Connecticut yesterday and today : 1635-1935 : celebrating three hundred years of progress in the Constitution state, Part 32

Author: Brett, John Alden
Publication date: 1935
Publisher: Hartford : J. Brett Co.
Number of Pages: 596


USA > Connecticut > Connecticut yesterday and today : 1635-1935 : celebrating three hundred years of progress in the Constitution state > Part 32


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34


In the bank lobby are five large murals, depicting whal- ing scenes, together with many ship models and whaling prints. In a separate room is the museum which is open to the public every day during banking hours. This col- lection is listed by the American Museum Association and vsted annually by hundreds of people from all parts of the country who are interested in the history of whaling. It is also a center for instruction of school children.


During the Tercentenary many will doubtless take the opportunity to view of review this interesting collection.


1790


FOUNDED BY EBENEZER BUSHNELL


1935


Normich


1790


1935


Bulletin


VOL. LXXVII-No. 223


33,535


NORWICH, CONN., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1935 12 Pages


MORNING AND FLENING


19,181


PRICE TWO CENTS


N the year 1790, when Ebenezer Bushnell present home of the Norwich Bulletin at 62-74 first published his Weekly Register in Franklin Street, where today the modern plant sends out the world, state and local news to its subscribers. Norwich, "24 rods left of the meeting house," the parent paper of the Norwich Norwich, the birthplace of over 60 papers, has seen them come and go, some 25 previous to the birth of the Bulletin, the balance since that day. Through it all the Norwich Bulletin has ever gone on its way serving best the interests of its readers. Bulletin came into being. Through several changes in names this paper came down to the year 1858 when, in new hands, the weekly was continued under the name of Norwich Weekly Courier and the daily became the Norwich Morning Bulletin.


Bushnell was joined in 1793 by his brother-in- law, Thomas Hubbard, who bought him out and in 1796 changed the name of the Weekly Register to the Chelsea Courier. When Hubbard's son took charge in 1805, the paper became the Norwich Courier. The paper changed hands several times, Rev. Dorson E. Sykes becoming editor in 1842. He ran the paper as a daily and then as a tri-weekly until 1858. Geo. B. Smith then ran it as a daily and a weekly for several months and on December 15, 1858 the Norwich Courier was taken over by Perry and Isaac Bromley, the latter as editor. ()n this date the Norwich Morning Bulletin came into being as a daily paper, the Courier being the weekly.


With its unbroken line since 1790 the Norwich Bulletin traces its ancestry back to among the first half dozen papers published in the United States.


In 1790 the center of activity in Norwich was at what is now called Norwichtown, some three miles north of the present business center. Chelsea Land- ing, as the business section was then known by, later became the center of activity. Norwich in 1784 was already incorporated a city, having 3,284 residents.


Various locations throughout the town were used by the Courier in its march to the daily in 1858, culminating in 1904 with the construction of the


From a small weekly in the days of President George Washington the Norwich Bulletin has grown with Norwich until today, with the Norwich Bul- letin as the morning paper, the Norwich Evening Record as an afternoon and the Norwich Sunday Record on Sunday, the field of Eastern Connecticut is thoroughly covered by a daily circulation of over 19,000 and a week-end circulation of over nearly 25,000 copies.


The Norwich Bulletin-Record as the paper is more commonly known today, since the purchase of the Norwich Evening Record in 1927, and the start of J. Homer Bliss, William D). Manning, James N. the Norwich Sunday Record in 1930, is today the


home newspaper for Eastern Connecticut. Seven fast motor routes cover the entire territory from the shores of Long Island Sound from Westerly to Say- brook on the Connecticut River and thence north to the Massachusetts border, carrying the story of Norwich and Eastern Connecticut towns as business centers.


The present management of the Bulletin Com- pany comprises: Charles D. Noyes, president and treasurer; William H. Oat, secretary and manager ( Mr. Oat having been connected with the Bulletin for over 51 years); Harvey M. Briggs, editor-in- chief; Charles F. Whitney and John D. Moulton, editors of the Norwich Bulletin and Norwich Sunday Record respectively.


THE NORWICH SAVINGS SOCIETY


Founded 1824


HE Norwich Savings Society, which received its charter from the General Assembly in 1824, was the second savings bank to be organized in Connecticut. While in many respects the time of its founding must seem unpropitious, the sagacity and courage of its twenty original incorporators is reflected in the many years that the bank has operated and in the success of its operation.


