith, Holmdell, New Jersey 10 10 Miss Elizabeth Nickerson, Cazenovia, N. Y 10 10 Mrs. Laura A. Hinckley, Nan- tuck et, Mass. 10 10 Mrs. Matilda S. Holden 10 10 Miss Emma Holden 10 10 Mrs. Louisa Veach 10 10 Mrs. W. R. Woodruff. 10 10 " Richard Flagg 10 10 " Addie B. Sloman 10 10 " W. H. Burroughs 10 10 " Eliza Barnctt 10 10 Miss Mary Miller. 10 10 " Ella Miller 1 10 Mrs. Nancy J. Diamond 10 10 " Nancy Riley 10 10 " John L.Blair 10 10 Miss Hattie Blair 10 10 Mrs. Lucy Edwards 10 10 Miss Mary Ballinger 10 10 Mrs. Mary L. Bassett 10 " Emily Shelley 10 10 " Helen Detrich JO 10 Miss Delia Shelley 10 " Frederika Shelley 10 Mrs. Christian Spreeii 10 10 " Henry S. Baker. , 10 " Mary Cutter 10 10 " D. A. Spalding 10 10 ; ' Sarah II. Phiuney 10 10 11 Jane Hood 10 10 " D. D.Ryrie. 10 10 " Rachel 1). Hopkins 10 10 " Frank P. Hopkins 10 10 Miss Fannie K. Hopkins 10 10 Pledged. Paid. 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 Mrs. Elizabeth Smith 10 " James H. Forbes 10 Miss Ella Forbes 10 " Bessie Forbes 10 Mrs. E. A. Haight 10 Miss Lizzie C. Pattison 10 Mrs. M. A. Perrine 10 " E.C.J.Smith I'l Miss Mary E. Emerson 10 Mrs. C. A. Caldwell 10 Miss Hannah L. Caldwell.. .. . 10 " Emma H. Caldwell... 10 Mrs. Thos. G. Field 10 Miss Carrie A. Houghton 10 Mrs. A. L. Daniels 10 ' Elizabeth B. Runzl 10 " Julia A. Jamison, Bassein, Asia 10 " Robert Gibson 10 Ann Roberta Gibson 10 Mrs. Eliza Day, Chatfleld, Minn 10 Mrs. Isaac J. Richmond 10 ALBION, ILL. MissEdieLow 10 5 ALEDO, ILL. Mrs. Lizzie David 10 jETNA, ILL. Mrs. Mary W. Jones 10 1 " M. E. Darnblazer 10 2 ARCOLA, ILL. Mrs. A. M. Williamson 10 10 ATLANTA, ILL. Mrs. Abigail Hoblett 10 10 " J. A. Hoblett 10 10 Miss Nellie Hoblett 10 10 Mrs Frank Hoblett 10 10 " William Miller 10 10 " E.J.Thomas 10 10 " Acsah Olin Merriam 10 " Lucy White Merriam JO Miss Bessie Borland Merriam.. 10 AUBURN, ILL. Mrs. W. A. Epling 10 JO " James M. Stout 10 >10 " Robert Morse . 10 ROLL-BOOK. 123 BARKY, ILL. Pledged. 1'ald. , 10 10 Hi 10 in in Mrs. William Green. ' Caroline Babcook lit 1 Lewis Angle 10 " Benjamin Brown 10 " Nettie E Hitch 10 Miss Mary W. Poling 10 BERLIN, ILL. Mrs. Charles Boynton 10 10 ' ' Sarah Foutch 10 10 ' Martha Foutch 10 10 " Julia A. Rhea 10 BAKERSFIELD, CAL. Mrs. Philo D. Jewett 10 10 BROOKLINE, MASS. / Mrs. George Brooks 10 10 " B. F. Baker 10 10 " David S. Coolidge 10 BELLEVILLE, ILL. Mrs. W. W. Weir 10 10 " Joseph H. Ripley 10 10 M iss Mary Julia Ripley 10 10 Mrs. James H. Ripley 10 Miss Sadie Susan Ripley 10 Mrs. Elizabeth Stookcy 10 10 " Matt T. Stookey 10 10 " LouS.Stookey 10 10 " Margaret H. Ogle 10 10 Miss Gillie G. Ogle 10 10 Mrs. Livonia E. Gooding., .... Id 10 " J. B. Rentchler 10 10 " James L. Pulliam 10 10 " Fafinie A. Bowman 10 " W.H.Powell 10 BETHALTO, ILL. Miss Lenora Flick 10 10 Mrs. J. S. Deck 10 " W. J. Prewitt. 10 BLOOMINGTON, ILL. Mrs. Francis H. Roach 10 19 Martha Benjamin 10 10 M. X. Chuse 10 10 J. R Mason 10 10 S. W. Lyman 10 10 Samuel Lander 10 George McFadden 10 H. H. Hewitt 10 " L.M.Hewitt 10 " Lydia Wilson 10 BLANDINSVILLE, ILL. Mrs. Nancy Logan 10 10 BOIS D'ARC, ILL. Mrs. Narcissa Y. Ewing 10 10 Miss Mary E.Ewing .'.. 10 10 BRIDGEPORT, ILL. Mrs. Margaret H. Black... . 10 10 BUNKER HILL, ILL. Pledged. Paid. Mrs. J. F. Howard 10 5 Mrs. C. C. Campbell 10 10 ' Solomon Davis lo ' Lucinda Williams.... 