USA > Illinois > Cook County > Chicago > Chicago and Cook County official Republican directory and sketch book, 1900 > Part 2
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Mayor Bovay wrote to Horace Greeley, editor of the New York Tribune, on or about March 20, 1852, and suggested that he urge the adoption of the name, which Mr. Greeley did, and at a convention held in Vermont on June 8, 1854, the "free men of Vermont " and the people of all the other states were invited to send delegates to a National Convention, should one be called, to oppose the extension and encroachments of slavery. A mass convention was called to meet July 13 of that year, and adopted the name of " Republican " for the new party. Horace Greeley got the credit for the name, but it originated with the Wisconsin man.
Several other states also held conventions on July 13, and it was seen that the Republican party was to become a national organization. On Feb. 22, 1855 (Washington's birthday), an informal convention met at Pittsburg for the purpose of perfect- ing the national organization and to provide for a nominating convention of the Republican party to select candidates for President and Vice-President. This convention met at Phila- delphia, July 17, 1856, and from that day the Republican party
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began the struggle which a few years later liberated the slaves and precipitated the events which brought about the War of the Rebellion and finally held the states together as a Union. It is proper to state here, however, that the name of "Repub- lican " was adopted by a Michigan State Convention on July 6, 1854, just seven days before the Vermont convention was held.
At the first National Convention John C. Fremont of Cali- fornia, and William L. Dayton of New Jersey were nominated. Abraham Lincoln's name was before the convention for the nomination of Vice-President. He received 110 votes against 259 for Dayton and 180 scattering. The Republican ticket was beaten by James Buchanan of Pennsylvania and J. C. Brecken- ridge of Kentucky ; but the new party was not discouraged, and the next national campaign, in 1860, passed into history as the most notable for many reasons.
This convention, the second National Convention of the Republican party, met in Chicago on May 16, 1860, and nomi- nated Abraham Lincoln of Illinois for President and Hannibal Hamblin of Maine for Vice-President. The Republican ticket was elected.
President Lincoln issued his first proclamation of emancipa- tion. The stirring scenes that followed still live in the memory of all who witnessed or read of them. Lincoln became the idol of his party and was renominated and elected in 1864, with An- drew Johnson of Tennessee as Vice-President. Through all that bloody drama from '61 to '64 he was firm, yet kind, in- flexible in his devotion to duty, generous and liberal to his fallen foes. His policies cemented and strengthened the Union and made a dissolution of the States impossible. Yet he fell by the hand of the " Assassin" Booth, and a nation was in tears.
The war had ended, and General U. S. Grant of Illinois, the head of the army, was nominated in Chicago on May 20, 1868. Schuyler Colfax of Indiana was named for the Vice-Presidency, and both were elected.
Next came the convention of 1872, held at Philadelphia, which nominated Grant and named Henry Wilson of Massachu- setts for Vice-President, and both were elected, this being Gen. Grant's second term. The Republican party had enjoyed such smooth sailing up to this time that little thought of its possible defeat was entertained ; but in the convention of 1876, which
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was held at Cincinnati on June 14, there was aroused a spirit of opposition to a third term and to the Grant following which finally resulted in the election, eight years later, of a Demo- cratic President. The opposition to Grant and a third term led to the nomination of a " dark horse," Rutherford B. Hayes of Ohio and William A. Wheeler of New York. They were elected, but there was a bitter contest by the Democrats for their can- didate, Samuel J. Tilden.
The next convention was held in Chicago, June 10, 1880. James A. Garfield of Ohio and Chester A. Arthur of New York were the nominees, and at this convention another wedge was entered which aided in the defeat of the Republican party four years later. The friends of James G. Blaine, who afterwards became President Garfield's premier, worked hard for the nomi- nation and were greatly disappointed at his defeat. President Garfield was assassinated before his term expired and Vice- President General Arthur filled out the unexpired term.
At the convention of 1884, held in Chicago June 5, Mr. Blaine secured the nomination after a hard battle. The war veteran, Gen. John A. Logan of Illinois, was named for Vice- President, and the strife which began in the Republican con- vention eight years before, and kept up in the convention four years later, had its effect during the campaign, and Blaine and Logan went down before the Democratic nominees, Grover Cleveland of New York and T. A. Hendricks of Indiana.