At that time Norwich was chiefly dependent upon the lucrative West Indies trade for its livelihood, but the first signs of the coming industrialization were beginning to show on the surface. Among the twenty men who founded the bank as a source of convenience and protection for the townspeople were many who were later prominent in pro- viding a new livelihood for the citizens after the shipping had died away to nothingness.


The Society met for the first time on the last Tuesday in June, 1824 and on that date elected officers and directors, as well as several additional members. The first by-laws, containing fifteen articles, were adopted at a later meeting, held on July 12, 1824. Among the regulations provided in this interesting document were: that the Savings Society should be open twice a month ( the first and third Mondays) from 10 A.M. to 12 M .; and that deposits should draw interest from the succeeding quarter day, and that dividends not called for within three months were to be added to the principal.


The first deposit was two hundred dollars made by Dorcas Mansfield of Norwich, July 3, 1824, and the


second was made by William C. Gilman on July 26, 1824. The first earnings were received from interest on all order of the Town of Norwich, and amounted to 78 cents.


For the first twenty-three years of its existence the Society occupied a room in the old Norwich Bank building, but in 1847 it was felt necessary to find larger quarters due to the increasing business. At that time the directors voted to erect a building for the use of the bank, and the structure on Main Street later occupied by the Dime Savings Bank was constructed. In that year there was nearly a half-million dollars of funds on deposit. Continued growth necessitated a new banking house in less than twenty years, and a second building was built on Shetucket Street in 1864. By this time the deposits had grown to four million dollars. These facilities were ample for thirty years, by which time the deposits had grown to ten million dollars. In 1894 the present building was erected, and has been occupied since January 1, 1895.


In its lifetime of one hundred and eleven years, the Norwich Savings Society has failed but once to declare, a dividend. This was the semi-annual dividend of 1843, which was made up in January 1847 by a special extra dividend.


Today The Norwich Savings Society has 20,715 de- positors, with a total of $21,532,000 on deposit. With such confidence reposed in them by the people and with over a hundred years of sound banking experience to guide them, they look forward with confidence to their second century of helping the people of their community to save and to be thrifty.


ORIGINAL OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS


President CHARLES ROCKWELL


Vice-Presidents JABEZ HUNTINGTON JOHN I .. BUSWI.I.I. WILLIAM C. GILMAN RUSSELL HUBBARD


Treasurer FRANCIS A. PERKINS


Secretary JOSEPH WILLIAMS


Directors GEORGE L. PERKINS CHARLES P. HUNTINGTON JOHN LATHROP ERASTUS Corr RICHARD ADAMS ROGER HUNTINGTON JOSEPH WILLIAMS JOHN BREED LYMAN BREWER


Present Building of The Norwich Savings Society. On this site in olden times stood a brick tavern, where George Washington spent the night of June 30, 1775


PRESENT OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS


President CHARLES R. BUTTS


Vice-Presidents S. ALPHEUS GILBERT CHARLES D. NOYES JOHN PORTEOUS NELSON J. AYLING


Secretary and Treasurer GUY B. DOLBEARE


Assistant Treasurer WILLIAM I. COOK


Ass't Sed'y and Iss't Treas. HAROLD P. Holl


Attorney Joux P. HUNTINGTON


Directors EBENIZER LEARNID HENRY .A. TIKRI.I.I FRANK B. RICKIESON JOHN P. HUNTINGTON CASPER K. BAILLY ATEAANDER JORDAN ARCHIBALD FORRANCL WILLIAM G. PARK HARVEY AL, BRIGGS


+4263] *


1822


WINDHAM COUNTY NATIONAL BANK


1935


The


TABILITY, that is a fundamental of perma- nency, has ever marked the historical record of Windham County National Bank. It ranks among the solid finan- cial institutions of the State that have been in existence for more than a century.


Chartered on May 28, 1822, as a State bank, it has, through the 113 years that have since ensued, pros- pered, steadily grown in strength, and developed a sturdiness like the grand old oaks so characteristic of the coun- tryside which it serves.


Its history is synonymous with the major phases of the development of Connecticut itself in what up to now has been the most glamorous century of its existence.