10 ' (ioor.iri! Silver lo ]o ' S.E.Barnes 10 10 ' R. K. Barnes 10 ' Juliette Johnston 10 10 ' Sarah B. Carter 10 10 Miss Jennie Brown 10 10 BRIMFIELD, ILL. Mrs. Gilbert Hathaway 10 . 10 BUSHNELL, ILL. Mrs. N. B. Kay 10 CARROLLTON, ILL. Mrs. Francis McFadden 10 " J. T. Cameron 10 ' Fannie C. Burruss 10 ' R. G. Robinson 10 " Courtney Hill, per R. B. Hill lo " Matilda Clemmons 10 " Wni. B. Robinson 10 CAMERON, ILL. Mrs. G.D.Kent 10 CANTON, ILL. Mrs. D. C. Jenne. . . .10 CAZENOVIA, ILL. Mrs. Rimh Hammers .......... (." L. Luella Hammers ...... '" Julia A. Hammers ........ " W. E. James .............. " AbnerMuudell ............ [CENTRALIA, ILL. Mrs. N. A. Reed " J.M.Morrison COLLINSVILLE, ILL. Mrs. Mary Begole " Cyrus L. Begole CORDOVA, ILL. Mrs. Jacob H. Marshall CLEVELAND, OHIO. Mrs. A. K. Scott ............... CHRISMAN, ILL. Mrs. J. S. Hartley. . ........... " Siimuel Kenton ........... " James McKee .............. " William Wyatt ........... " John McKee, Sr ........... John McKee, Jr .......... " Rebecca Hoult ............ 10 1:1 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 124 KOLL BOOK. 10 CHATHAM, ILL. " " Pledged. Paid. Mrs. Henry Kinncy 10 ..; CHICAGO, ILL. Mrs. Carlos Swift , 10 " C. E. Hewitt 10 CARTHAGE, ILL. Mrs. II. P. Cutter 10 CHARLESTON, ILL. Miss Alice Maxwell 10 " MattieBarr 10 DECATUR, ILL. Mrs. W. G. Inman ]<> " Thos. Hays ]<> "D.P.Elwood 10 DELHI, ILL. Mrs . Mary Ann Randolph 10 Miss Ruth Randolph ID Mrs. Moore C. Stelle 10 Miss Jennie May Stelle...... 10 EVANSVILLE, WIS. Mrs. C. R. Lathrop 10 EDWARDSVILLE, ILL. Mrs. Mary O'Hara 10 " Margaret N. Fruit 10 EFFINGHAM, ILL. Mrs. \V. P. Surrells 10 EWING, ILL. Mrs.S. J.King 10 EL PASO, ILL. Mrs. E. E. Evans 10 10 ENGLEWOOD, ILL. Mrs. J. Carr , 10 FREEPORT, ILL. '. Mrs. W. H. Dorward 10 FAIRBURY, ILL. Mrs. Margaret Merit '10 Miss Vena Merit 10 " S. R. Merit 10 " Minnie I. Merit 10 FIDELITY, ILL. Mrs. Wm. A. Tomkins 10 ' ' Mary Christopher 10 FLORA, ILL. Mrs. Rarah E. McEndrco. . . .10 " Mary C. Dye 10 10 10 10 10 (0 FREEBURG, ILL. Pledged. Paid. Mrs. H/S. Dcppe 10 10 FRANKLIN, ILL. Martha H. Spires 10 10 GALESBURG, ILL. Mrs. Zephaniah Lewis. Mrs. E. Benncr ID GALVA, ILL. GREENVIEW, ILL. Tattie A. Broomfleld. Virginia A. Godbey. . 10 10 JO Mrs. James M. Coon 10 GIRARD, ILL. Mrs. John Lloyd 10 10 Miss Mella Lightbourn 10 " Gussie Lightbourn..- 10 Mrs. E. M. Cooper 10 10 10 GRANVILLE, OHIO. Mrs. William Whitney. ..... GRIGGSVILLE, ILL. Miss Sara E. Coflfey Mrs. R. L.Eastman Miss Lucy J. Eastman Mrs. James Brakefleld " Rioly F. Gray Miss Tennie Lamar Gray " Anna Rhipton Gray Mrs. B. B. Carpenter " Sarah Temple " Josiah Bryant Miss Abbey Petra. Belle Petra HAVANA, ILL. Mrs. A. D. Hopping 10 10 " Elizabeth M.Mitchell.... 10 HORACE. ILL. Mrs. Jennie Harding 10 HULL'S STATION. Mrs. Sarah Hull 10 10 JACKSONVILLE, ILL. Mrs. Posa P. Holmes 10 10 Miss Francis E. Holmes 10 1 " Rosa M. V. Holmes 10 10 Mrs Lois Holmes 10 10 " R. Reynolds 10 10 Miss E. C. Spencer 10 10 Mrs. A. E. Goltra 10 10 " Justus V. Read 10 10 M) JERSEYVILLE, ILL. Mrs. Caroline Snedeker 10 10 ROLL-BOOK 125 Pledge Mrs. Harriet M. Snedekor. . . . " Cathariue K. Hill, ML Pleasant Iowa. d. Pf 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 ! 10 10 10 10 10 10 lid. 