The next convention was held in Chicago in 1888, and Ben- jamin Harrison of Indiana was nominated for President, with Levi P. Morton of New York for Vice-President. The ticket was elected, Grover Cleveland being defeated.
But the Democrats and Mugwumps rallied, and in the cam- paign of 1892 Cleveland, being again the nominee, defeated Mr. Harrison, who was named for a second term by the National Republican Convention, which was also held in Chicago on May 20.
The next National Republican Convention was held in St. Louis, and this brings the history of the party up to the present administration. It was at this convention that William McKin- ley of Ohio and Garret A. Hobart of New Jersey were nom- inated and in the campaign which followed achieved such a glorious victory. This victory did not end, however, in Major
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McKinley's election. It brought prosperity out of depression and stagnation. It made the country to blossom as a rose, and opened up the industries which under Democratic rule had closed down for want of demand for products. Nor is this all. President Mckinley was asked by the people of the United States to go to the relief of the oppressed and struggling peo- ple within 100 miles of our shores, and he did not hesitate. He assumed the responsibilities of the undertaking and carried to glorious success in a short time a great war, which added to the United States colonies, increased their wealth untold millions and demonstrated to the world that America is one of the leading powers and must be considered as such in all future conflicts for superiority, expansion of territory or commercial rights. The names of Lincoln and Mckinley will go down to posterity as symbolic of courage, statesmanship and champions of the rights and demands of our people.
History shows that in the conduct of the affairs of the nation the Republican party has not only claimed to be the party of prosperity for the whole people, but by its performances has made good its claim.
The people of the United States have been accustomed to prosperity because they are the most progressive, resourceful and energetic people in the world, and because, also, they have dominion in a country which comprises within its boundaries every material gift of nature. Under wise and beneficent gov- ernment, prosperity and happiness for the governed must be a natural result of such government under such conditions.
The condition of the people of the United States from the date of the foundation of the Republican party to the opening of the last year of the nineteenth century forms, as shown by the cold and truthful light of history, the grandest tribute to the beneficence of the practical enforcement of the principles of the Republican party, and at the same time, the strongest condemna- tion of the principles of that moribund organization known to the people of the United States, as the National Democratic party that facts can demonstrate. Facts speak for themselves. Like figures they do not lie.
From 1860 to 1884 the Republican party was in power in the nation, and the prosperity of the American people during all those years was the wonder of all the nations of the earth. From
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all points of the world the people of every nation flocked to the shores of the United States because here, under the flag of the republic, upheld by Republican rule, there was work and bread for all.
In the year 1884 an accident occurred. The great statesman Blaine was defeated by a Democratic candidate in the race for the presidency through untoward circumstances, and Cleveland, a Democrat, assumed the reins of government as Chief Execu- tive of the nation. During the four years that followed the full effects of this misfortune to the people had not time to-develop, and Cleveland was succeeded in 1888 by Benjamin Harrison, who, during four years of wise and beneficent administration, succeeded in giving the American people a chance to regain what they had lost. But in 1892, for the second time in thirty-six years, the Democrats succeeded in capturing the national gov- ernment, and Grover Cleveland was once more installed as Pres- ident of the United States. Then befell to the nation all the ills and misfortunes that were threatened from 1884 to 1888, and for four years we had untold suffering among the common people of the country. Industries died for want of a fostering system of government, foreign countries preyed and grew fat upon the life blood of the American nation, personal and business energy lagged and merged into inanition, enterprise hid her head, and poverty stalked through the land.
These darksome days of Democratic government are known to-day and will be known to history as "the hard times." No need to dwell upon them. Rather turn to the bright epoch which has succeeded them, the era of Mckinley, Republicanism and prosperity, ushering in, as it does, the twentieth century. We have taken merely a backward glance at the events of the last half century, and but slightly and incidentally touched the mountain peaks of the history of the two parties from the purely economic point of view. The great commercial and business element of the community has had in general and in detail ex- perience of the facts to which we have alluded. The working- men, the toilers who form the bone and sinew of the nation, have had theirs. Three years ago they drew their own conclusions and have since reaped the priceless harvest that comes of expe- rience. On the commencement of the new century the history of the past one will be the best guide of the American people.
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BRIEF HISTORY OF THE FAMOUS HAMILTON CLUB OF CHICAGO.