'This bank was conscientiously and adequately fulfilling its mission for which it was created, as far back as the days when no better means of transportation existed in Windham County than that provided by horse or foot travel; it was well estab- lished and flourishing before the first railroad was built through eastern Connecticut; its history antedates that of all modern means of com- munication, lighting and mechanical aids to the transaction of business.


It was alone in its field when it began to do business, pioneering in the realm of finance in Windham Coun- ty; it brought to the people it served the rare privilege of banking facili- ties near at home. It has, through all the years, unvaryingly maintained the high standards that marked its early activities, building firmly on the prin- ciples of its founders.


Brooklyn, which had become the county scat in 1819, was chosen as the home of the new bank. A meeting to apportion the stock, was held at the home of Pascal P. Tyler, of that town, on June 25, 1822. Stock was well over-subscribed and we find such names as Eaton, Freeman, Gallup,


First Banking House, Brooklyn, 1822


Hall, Howe, Hubbard, Hutchins, Hyde, Judson, Putnam, Robinson, Tyler, White and Young in the long list of the original stockholders. Here were representatives of practically every township in the County, and what could have been more fitting than the chosen name, Windham County Bank.


Nine days later, on July 4th, the first stockholders' meeting was held in the county court house, still stand- ing in Brooklyn. Judge Joseph Eaton, prominent in county affairs, presided. A Board of Directors was chosen and empowered to immediately undertake the establishment of the institution.


Though at their very first meet- ing, the Directors of the bank decid- ed to build a banking house, it had not been completed by the time the in- stitution was ready to function. Tem- porary quarters were arranged in the residence of Adams White, Jr., the first cashier of the bank, and there banking business was carried on for a


period of several months.


Occupying the new bank building in the latter part of 1822, the insti- tution continued to do business therein until it removed to Danielson in 1895.


For the first forty-three years of its existence, it functioned as a State bank, thereby possessing the authority to issue its own bank notes, plates for which are still in the possession of the bank.


At the close of the Civil War, in 1865, the bank availed itself of the provisions of the National Banking Act, and became The Windham County National Bank. At this time, all of its State bank notes were retired from circulation and were replaced by National bank notes, destined to be used up to the present time.


Judge Eaton, the first president, continued in the office for twenty- five years, retiring then because of ill health. Mr. White continued to serve as cashier from 1822 to 1837, when he was succeeded by his son,


[264]>


ESTABLISHED AT BROOKLYN AS A STATE BANK


3.8395


3. WINDHAM COUNTYBANK fremer "pay Mitism, " for ONE DOLLAR on demand. BROOKLYN (Summary 1" 134


Three Dollar Bill, 1822


Charles White, who continued in the office until 1847.


It was when Comfort Starr Burl- ingame came to the presidency in 1892 that the bank entered upon one of the several important cras in its history. Brooklyn was then without the transportation facilities afforded in Danielson, which had become an enlarged center of population. It was only after long deliberations that a de- cision was reached to remove the bank to Danielson, that it might more read- ily serve a majority of its patrons. This was done in 1895.


In Danielson, the bank has occupied a succession of quarters; first in the Exchange Block; next in the Phoenix Block, and since 1914, in its present banking home at the corner of Main and Center Streets.


Its growth in Danielson may be in- dicated by the fact that when the bank removed from Brooklyn the modest amount on deposit was but $52,000. With the passing years this has been increased many fold, the assets of the institution now pressing close onto $5,000,000.


In 1934, The Windham County National Bank acquired the liquid and choice assets of The Danielson Trust Company, the latter institution ceasing to be actively engaged in bank- ing, thus leaving the field, insofar as commercial business was concerned in Danielson, exclusively to the National Bank.


This important development brought a large amount of new busi- ness to The Windham County Na- tional Bank and pressed the necessity of a larger banking home. To meet this urgent need, the bank, during 1935, acquired the control of an ad- joining building. This has been in- corporated into the original structure


ADAMS WHITE Cashier, 1822


OFFICERS of The Windham County National Bank who have served for long periods Presidents


JOSEPH EATON - 25 years


ADAMS WHITE - 8 years


JOHN GALLUP, 2ND 23 years


JOHN PALMER 12 years


12 years


C. S. BURLINGAME


T. E. HOPKINS - 10 years


Until decease


NATHAN D. PRINCE,


since 1924 to date


Cashiers


ADAMS WHITE, JR. - - 14 years


(his son)


CHARLES WHITE


10 years


C. C. CRANDALL


II years


JOHN P. WOOD


. 17 years


Until decease


F. E. STORER


15 years


NATHAN 1). PRINCE 12 years


One Dollar Bill; 1854


to give a commodious, modernly ap- pointed banking home adequate to its requirements.