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 19 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 JO 10 10 10 10 10 10 MACOMB, ILL. Pledge Mrs. Martha J. McLean. d. P 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 30 10 10 10 aid. 1(1 10 10 10 10 1" 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 11) 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 ' ' Emma L. D. Snedckcr. . . Miss Etta Caroline Snedekcr.. Mrs. JacoJ) K Stelle Miss Ivy C. McLean >irs. Rebecca S. Blount Mrs. Louisa M.Holland Miss Cretif Stelle Miss Mary L. Camp " Rolanda Brooks Mrs Nancy J. Forest . . Mrs. J. W. Clark Lizzie F. Patterson Mrs Joel Corey Sarah A Forest " Robert Newton Theodosia K. Forest " Julia Bowman Samaiitha E. Forest ' Eliza Holliday Lucy Ann Judson Farcst Mrs. Leona Forest Miss Carrie Squires Mrs. Margaret E. Kirby " J. A. Smith " Louis Gillworth " Miriam Millagan .. " Mary Lamb " J. L. M. Young " J. H. Lamb MATTOON. ILL. Miss Rebecca Clancy " Helen K. Perrine Miss Mattio Perrine , KANE, ILL. Mrs. Isabinda Grandy Mrs. Ellst M. Guthrie MASON, ILL. Miss Mary Grandy Mrs. Mary L. T rask " Helen E. Finity MAHOMET, ILL. Mrs. Mollie Gleason " Ruth E. Perry " Debbie English LACLEDE, ILL. " Emily J. Scott " Nora Biers LA MOILLE, ILL. MENDOTA, ILL. Mrs. T. M. Colwell " H. Benedict Miss Anna May Colwell Mrs R M Bailey " Jemima Hopps MUNSIE, IND. Mrs. H. McFarland. . . LEE, ILL. Mrs. David Luper Anna Cast ' Sarah E. Alden Mary Jones MASON CITY, ILL. Mrs. C. A. Hobbs. . . M. A. Powell LITERBERRY, ILL. Martha E. Hatflcld LITCHFIELD, ILL. Mrs. M. B. Savage " Sarah Ivens Fislier M. J. Lynn Km ma Allen Sarah Lamorcaux Olive Hastings Catherine Barngrovcr LINCOLN, ILL. Mi J. H. Pennington Roseville, 111 200 Thos.G. Field Alton, 111 200 J. Bulktey, D. D Upper Alton, 111 100 100 C. I>. Merltt Fairbury, 111 50 D.T. Morrill Upper Alton, 111 50 50 J. Cairns Cambridge, 111 10 10 J. M. Stickney Toulon, 111 c>0 n> H.M.Carr Downers Grove, 111....... :.i 25 J. A. Smith, D. D Chicago, 111 100 50 J.M.Gregory Champaign, 111 100 100 D. D. Holmes Jacksonville, 111 20 20 G. Silver .Bunker Hill, 111 20 Charles Cross Bushnell, 111 10 M. H. Worrall Springfield, 111 25 D. King, Jr New Berlin, 111 100 W.I. Price Wahoo, Neb 35 ('. \V. Clark Springfield, 111 25 G. W. Riley Paris, 111 100 100 G. N. Drury Panola, 111 10 W. E. James Cazenovia, 111 25 25 E.A. Ince Owosso, Mich 25 W.C. Archer Anawan, 111.... 25 132 EOLL BOOK. Pledged. I. N. Hobart, D. D Chicago, 111 200 V. B. Ingram f . Osceola, 111 15 J. C. Lewis Alpha, 111 60 S.B. Gulp Carlinvllle, 111 10 J. C. Qrosh Littleton, 111 10 Norman Parks Blandinsville, 111 10 B. P. McAuley Dallas Ci'ty, HI 10 J. M. Harrington Macomb, 111 25 S. J. McCormick Plymouth, 111 25 L. Osborn ' Plymouth, 111 25 J. W. Reed Newton, 111 5 W. P. Throgmorton Benton, 111 50 Wm. Elmer.. St. Louis, Mo 25 John Jumper Seminole Nation, I. T.. 5 D. P. French, D. D ..Shobonier, 111 150 W. H. Garner . Nashville, 111 25 NilesKinne , Carthage, 111 10 James Buckland St. Louis, Mo . ... 50 A. Jones Sullivan, 111 5 Peter Long Pocahontas, 111 10 N. J. Coffey Sweetwater, 111 5 W. J. Chapin Edwardsville, 111 l' John Washburn...... Ewing, 111 25 N. L. Grifflng Sadorus, 111 5 T. M. Colwell Mendota, 111 30 Thomas Powell Ottawa, 111 100 F. A.Armstrong St. Louis, Mo 3 E. C. Taylor Jersey ville, 111 5 W. G. Inman Decatur, 111.... 