WHICH STANDS FOR GOOD GOVERNMENT AND SOUND REPUBLICAN PRINCIPLES AT ALL TIMES-ALSO ROLL OF OFFICERS AND MEMBERS.
The Hamilton Club, of Chicago, is to-day one of the most famous and influential independent Republican organizations in the country.
It has been ten years in existence, being founded April 9th, 1890, on the twenty-fifth anniversary of the surrender of Appomattox.
In the comparatively brief existence of the club, it has done wonders for the cause of Republicanism in Chicago and the West, and in the broad field of activity which it has marked out for itself, this organization is bound to be recognized as a most in- fluential factor in the affairs and campaigns of the party in the future. In its list of membership we find the names of the best element of the Republican party in Chicago, men who are in politics for principle only, whose object is good government and purity in official life, and who seek to elevate not only the party to which it declares its adhesion but to contribute to the great cause which found its noblest exemplar in Abraham Lincoln, a government of the people, by the people and for the people.
On its roll of membership are to be found the names of men who are leaders of Republicanism recognized and honored every- where throughout the length and breadth of the land.
In the list of its resident members we find the names of such men as Samuel W. Allerton, J. Frank Aldrich, Farlin Q. Ball, Lorin C. Collins, Daniel F. Crilly, Charles G. Dawes, Charles S. Deneen, Arthur Dixon, John Gibbons, James H. Gilbert, Ed- ward T. Glennon, Moses E. Greenebaum, John H. Hamline, Elbridge Hanecy, Jesse Holdom, Perry A. Hull, James C. Irwin, Egbert Jamieson, Marcus Kavanagh, Charles F. Kimball,
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Daniel H. Kochersperger, C. C. Kohlsaat, George W. Miller, R. J. McDonald, John S. Miller, Charles M. Peck, Alexander Revell, Fred W. Upham, C. S. Winston, George W. Dixon, Fred A. Banges, Edw. A. Munger, James R. Mann, Martin B. Madden, F. O. Lowden and the late lamented Hope Reed Cody. These names are mentioned not that they possess any more distinguishing merit than the main body of the membership, but because they represent success in business, honor and purity in official life, and public spirit in the roll of honorable citizen- ship of Chicago. 1
Its honorary membership comprises the names of William McKinley, Chauncey M. Depew, William D. Hoard, Thomas Brackett Reed, Theodore Roosevelt, Charles Emory Smith and John M. Thurston. In its non-resident membership are other equally distinguished citizens.
The club, as everybody knows, is named in honor of Alex- ander Hamilton, and its aims and objects are worthy of the magnificent American statesman after whom it is named.
As stated in its by-laws, the purpose of the Hamilton Club is the advancement of political science, the promotion of good gov- ernment-local, state and national-and the development of patriotism and Republican principles. The membership is com- posed exclusively of pronounced Republicans who are believers in civil service reform. Its motto is to be found in the famous words of Hamilton, the chevalier Bayard of the Republican party: " As too much power leads to despotism, too little leads to anarchy."
The Hamilton Club has grown steadily in numerical strength and general influence from the date of its inception. It has always taken a most active part in all the campaigns that have occurred since it was founded, most notably in the historic national cam- paign of 1896. In that fight the Hamilton Club did heroic work in the education of the people in the tremendous economic prob- lem that then engaged the minds of the citizens of the United States, and the Hamilton Club is deserving of the tribute that no independent organization in the country from Maine to California did more to save the country from financial dishonor and to con- tribute to the clection of the great apostle of sound money, na- tional honor and prosperity-William McKinley-than did the Hamilton Club. The annual banquets of the Hamilton Club
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have been among the red letter days of the club as also of the party locally.
Each and all of them have been notable events not only from a social, but also from the highest and noblest standpoint of party politics and American patriotism.
The first headquarters of the Hamilton club were at 21 Grove- land Park. In those days there was more of a social than a political aspect to the organization. But it soon widened the field of its usefulness. In May, 1895, it took possession of 3014 Lake Park Avenue, and later on, in March, 1898, it came down town and opened up its headquarters at 114 Madison street, where they are to-day.
This necessarily brief notice of this splendid organization cannot be better concluded than in the closing words of the historical notice contained in the beginning of the little hand- book containing the by-laws and roster. "On the Club anniver- sary in 1899, the most notable of the club banquets, was given in honor of the tide of Americanism which had its rise in the Spanish War and hastened the obliteration of all sectional feeling in this country.