Approximately nine years after the removal from Brooklyn to Danielson, an almost complete reorganization of the directorate was effected. At this time, in 1903, Nathan D. Prince, who had been with the institution since his youth, succeeded to the cashiership.


This, with the passing years, has become of great significance in the history of the bank, because Mr. Prince was destined to become its great motivating force. In 1914, Mr. Prince was elevated to the vice-presi- dency, and in 1924 to the presidency.


Meanwhile his financial acumen and ability had made him well known in banking circles throughout the state. It attracted the attention of of- ficials of The Hartford-Connecticut Trust Company, to which he was called to fill a high executive office and of which bank he eventually be- came president. Throughout the years he spent in Hartford, however, Mr. Prince retained his official connection with The Windham County National Bank and kept in constant and inti- mate touch with its affairs.


Eventually he decided to concen- trate his banking activities in Daniel- son, and has done so for a number of years past. During the more than thirty-seven years of his association with The Windham County National Bank, it has flourished and expanded its scope and field of service. Its de- posits have increased nearly one hun- dred fold; its depositors are now numbered by the thousand. It has become a strong, sturdy institution, rating as one of the most successful financial institutions of castern Con- necticut, fulfilling the faith and vision of its founders.


12651+


linden


WINDHAM COUNTY NATIONAL BANK REMOVED TO DANIELSON-1895


ORIGINAL BOARD OF DIRECTORS JOSEPH EATON DAVID BOLLES VINE ROBINSON THOMAS HUBBARD JOHN MCCLENNAN ANDREW T. JUDSON JAMES GORDON, JR. EBEN WILLIAMSON SAMUEL L. HOUGH ELKANAH C. EATON EBENEZER YOUNG RUFUS ADAMS CHARLES SABIN


OFFICERS JOSEPH EATON President


ADAMS WHITE, JR. Cashier


NATHAN D. PRINCE President


PRESENT BOARD OF DIRECTORS


NATHAN D. PRINCE CHARLES A. TILLINGHAST


ANDREW D. BITGOOD ELBERT L. DARBIE FRANK F. KENNEDY EARLE E. GILBERT JOSEPH N. PERREAULT


FRED A. POWDRELL HERBERT H. RAPP


OFFICERS NATHAN D. PRINCE President


CHARLES A. TILLINGHAST Vice-President


J. LEO BODO Cashier


1914


BANK


NATIONAL


COUNTY


WINDHAM


1622


Present Bank Building, 1914-1935


Prosent Interior as Remodeled, 1935


4266}


COUNTY


MIDDLESEX


TOWNS OF


THE FIFTEEN


IN THE ORDER OF THEIR ESTABLISHMENT TOGETHER WITH THEIR PRESENT ACREAGE AND POPULATION.


POPULATION


ACRES


TOWN


ESTABLISHED


2,381


9,452


36


Saybrook


24,554


27,287


Middletown


1651


482


20,39I


32


1667


1,755


29,375


Haddam


24


1668


1,044


15,417


Durham


22


I704


2,114


35,712


30


I734


2,616


23,147


10,338


34


1836


1,574


10,524


39


1838


1,037


1 1,070


43


1840


3,930


17,283


17


1841


2,814


8,465


I3


1851


2,777


7,559


Essex


1852


1,643


11,55I


Old Saybrook


1854


1,204


21


1866


THE THIRTEEN


TOWNS OF TOLLAND COUNTY


IN THE ORDER OF THEIR ESTABLISHMENT TOGETHER WITH THEIR PRESENT ACREAGE AND POPULATION.