10 M. T. Lamb. Jacksonville, 111 50 Lee Goff. Jacksonville, 111 10 J.T. Green St. Louis, Mo 10 John H. Phillips ; Shelby ville, 111 100 W. C. Roach Mowequa, 111 10 Walter L. Wood Oquawka, 111 10 J. V. Schofleld St. Louis, Mo 50 Daniel L. McBride. D. H. Cooley Canton, 111 10 William Ashmore, Jr Rochester, N. Y 25 T. M. Griffith Tolerance, 111 10 N. B. Crisman Alton, 111 5 Benj. F. Bishop Bridgeport, 111 6 Louis Auger St. Annie, 111 1 Muridy Durant CreekNation, Ind. Ter'y 1 S. F. Gleason Mahomet, 111 -25 P.P. Shirley La Grange, 111 10 N. A. Reed, D. D Centralia, 111 10 J. S. Barnes Prairie City, 111 r>o R. D.Adams . Kansas 75 Wacaconna Le Fountain, Ind 50 E. Nisbett, D. D Rock Island, 111 25 J. H. Austermell Alton, 111 50 M. Melvin Jameson Bassein, Asia 10 Total Paid on Ministers' Roll : Yet to be Paid... Paid. 155 10 15 5 150 25 10 in 5 in 96 3 5 Jti 10 25 5 10 10 3,741 00 3,925 00 Grand Total of Baptist Ministers' Roll $ 7,666 00 GENERAL CENTENNIAL ROLL. Pledged. Paid. Mrs. Stephen Griggs New York, N. Y 8 6,000 $ 6,000 Elisha S. Converse. Boston, Mass 5,000 5,000 James W. Converse ..Boston, Mass 1,000 John E. Hayner Alton, 111 2,&50 950 George K. Hopkins Alton, 111 2,575 2,575 Mrs. Martha E. Pierson Philadelphia, Pa 2,0.-)0 50 Moore C. Goltra Jacksonville, 111 1,800 1,800 Friends, Per Anonymous Alton, 111 1,500 500 Daniel D. Ryrie Alton, 111 1,350 7:'-r> W. H. Burroughs Alton, 111 1,250 500 Mrs. Eliza Porter La Moille, 111 2,500 1,500 Cyrus Edwards, LL. D Upper Alton, 111 2.200 1,200 Hermon C.'.Cole, Estate Upper Atton; 111 1,000 1,000 A. A. Kendrick, D. D Upper Alton, 111 1,000 276 Charles B. Day Peoria, 111 1,100 400 Mrs. Henrietta Clark McLean 111 1,000 Mrs. Elizabeth Ann Barber Upper Alton, 111 1,000 M. C. Cooley Upper Alton, 111.. 1,000 500 S. A. Bemis St. Louis, Mo 1,000 1,000 Hon. D. B. Gillham Upper Alton, 111 1,200 200 Misses Hay, Sisters Springfield, 111 1,000 200 Miss Matilda Jackson Mason City, 111 1,000 Jesse Hammers Cazenovia, III 1,000 1,000 Mrs. Carrie E. Richardson Springfield, 111 1,000 Henry H. Herr Canton, 111 1,005 5 Lewis B. Kline St. Louis, Mo 1,000 L. J. Hastings Mason City, 111 1,000 A True Friend Jersey ville, 111 500 Wm. M. Pierson Alton, 111 500 500 George H. Stookey Freeburg, 111 250 E. W. Pattison St. Louis, Mo 200 200 Mrs. Renewa Gove Quincy, 111 300 300 C.C.Campbell Bunker Hill. Ill 400 200 L. P. Scrogin Lexington, 111 500 :>(*) Peris Holmes Jacksonville, 111 wo 200 H.M. Thompson St. Louis, Mo 100 Mrs. Richard Flagg Alton, 111 100 100 Maj. G. W. Ingalls Muskogee, Ind. Ter'y. 100 Dr. A.S. Everett St. Louis, Mo 250 II. A. Cheney ....Alton, III 100 100 Boston W. Smith Alton, 111 100 100 Frank P. Hopkins Alton, 111 100 \Vm. E. Pattison Shenandoah, Iowa 100 J. Q. Spears Tallula, 111 100 100 Mark B. Sloman Alton, 111 100 50 134 EOLL-BOOK. Holden & Norton Gabriel Kay Pi.= Alton, 111 Payson, 111 dged. 75 50 Paid. 75. 50 Jacob K. Stelle 50 5'J Philadelphia, Pa 50 50 Darius Lainoreoux Mason City, Ills 50 David Powell Mason City, 111 50 50 Baptist Church ..., Decatur, 111 50 50 A. S. Kendrick S. N. Peabody St. Louis, Mo 50 50 Tyler Chapman Stonington, 111 50 Harvey Veach S.& W.Pitts H. C. G. Moritz T. W. Knight George O.Adams Alton, 111 Alton, 111 Alton, 111 Alton, 111 Alton, 111 22 25 25 25 25 22 25 10 10 A. L. Daniels . Alton*, 111 25 o- Mrs. D. Seckman The Standard C. B. James Perry, 111 Chicago, 111 Minonk, 111 25 200 90 200 John E. P. Bell 50 10 Charles J. Merit Falrbury, 111 20 Smiley Brothers Alton, 111 25 25 Col. J. Merriam Atlanta, 111 20 A. B. Scrogin 25 Clement Leach, Jr 10 10 J. V. Reed Jacksonville, 111 10 10 Albert H. Drury Alton, 111 10 10 M. Bowman Carrollton, 111 10 10 John Seeders Springfield, 111 10 10 Alonzo Cease L. Eastman L. Holland St. Louis, Mo Griggsville, 111 15 10 10 10 10 J.W. Gary James Cullimore Alton, 111 Carrollton, 111 10 10 10 10 Charles Phinney Alton, 111 15 15 J. D. Rawlings Jacksonville, 111 20 20 Miss E C. Spencer . . .... . Jacksonville, 111... 