The event was celebrated in the Auditorium theatre, which was filled-the parquette by banqueters, and the rest by spectators. The occasion was non-political and purely patriotic. The grow- ing brotherhood between North and South was the theme, and the subject of the toasts "Grant," "Lee, " and "The Union," Appomattox Day being celebrated as "The First Day of Peace." The Club has thus endeavored to aid in cementing the ties that bind the two sections of our country and trusts that the future may have in store for it the privilege of drawing even more closely together the Blue and the Gray.
The following is a full list of officers, directors and members of the Hamilton Club:
OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS 1899-1900.
President, First Vice-President, Second Vice-President,
George W. Miller. Frank O. Lowden. Alonzo Wygant.
Secretary, Rush C. Butler.
Treasurer, Henry L. Turner.
DIRECTORS.
Fred A. Bangs
Gideon E. Newman
Roger Sherman
George E. Shipman
David S. Geer
Arthur A. Taylor
Edward H. Taylor
William W. Wheelock
Conrad J. Gundlach
James T. Plumsted
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COMMITTEES.
Political Action Committee: Arthur A. Taylor, Edwin A. Munger,
Fred A. Bangs, Chairman. William W. Wheelock .. Eli B. Felsenthal.
IIOUSE COMMITTEE. Conrad J. Gundlach, Chairman.
Chauncey W. Martyn,
Rush C. Butler.
ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE. lIenry W. Price, Chairman.
Stillman B. Jamieson,
Warwick A. Shaw.
MEMBERSHIP COMMITTEE. R. Delos Martin, Chairman.
William S. Barbee,
James H. Wilkerson.
LIBRARY AND PUBLICATION COMMITTEE. Stuart HI. Brown, Chairman.
Henry R. Baldwin,
Hoyt King.
PRESS COMMITTEE.
Ward B. Sawyer, Chairman.
William H. Harper,
Erasmus C. Lindley.
FINANCE COMMITTEE. James T. Plumsted, Chairman.
Fred Whitfield,
Pliny B. Smith.
CIVIL SERVICE COMMITTEE. Newton A. Partridge, Chairman.
Wallace Heckman, Frederick W. Burlingham,
David S. Geer,
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Donald M. Carter.
AUDITING COMMITTEE. William A Coleman, Chairman.
James Rosenthal,
BILLIARD COMMITTEE. Thomas M. Turner, Chairman.
Fred L. Goff.
WHIST COMMITTEE.
John B. Porter, Chairman.
Fletcher R. Ross, Alfred J. Babcock,
Archibald W. McCandless, William S. Burling.
COMMITTEE ON SELECTION OF SERIAL PUBLICATIONS. Robert McMurdy, Chairman.
Frank I. Moulton, Hope Reed Cody ..
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Julian McDermid.
Harry V. Wood,
RECEPTION COMMITTEE.
William D. Washburn, Chairman.
Farlin Q. Ball
Henry C. Lytton W. Gale Blocki
Charles L. Caswell
Matthew H. McCarthy
George W. Northrup
Dwight B. Cheever
Charles S. Cutting
Patrick H. O'Donnell
Adelor J. Petit
Alfred D. Eddy
Henry V. Freeman
Frank L. Shepard Kitt Gould
Kickham Scanlan James P. Harrold
Frank P. Sadler
William B. Herrick
Edward H. Taylor
John Hanberg Myron W. Whittemore
Harry L. Irwin
Roy O. West.
Charles T. Lee
Frank B. Draper
Henry M. Wisler.
OFFICERS.
Presidents.
Robert McMurdy
1890-'91
Samuel W. Allerton 1895-'96
Frederick A. Smith
- 1891-'92
Frank I. Moulton · 1896-'97
Robert Mather
1892-'93
Jesse Holdom 1897-'98
Edward J. Judd
- 1893-'94
Hope Reed Cody - 1898-'99
Arthur Dixon
1894-'95
George W. Miller
- 1899-1900
First Vice-Presidents.
M. Lester Coffeen
1890-'91 W. N. Sattley 1892-'93
Henry M. Bacon
D. J. Schuyler
- 1893-'95
Resigned
- 1891-'92
John S. Miller
1895-'99
Edward J. Judd
Frank O. Lowden
1899-1900
Second Vice-Presidents.