POPULATION


ACRES


MILES FROM HARTFORD


TOWN


ESTABLISHED


3,349


25,292


25


Mansfield


1703


879


22,651


22


Hebron


1708


1,554


18


Coventry


I712


1,064


20


Tolland


171512


3,949


38,495


30


Stafford


17195


9,660


14


Bolton


I720


1,213


21,753


27


1727


Union


1734


Somers


17494


22,685


19


Ellington


1786


14,467


24


Columbia


1804


8,703


11,758


16


Vernon


1808


430


9,506


20


Andover


1848


4267]>


18,594


39


1,917


17,310


25


2,253


648


43


8,406


Middlefield


21


East Hampton


1767 Chartered


1,463


Chester


Clinton


Westbrook


Portland


Cromwell


39


22,726


24,646


504


Willington


196


MILES FROM HARTFORD


16


Killingworth


Fast Haddam


THE FARMERS AND MECHANICS SAVINGS


BANK


HE Act of the General Assembly which incor- porated the Farmers and Mechanics Savings Bank was passed at the May session in 1858 and the certificate of John Boyd, Secretary of State, was affixed on June 2 of that year. Of the cighty-four savings banks chartered by Connecticut, now existing, only twenty-five were incorporated at earlier dates, the earliest in 1819.


It does not appear who were leaders in the application, but the Act was introduced in the General Assembly by Dr. Ellsworth Burr, then a representative from Middle- town. Nor does the reason for the selection of name appear. It was written in the Act and nothing in the record indi- cates a reason for the choice. .


The call for the first meeting of the corporators was issued July 1, 1858, and was signed by (Dr.) William B. Casey. The meeting was held in the Common Council room in the old Court House on July 10 at 2 P. M. and sixteen of those entitled to be present were in attendance. The meeting appointed a committee of five members to draft and report by-laws, and elected William B. Casey president, Benjamin Douglas vice-president, Patrick Fagan Secretary and treasurer, and all of the corporators trustees. At an adjourned meeting held one week later this last action was reconsidered and rescinded and five trustees were elected, viz .: Patrick Fagan, Charles C. Tyler, Aaron G. Pease, Jonathan Kilbourn, and Ellsworth Burr.


At this meeting Dr. Casey resigned the presidency and Mr. Fagan resigned as secretary and treasurer. To fill the vacancies thus caused Samuel H. Parsons was elected presi- dent and Arthur B. Calef secretary and treasurer.


At the next meeting, July 28, the by-laws were adopted, and as these provided for the election of "not less than ten nor more than twenty-eight trustees," the twenty-eight corporators whose election had been rescinded were once more made trustees.


The records of trustee's meetings began August 9, 1858, and at the second meeting held August 14 a committee ap- pointed to find room for the business use of the new insti- tution reported that a lease for three years could be secured of "the north half of the dwelling house next south of the Court House on Main Street, now occupied by Messrs. Pelton and Mather, at the annual rental of two hundred dollars." It was voted to lease these quarters upon the terms named and, inasmuch as possession could not be had until May I of the succeeding year, to begin business in the rooms of Mr. Calef in the north half of the Court House. At this meeting the first board of directors was chosen and


consisted of William Plumb, Jonathan Kilbourn, Julius Hotchkiss, Alfred Hubbard, Aaron G. Pease, Patrick Fagan, and Charles C. Tyler. The purchase of an "iron safe" was also authorized "for securely keeping the books and documents of the bank."


At a meeting on August 21 Arthur B. Calef qualified as treasurer and was instructed by vote "to advertise in the Sentinel and Witness and the Constitution that the Farmers and Mechanics Bank is ready to receive deposits." On August 24 the first account was opened in the name of J. Francis Calef.


The bank continued in the occupancy of the rooms in the Hubbard house (next south of the Court House) until the expiration of its three-year lease, May 1, 1862. The property had meanwhile passed into the possession of Samuel L. Warner. In 1862 the business was moved across Main Street to the building since long known as Coc's meat market. The room here was shared with the newly organ- ized First National Bank.


Three years later the Middlesex Mutual Assurance Co. erected the fine brownstone-front building known as "The Middlesex." The two offices on the ground floor were leased to the two banks doing business across the street and were fitted with vaults and entrances to suit their peculiar needs. The Farmers and Mechanics Bank acquired in 1880 a fine site on Main Street, near the post-office, and sought and received permission from the General Assembly to erect thereon a building for business uses, and the Bank Block was thereupon constructed. The south store of the block was fitted up for the use of the bank and in 1881 became its place of business.


By 1912 the volume of business had so increased that more room and better facilities were imperatively needed, and the property on the corner of Main and College Streets was purchased. At the semi-annual meeting in January, 1913, it was decided to erect a Banking House, and the present place of business was then constructed. The build- ing was first occupied in February, 1914.