10 10 Mrs. Thos. Perrine Jerseyville, 111 5 5 Wm. H. Humphrey Virden, 111 5 5 M. J. Ricks ; Auburn, 111 .-> 5 Thomas Stout . . Auburn, 111 5 5 L. Stohr John Bauer Thomas Tagg Alton, III Alton, 111 Auburn, 111 5 5 .-> 5 Mrs. Elizabeth E. Talbot. . . Roseville, 111 .' *0 Mrs. L. W. Thompson Mrs Ann Thornton Aledo, 111 Shelby ville 250 100 100 Charles Boynton Berlin, 111 100 100 John Rhea James P. Slade ....Berlin, 111 Belleville, 111 100 100 Charles Gooding Belleville, 111 100 M. W. Weir Belleville, 111 400 Joseph H. Ripley James H. Ripley Belleville, 111...., Belleville, 111 to 80 40 Hon. Gustavus Koerner j jyf Forest . . . Belleville, 111 . . Macomb, 111 50 30 50 John Franklin Forest Macomb, 111 10 BOLL-BOOK. 135 Abner Mundell Miss Abbie M. Lawton Wm. A. Robinson , David Evans Miss Agnes Johnson James Rixon Rev. H. R. Hicks and Wife. . . Warren Whitefleld Carlton G.Taylor A. D, Hopping J. M. David Andrew C. Chapman Wm. Lewis C. L. Bridges , Mrs. Amanda E. Corn well Dr. C. W. Bishop J. T. Whitaker H. James John Christ Mrs. Sarah Lackford J. L. Ruse and wife... Mr. Ferguson Mrs. Jenkinson Mrs. Sophia Sage Miss Mattie Kendrick Eddie A. Kendrick Theodore Pridemore J. C.Turner..... F. R. Marshall Samuel Bevan Mrs. Julia A. Foltz J. B. Montague Wm. Leighton Mrs. F. P. Bone Mrs. Lucinda G. Bent W.F. Coolidge Edward Wilson Mrs. Phcebe G. Strawn Mrs. C. N. Bonner Luther Bishop H. J. Pierson A. Judson Wilson Eleazer Dunlap P. Dudley P. H. Vance F.Q. Hicks Louis D. Holmes Wm. S. Dean Josiah Francis Lafayette Smith W.A.Epling Lewis H. Thomas E.G. Miner Mrs. S. A. Willard Daniel C. Jenne Mrs. H. N. Barnhurst... Pledged. 100 80 25 Paid. 80 Cazenovia, 111 .., Mason City, 111 , Carrollton, III El Paso, 111 25 Alton, 111 5 Upper Alton, 111 5 Paw Paw, 111 5 Minonk, 111 5 Pontiac, 111 5 , Havana, 111 5 New Windsor, 111 5 Stonington, 111 ii Springfield, 111 5 Auburn, 111 5 f.Mason, 111 5 Aetna, 111 5 Arthur, 111 2 50 Arthur, 111 5 .Arthur, 111 3 Arthur, 111 2 Windsor, III 4 Carrollton, 111. 3 Minonk. 111..... 3 Upper Alton, 111 :'> ..Upper Alton, 111 1 Upper Alton, I1L 1 Windsor, 111 5 Sterling, Kan 10 Eureka, 111 200 , Atlanta, 111 200 Atlanta, 111 100 Lincoln, 111 100 Lincoln, 111 100 , Lincoln, 111 100 20 Bloomington, 111 100 Bloomington, 111 250 , Bloomington, 111 200 Jacksonville, 111 103 Bloomington, 111.... 1 ... 100 25 , Bloomington, 111 100 20 Bloomington, 111. Bloomington, 111..". 50 , Bloomington, 111 5 5 Bloomington, 111 5 r> Danvers, 111 100 Danvers, 111 10 Aledo, 111 50 5 Aledo, 111 20 Springfield. Ill 1,000 500 Springfield, 111 1,000 200 Auburn, 111 i;000 Virden, 111 1,000 Winchester, 111 1,000 Centralia, 111 1,000 100 , Canton, 111 1,100 1,100 Mendota, 111 ,1,000 100 10 136 EOLL-BOOK. \ Pledged. Paid. L. B. Merrifleld Mendota, 111 1,000 F. J. Comstock St. Louis, Mo 1,000 Henry Hall ....Latham, 111 60 J. L. McDaniel Latham, 111 25 E. W. West Canton, 111 25 5 J. G. Piper Canton, 111 15 Benj. Packer Toulon, 111 50 Gilbert Hathaway Brimfleld, 111 50 10 