Frank I. Moulton
1890-'91
Isaac H. Pedrick 1896-'97
James R. Terhune
- 1891-'92
Julius Stern
1897-'98
Frank HI. Barry -
1892-'94 Jacob Newman - 1898-'99
Frank Wells
- 1894-'96
Alonzo Wygant 1899-1900
Secretaries.
Herbert C. Metcalf
Resigned
1890-'91
George W Dixon Resigned
1894-'95
Robert Mather
Edward S. Elliott
Robert Mather
- 1891-'92
Albert E. Crowley
- 1895-'97
Hubert D. Crocker
Roger Sherman - 1897-'99
Resigned
1892-'94
Rush C. Butler
1899-1900
Treasurers.
Ralph Metcalf
1890-'97 Daniel F. Crilly
1898-'99
Samuel J. Kline
- 1897-'98
Henry L. Turner
1899-1900
John J. Magee Alonzo J. Colt Edward K. Orr Thomas Davies David H. Roblin John Gibbons
Robert E. Sackett
Henry Greenebaum
Harry P. Simonton
Charles W. Vail
Thomas J. Holmes
George W. Dixon
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Chairmen Political Action Committee.
John C. Everett
- 1890-'92
Albert C. Barnes Resigned - 1896-'97
Frank I. Moulton
1892-'94
John C. Everett
- 1894-'95
Robert McMurdy Resigned
Albert C. Barnes
Fred A. Bangs - 1899-1900
FIRST ANNUAL BANQUET.
Robert McMurdy, of Illinois
John H. Hamline, of Illinois
Patrick Dyer, of Missouri
W. W. Tracy, of Illinois
John Jay Knox, of New York W. D Hoard, of Wisconsin Conrad Haney, of Illinois
SECOND ANNUAL BANQUET.
Frederick A. Smith, of Illinois
John M. Thurston, of Nebraska
Richard Yates, of Illinois
Frank F. Davis, of Minnesota
Russell A. Alger, of Michigan
THIRD ANNUAL BANQUET.
Robert Mather, of Illinois
H. Clay Evans, of Tennessee
Edgar A. Bancroft, of Illinois
George Hunt, of Illinois
Theodore Roosevelt, of New York
Emil G. Hirsch, of Illinois
FOURTH ANNUAL BANQUET. (Informal.)
FIFTH ANNUAL BANQUET.
Arthur Dixon, of Illinois A . B. Cummins, of Iowa
Richard J. Oglesby, of Illinois
Conrad Haney, of Illinois Clark E. Carr, of Illinois Thomas B. Reed, of Maine
SIXTH ANNUAL BANQUET.
Samuel W. Allerton, of Illinois
Joseph B. Foraker, of Ohio John W. Noble, of Missouri
Albert C. Barnes, of Illinois
Booker T. Washington, of Alabama
Albert J. Beveridge, of Indiana
Charles Edward Cheney, of Illinois
William H. Skaggs, of Alabama
Asa T. Bushnell, of Ohio
William P. Williams, of Illinois
SEVENTH ANNUAL BANQUET.
Frank I. Moulton, of Illinois,
Robert G. Cousins, of Iowa
Samuel W. MeCall, of Massachusetts
Charles H. Grosvenor, of Ohio J. Frank Aldrieh, of Illinois Joseph V. Quarles, of Wisconsin
EIGTH ANNUAL BANQUET.
Jesse Holdom, of Illinois Lorrin A. Thurston, of Hawaii William P. Hepburn, of Iowa Albert J. Hopkins, of Illinois
James A. Tawney, of Minnesota Romulus Z. Linncy, of North Carolina James R. Mann, of Illinois Artemas Jean Haynes, of Illinois
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Jesse Holdom
Hope Reed Cody 1897-'98
George W. Dixon - - 1898-'99
1895-'96
NINTH ANNUAL BANQUET.
Hope Reed Cody, of Illinois Peter S. Grosscup, of Illinois
Chauncey M. Depew, of New York Henry L. Turner, of Illinois
George R. Bidwe 1, of New York William E. Mason, of Illinois
Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois Marcus Kavanagh, of Illinois
APPOMATTOX DAY BANQUET, 1899
Hope Reed Cody, of Illinois
John C. Black, of Illinois
Evan C. Settle, of Kentucky
Charles Emory Smith, of Pennsylvania Theodore Roosevelt, of New York
In Memoriam.