On April 20, 1931, an addition to the building and a revamping of the old interior was unanimously voted by the Board of Trustees, business having increased so that the addition and rearrangement were necessary.


The formal opening of the remodeled and enlarged Banking House was held on the afternoon and evening of December 22, 1931.


The Farmers and Mechanics Savings Bank has enjoyed a steady and solid growth from the time of its incorporation to the present day, and by careful and intelligent manage- ment it has taken its rightful place with the older banks as an example to the later ones.


[268}


Incorporated by Act of the GENERAL ASSEMBLY


FARMERS G-MECHANICS.SAVINGS BANK.


---


CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD


1934


JAMES K. GUY


PATRICK FAGAN


WILLIAM B. CASEY


BENJAMIN DOUGLAS


EDWIN F. JOHNSON


JOSEPH K. F. MANSHIELD


1858


SAMUEL, H. PARSONS


1864


CHARLES C. TYLER


1858


ERASTUS BRAINARD, JR.


1864


JOHN M. DOUGLAS 1897


WVILIJAM PLUMB


1887


SAMUEL T. CAMP


1903


JONATHAN KILBOURN


1903


JAMES O. SMITH


1934


CORNELIUS HALL


ALFRED HUBBARD


CHARLES WOODWARD


TREASURERS


AUSTIN BALDWIN


PATRICK FAGAN 1858


JULIUS HOTCHKISS


1858


HIRAM VEAZKY


1858


Fiind W. N. STARR


1864


BURTON B. DOOMATTLE


AARON G. PLASE


1861


JOHN STEVENS


1864


O. VINCENT COFFIN


1878


GEORGE H. LOEWENTHAL


EDWIN ScoVIL.I.


ROBERT W. MERRIAM


ENOCH C. FERREE


1878


FRED B. CHAFFEE


1906


JAMES C. Fox


FREDERICK W. STEUBEN


1888


SEABURY BELDEN


CARIION H. LEACH


1930


SAMUEL H. PARSONS


1906


SYLVESTER GES DERSI REVE


1931


AUGU ar SCHAUB


TRUSTEES


GEORGE T. MERCU


JAMES K. GUY


ERNEST G. CONE


WILLIAM W. WILCOX JOSEPH MIRRIAM


CHARLAS BRAINARD


FRANCIS A. BEACH


ELISHAA S. HUBBARD


FRANK H. FRISSEL.1.


ERNEST S. DAVIS


ARTHUR B. CALEF


1897


RANDOLPH S. LYON


DANIEL HL. CHASE


ALVA HI. KELSEY


GEORGE A. TIERNEY


ARTHUR M. COUGHLIN


AUGUST SCHAUB


1. Howit CONKLIN HAROLD S. GUY ANSI1. A. PACKARD


ARTHUR B. CALIF


1861


IHEZEKIAH Scovil.


GEORGE N. WARD . 1888


ARTHUR V. McDOWELL


WILLIAM E. WRANG


1269}


ISRAEL C. NEWTON


PRESIDENTS


WILLIAM B. CASEY 1858


ELLSWORTH BURK


BENJAMIN DOUGLAS 1887


JAMES K. GUY 1934


FRANK H. FRISSELI.


1858


ORIGINAL CORPORATORS


1825


THE MIDDLETOWN SAVINGS BANK


1935


-


DIRECTORS


CHARLES T'. DAVIS


RALPH J. ATWELL


JOHN P. BACON


WILLIAM H. BOUTEILLER


FREDERICK B. FOUNTAIN


CHARLES 1,, WETHERBEE N. EVAN DAVIS


EARL. R. HUDSON Treasurer


TRUSTEES


FRANK D. HAINES 1906


EDWARD H. WIL KINS 1909


BERKELEY C. STONE 1915


CHARLES T. DAVIS 1917


ERNEST A. INGLIS 1917


RALPH J. ArwEL.L. 1917


JOHN P. BACON 1918


WILLIAM H. BOUTEILLER 1918


ROBERT W. RICI 1918


AMBROSE M. STARR 1922


HENRY H. LYMAN 1924


LANUS BALDWIN 1924


FREDERICK B. FOUNTAIN 1925


THEODORE HERRMANN


1927


HERBERT C. DANFORTH 1928




Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.