Alfred C. Cady Brimfleld, 111 1250 W. A. Parks Osceola, 111 5 5 S. M. Smalley Oalesburg, 111 25 Richard Rich Fidelity, 111 100 Samual Rich Fidelity, 111 100 D. P. Prichett Fidelity, 111 100 SethP.Stem Roseville, 111 100 20 Taylor Williams Sterling, 111 100 F. G.Mason Sterling, 111 10 10 C. C.Buel Sterling, 111 10 Alonzo Barnes Prairie City, 111 10 10 M. T. Winslow Macomb, 111 25 L. W.Garlick Chicago, 111 6 6 W.G.Marshall Cordova, 111 5 5 Nelson Holt Tamaroa, 111 100 100 C.F.Linzee DuQuoin, 111 5 5 C. R. Poole Mt. Vernon, 111 10 10 Henry M. Gee Tamaroa, 111 10 10 J.A. Lemons Tamaroa, 111 50 50 J. Brad Davis Pinckneyville, 111 6 L. T.Ross Pinckneyville, 111 5 5 Misses Molly and Fanny L. Primm.. . . Pinckney vill e, 111 5 5 John H. Harris Pinckneyville, 111 5 5 T.J.Williams Spring Garden, 111.... 5 5 Blithey Reece Mt. Vernon, 111 10 10 Don T. Short Ashley, 111 10 Vesalius Colbert Dundas, 111 6 Samuel W. Puffer Winchester, 111 10 10 Charles Wilson Winchester. Ill 10 10 C. B. Hubbard Winchester, 111 10 10 Joseph Burnap Upper Alton, 111 100 Third Baptist Church St. Louis, Mo 40 40 John Ryan Virden, 111 40 40 I. N. Scheller Sciota, 111 25 5 M. A. Smith Snicarte, 111 120 20 Miss Lenora Page Monmouth, 111 5 5 Walter Wilkins Laclede, 111 5 5 L. E. Wilkins Laclede, III 10 10 H.T.Cunningham Centralia, 111 5 5 Miss Mary A. and Julia Badlet Centralia, 111 5 5 J.C.Bernard Quincy, 111 100 100 Mrs. E. Richardson Loxa,Ill 100 Daniel Furry Loxa, 111 10 A. F. Dunlap Tolerance, 111 10 J.B.Turner Windsor, 111 100 Mrs. M. P. Lemen Salem, 111 100 Mrs. Mary Begole Collinsville, 111 ICO 100 M.A.Cushing Minonk, 111 100 I. H. Elkins, Jr .*. lola, 111 100 ROLL-BOOK. * 137 Pledged. Paid. E. A. Bowen Mendota, 111 100 100 Baptist Church Mendota, 111 50 50 N.C. Hatheway Alton, 111 60 50 B. Foster Fidelity, 111 50 T. G. Shannon Fidelity, 111 50 Prof. C. S. Pennell St. Louis, Mo 25 25 Moore C. Stelle Jersey ville, 111 60 Ellsworth Stelle Jerseyville, 111 10 Harry Justus Stelle Jerseyville, 111 10 Frank Everett Stelle Jerseyville, 111 10 Kay Johnson Stelle Jerseyville, 111 10 William P. McKennie Springfield, 111 20 20 George W. Sanders Carlyle, 111 10 10 George Dennison Mendota, 111 10 10 Manning L. Allen LaMoille, 111 10 Baptist Church LaMoille, 111 15 15 H. A. Stanard LaMoille, 111 25 ]Virs. E. S. Gill LaMoille, 111 100 100 Franklin Walker Champaign, 111 100 Rev. A. Cleghorn. D. D Champaign, 111 100 A. D. W ilder Sublette, 111 100 A. T. Swartwout Sublette, 111 100 A. L. Swartwout Sublette, 111 100 Mrs. Ellen Trowbridge Sublette, 111 50 Charles F. Ingalls Sublette, 111 25 William Gray Sublette, 111 25 Mrs. Lydia Tewksbury Mendota, 111 109 John G. Irwin Edwardsville, 111 100 John A. Prickett .Edwardsville, 111 5 6 Samuel B. Smith Jacksonville, 111 5 Francenia Cox Jacksonville, 111.....'.. 5 5 J. J. Smith Jacksonville, 111 10 J.M. Gentry Jacksonville, 111 10 10 Russell Godbey .' Greenview, 111 5 6 John W. Turner and Wife Virginia, 111 -5 5 M. H. Alderson Bath, 111 JO Marcus L. Sloat Bath, 111 6 .5 Thomas Eaton Poplar City, 111 5 A. Scott Poplar City, 111 5 6 G. W. Tegg , Havana, 111 5 E.B. David Aledo, 111 - r , Lewis Curry Neoga, 111 30 Alice Johnson Chrismaii, 111 3 J. W. Johnson Chrisman, 111 6 Baptist Church .' Paris, 111 4 20 20 Baptist Church Fairview, 111 8 Baptist Church Sadorus, 111 8 A. R. Collins Horace, 111 5 5 Nancy Hart Munsie, Ind 6 5 Martha Hart