HONORARY
John Jay Knox, John L. Stevens.
Edward B. Becker
Samuel K. Martin
A. F. Risser
E. A. Bushnell
William E. Wisdom
William K. Sullivan
Edward D. Cooke
Payson McKillip
L. H. Towler
Philo G. Dodge
William E. Oden
Hope Reed Cody
Frederick W. C. Hayes
James A. Perry
HONORARY MEMBERS.
Russell A. Alger. Chauncey M. Depew.
Thomas B. Reed.
Theodore Roosevelt. Charles Emory Smith.
William Mckinley. John M. Thurston.
HAMILTON CLUB RESIDENT MEMBERS.
Adams, W. Porter
Baker, Irving W.
Bassett, Orlando P.
Addington, Keene H.
Ball, Farlin H.
Bassett, Reuben C.
Adkinson, Henry M.
Ball, Farlin Q.
Beachey, Hill
Adkinson, Elmer W.
Ballard, George S.
Becker, Abraham G.
Akers, John W. Aldrich, J. Frank
Ballard, Orville W.
Becker, Anthony W.
Allen, Charles W.
Balmer, Thomas Baldwin, Aristides E.
Behan, Louis J.
Allerton, Samuel W.
Baldwin, .Blake
Beidler, Francis
Alling, Charles Jr.
Baldwin, Henry R.
Beifield, Joseph
Alling, Edward H.
Baldwin, Jesse A.
Beitler, Henry C.
Ames, John C. Anderson, Benjamin N.
Bancroft, Edwin A. Bangs, Fred A.
Benedict, George H. Benjamin, Louis Bennett, J. Leroy
Anthony, Charles E.
Barbee, William S.
Anthony, George D.
Barber, Edward L.
Bennett, Willis H.
Apmadoc, W. Tudor Arnold, William G. Ashcroft, Edwin M. Babcock, Alfred J.
Barnes, Albert C.
Berry, Franklin J. Bersbach, Alfred Best, Henry
Bacon, Henry M.
Barnes, Carl L. Barnett, Joseph H.
Billings, Charles L.
Baer, Almerin W. Baker, Frank E.
Barr, Edward
Barry, Edward P.
Binner, Oscar Birdsall, Claude H.
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Benton, George P.
Barker, George F. Barker, John T.
Becker, Benjamin V.
William D. Hoard.
Bishop, L. Brackett Bither, William A. Bliss, E. Raymond Block, Isaac . Blocki, W. Gale Bloomingston, J. A. Bloomingston, John S. Blume, George P.
Clements, D. D. Cole, Ira W. Colburn, Warren E. Coleman, William A.
Collins, Charles E. Collins, Lorin C.
Colt, Alonzo J. Comrie, Frank M. Condee, Leander D.
Conover, Luther W.
Converse, Clarence M.
Bowyer, Lorraine F.
Boyd, Charles L.
Boyd, Thomas C.
Brace, William
Cooley, Harlan Ward
Cooper, Abijah O.
Coussens, Penrhyn W.
Cox, Amariah G.
Cox, Frank M.
Everett, Coleman S.
Everett, Edward W.
Brand, Edwin L.
Cranston, Thomas H.
Everett, John C.
Braunhold, Louis F. Bridge, Frank A. Bright, Orville T.
Brintnall, William H.
Brown, Adelbert E.
Cody, Arthur B.
Faye, Carl E. Fellows, Charles
Brown, Benjamin
Cody, Hope Reed
Felsenthal, Eli B.
Brown, Edward S.
Cody, Sherman P.
Field, Arthur C.
Brown, Marshall L.
Coffin, Percy B.
Filer, Edward T.
Brown, Scott
Cohen, Samuel
Fish, Abner C.
Brown, Stuart H.
Crouch, Herbert E.
Fisher, Harry H.
Brown, William C. Browe, Edward
Crowley, Albert E. Crozier, Frank
Fisk, Lewis A. Fitch, John H.
·Buck, Orlando J. Buffington, Walter J.
Curtis, Henry M.
Flagg, Luther Nichols Fleming, Herbert E.
Buckley, Almond W. Burling, William S.
Curtis, Walter W. Cuthbertson, William
Florsheim. Simon
Cutting, Charles S.
Danziger, Louis
Fletcher, William M. Foell, Charles M. Foreman, Milton J.
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