Munsie, Ind 5 5 SarahHart Munsie, Ind 5 5 Dr. A. McBride Oreana, 111 5 Mrs. Nancy Clark Kimmundy, -111 f> A. J.Swlft Oreana, 111 6 C. P. Raney Oreana, 111 5 B. Giveler Oreana, 111 James Malcom Oreana, 111 2 138 ROLL-BOOK, Pledged. Paid. S. J. Griggsby Blandinsville, 111 5 5 JonnLloyd Girard, 111 5 5 D.C.Moore ....Kimmundy, 111 '2 2 Wm. Huskinson Alton, 111 10 10 H.L.Miller Alton, 111 10 10 C. B. Darrow ...O'Fallon, 111 10 W.F. Redburn Waverly, 111 10 John W. Stillwell Shelby ville, 111 10 Wm. P. McMurry Normal, 111 10 10 Wm. DuffHaynie Normal, 111 100 Elvin Armstsong Jerseyville, 111 200 20 Isabella Robinson Tremont, 111 100 100 Lincoln Chase Boston, Mass 100 E. B. Harper New York, N. Y 100 C. H. Flick Bethalto.Ill 500 Mrs. Permelia Rodgers Upper Alton, 111 500 Rachel Bardsley... Troy, 111 600 William M. Gonterman Troy, 111 100 W. A. Wilson Troy, 111 100 Hon. Silas L. Bryan Salem, 111 180 Baptist Church Riverton, lo 50 50 Baptist Church Goshen, Ind 50 :>n C. S. Mixter Arlington, Mass 20 Mrs. A. E. Fisher Arlington, Mass 25 23 Thomas B. Griggs Brookline, Mass 50 50 Henry R. Glover ' Boston, Mass 50 B. F. Sturtevant Boston, Mass 50 50 David Randall Waltham, Mass 100 C. C. Bills.... Waltham, Mass 100 B.B.Johnson Waltham, Mass 5 5 Mrs. H. E. B. Kelley Maiden, Mass 5 5 GeorgeT.Hope New York, N. Y 25 25 G. W. Avery Peoria, 111 40 40 Mrs. W. N. Denny Vincennes, Irvd 40 J.S.Richardson Springfield, 111 10 10 James Anderson Hord, 111 <> A. Judson Jones Dix, 111 < Joshua Meek Flora, 111 S Feorge Foster Flora, 111 5 W. P. Surrells Efflngham, 111 10 10 JamesGriffln Windsor, 111 ]() 10 Mrs. Anna Willis* Upper Alton, 111 10* Miss Mary Willis* ..Upper Alton, 111 10* Mrs. A. Fuller Rodgers* Upper Alton, 111 10* Mrs. George Cartwright* Upper Alton, 111.., 10* Miss Hannah Cartwrlght* Upper Alton, 111 lo Mrs. Kate K. Boyle* Upper Alton, 111 10* Mrs. S. W. Marston Muskogee, Ind. Ter.... lo M rs . Z. B. Jobf Alton, 111 10f Miss L. Jennie Jobf Alton, 111 10f Miss E. Alice Jobt Alton, 111 10f Mrs. W. W.Martinf Alton, 111 10f Miss NinaHawleyf Alton, 111 10f 10 *These six subscriptions belong to Ladies' 810 Memorial Roll, pages 127-8, but having been omitted there, are counted here. fThesc five ditto, page 122. ROLL-BOOK. 139 Pledged. Paid. Dr. "W. C. Q.uiglcy Alton, 111 1 67 1 67 Salem Association Illinois 10 60 1050 A. Rowe Macomb, 111 20 Hiram Rose Oquawka, 111 5 J. E. Bosler Oquawka, 111 5 J. S.Dickerson Chicago, 111 5 5 N. Sanders Stonlngton, 111 r, 5 K. A. Pence : Rosetta, 111 5 r> Mrs. Nancy Gardner... East Newbern, 111..... 6 5 W. Wilkes Harris Neosho Rapids, Kas.. 5 Mrs. Lou Hutfaker Berlin, 111 5 5 Miss Oracle Watkins Mason City, 111 5 5 Fred Shelley Alton, 111 100 loi) Tobacco Factory (J. T. D.) Alton, III. . . 100 1 'res. Edwin C. Hewitt, LL. D Normal, 111 100 W.H.Harris Cleveland, Ohio 100 100 Dr. A. H. Schott Alton, 111 1011 Albert Draper Upper Alton, 111 25 G. W. Lamoreaux and Family Clinton, 111 11 11 Charles Alt Alton, 111 10 10 W.M. Barker Charleston, 111 10 Prof. F. L. Marshall Upper Alton, 111 ]() Baptist Church Jerseyville, 111 10 JO First Baptist Church Peorla, 111 r> 5 D.M.Clark Eureka, 111 5 5 E. A. Fisher Eureka, 111 5 5 Sundry Unknown In Illinois 833 833 Mrs. Peter Howe Wenona, 111 1,000 Total Paid on General Roll $33,068 50 Yet to be Paid 40,068 00 Grand Total of General Centennial Roll $73,136 50 SPECIAL JUBILEE ROLL, Pledged. Paid. Second Baptist Church St. Louis, Mo $5,009 Mrs. Harriet Pratt St. Louis, Mo r,,roo Four Friends, unnamed Boston, Mass 2,000 Mrs. Margaret W. Wood Boston, Mass 2,000 l.OCO Mrs. Margaret McTaggart .'. .Springfield, 111 1,000 140 BOLL-BOOK. Pledged. Paid. Miss AnnaClinton Springfield, III 1,000 George Taylor and Wife Bethalto, III 1 ,000 Dr. A. Kendrick Wakesha, Wis 603 Hon. Wm. S. Frink Taylorville, 111 600 WilliamM. Senter St. Louis, Mo 300 100 David Pierson Carrollton, 111 125 James Duke, Jr Rosetta, 111 no 10 Two Notes by Rev. , D. D Away Down East 800 E. J. Manchester and Wife Mendota, 111 1,000 3Irs. H. M. Snedeker Mt. Pleasant, lo 1,000 Total Paid on Jubilee Roll $ 1,110 00 Yet to be Paid 20,335 00 Grand Total of Special Jubilee Roll .$21,445 00 GENERAL SUMMARY. Paid. To be Paid. Total. UNIVERSAL DOLLAR BOLL 82,361 $ 288 $2,619 SUNDAY SCHOOL ROLL 173 15 188 LADIES' MEMORIAL ROLL 3,80250 1,77750 5,580 ALUMNI PROFESSORSHIP ROLL 3,02950 9,276 12,30550 BAPTIST MINISTERS' ROLL 3,741 3,925 7,666 GENERAL CENTENNIAL ROLL 33,06850 40,068 73,13650 SPECIAL JUBILEE ROLL 1,110 20,335 21,445 TOTAL PAID ON SEVERAL ROLLS $ 47,285 5O YET TO BE PAID 75,684 5O GRAND TOTAL OF CENTENNIAL-JUBILEE OFFERINGS $ | 22,970 OO FINANCIAL AGENTS. The fact that the foregoing pages have beeu mainly edited by the Financial Agent of the College, will sufficiently, perhaps, explain why the Agency work, present and past, notwithstanding it has been so important a factor in making the College what it is, has been scarcely alluded to by him. But justice to those who have filled this office, as well as necessity to any approach toward com- pleteness of this work as a history, requires at ieast, a brief tribute to those who have served in this capacity. All, however, who have first and last served in this relation, though valuable and useful in their time, cannot, of course, be even mentioned; and the space al- lowed will permit only a glance at the few who have been instrumental in raising the larger sums. Not even what may have been done by the Presidents, Ldomis, Sherwood, Read and Kendrick, and other Presidents and Professors, who have been deeply interested and more or less active in this direction, may be noticed, as they were not, specifically, Financial Agents. The first Agent of the College, employed as such, and who raised any large sum, was Rev. John M. Peck, D. D. He not only secured the first 81,200, or thereabouts, in Boston and other parts of the East, in 1826, with help of which Rock Spring Seminary was founded the following year, but, when the School was removed to the new location at Upper Alton, and then, in 1835, had secured a charter as a College, he again went East in behalf of the Institution and gath- ered near 820,000 more, as the results of which, the name was changed to Shurt- leflf College, and the first degree of endowment provided. Rev. George B. Davis was the next Agent of the class under consideration, serving six years, from 1839 to 1845; and while yet this Western country was so new and the friends of higher learning here were few and poor, he was not so successful in securing larger amounts, as in imparting information and awakening interest. His cash collections, however, aggregated $2,512, while much larger sums were secured in notes, deeds and pledges. Rev. Isaac D. Newell served about five year?, between 184