The biographical dictionary and portrait gallery of representative men of Chicago, Minnesota cities and the World's Columbian exposition : with illustrations on steel. V. 2, Part 68

Author: American Biographical Publishing Company
Publication date: 1892
Publisher: Chicago : American Biographical Publishing Co.
Number of Pages: 980


USA > Illinois > Cook County > Chicago > The biographical dictionary and portrait gallery of representative men of Chicago, Minnesota cities and the World's Columbian exposition : with illustrations on steel. V. 2 > Part 68


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).


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Sergeant Heffelfinger soon become known to the officers and men of the entire regiment as one of the most efficient non-commissioned offi- cers in the regiment. In all soldierly qualities he was sans peur et sans reproche, and he was never found unready at the supreme moment when duty called. Before the famous seven days' bat- tles in front of Richmond he had won his com- . mission and taken rank as second lieutenant of Company D. At the battle of Fredericksburg he was slightly wounded, but continued in com- mand of his company, and at the battle of Antie- tam received his promotion to first lieutenant. In the famous charge of the First Minnesota at Gettysburg he achieved the rank of captain. The duties of this position he did not have to learn, because for many months, beginning with the siege of Yorktown, although only second lieu- tenant, he had commanded Company D continu- ously, and so skillfully as to win the commenda- tions of his superior officers.


At the expiration of the three years' term of service the First Regiment, as a body, refused to veteranize, and among them was Captain Heffel- finger. In the fall of 1864 the First Minnesota Heavy Artillery was organized, and Colonel Will- iam Colville, who led the famous Gettysburg charge, was commissioned its colonel. The war was drawing to a close, and all signs pointed to an immediate peace. Captain Heffelfinger was tendered a major's commission in the Heavy Ar-


tillery, but at first refused. His old comrades, however, would not listen to it, and finally, under . protest, he accepted the commission, and pro- ceeded to Chattanooga, Tennessee, where he en- tered upon the discharge of his new duties. Here he served faithfully, performing all duties assigned to him until he was finally mustered out with his regiment on September 27th, 1865, and resumed life as a citizen of the country he had done his share to preserve .:


At the close of the war Major Heffelfinger en- tered into a partnership with John S. Walker, and established a retail boot and shoe store in Minne- apolis, under the firm name of Walker and Heffel- finger. In this business he remained until 1873, when, in connection with Hon. A. M. Reid, he organized the North Star Boot and Shoe Com- pany, a corporation which has grown to be one of the best-known and most substantial manufactur- ing and jobbing houses in the northwest. From the beginning Major Heffelfinger has had full control and direction of the business, and through his energy it has developed into the largest con- cern of its character northwest of Chicago.


Major Heffelfinger has carried into his business life the same characteristics that distinguished him as a soldier. He has always been faithful, honest, truthful, energetic and trustworthy. Asa citizen, though always quiet, modest and unassum- ing, he has the respect and possesses the con- fidence and esteem of all who know him. In poli- tics he has always been a Republican, having cast his first vote for Gen. John C. Fremont in 1856, and is strongly attached to the doctrines and tenets of that great political organization, although he has never been an extreme partisan or an ac- tive politician.


From 1867 to 1870 he served in the city coun- cil as alderman from his ward. Although often importuned since to be a candidate for official position, he has resolutely refused, preferring to give all his time and energies to the responsibili- ties of his large business.


Major Heffelfinger, while on a leave of absence from his regiment in December, 1863, to his old home, Shippensburg, Pennsylvania, was married to Miss Mary Ellen Totton, daughter of John Totton, of Dillsburg, York county, Pennsylvania. From this union a large family has sprung-the second generation. Four sons, Alfred Sully,


1030


BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY AND PORTRAIT GALLERY.


William Walter, Frank Totton and Charles Ed- ·ward, and three daughters, Mary Ellen, Fanny, and Annie Lucy, are still living, and are all residents of this city and vicinity. With his wife and family he has always professed the Presbyterian faith, and they all have been regular


attendants at the Westminster Presbyterian Church.


Major Heffelfinger has many friends, but for none has he formed a greater attachment than for his old comrades and friends of the First Minne- sota Regiment.


PETER BERKEY,


ST. PAUL, MINN.


PETER BERKEY was born near Johnstown, located amidst the Allegheny Mountains, in Somerset county, Pennsylvania, on September 14, 1822. His early days were passed amidst the bracing air of the mountains. His childhood sports were such as the conditions of the country tended to make most popular. Thus it was that he was endowed with health, strength and a hardy constitution.


At the age of thirteen the boy obtained em- ployment on the Pennsylvania Canal as driver at a salary of eight dollars per month. Even in this minor capacity he displayed a faithful inter- est in his employer's affairs, and he was advanced . from time to time until he became a sort of agent . for the company. Later he ran a fast canal packet, running from Johnstown to Pittsburg. He was captain of the fast canal packet which made the trip from Johnstown to Pittsburg, one hundred miles, in twenty-four hours, or an average of four miles an hour. In this ven- ture he made some money, and later became the owner of a line of stages and boats running from Pittsburg to Freeport by canal, and thence by stage to Clarion, Pennsylvania, located in the mi- ning region of that state.


In 1853 Mr. Berkey married Miss Annie E. Porter, of Westmoreland county, Pennsylvania. After his marriage he determined to locate in the then far west, and in the same year came to St. Paul. Here he at once became actively engaged in mercantile pursuits, and, associating himself with John Nicols, whom he had known in Pitts- burg, he formed the firm of Nicols and Berkey, dealers in iron of all kinds, and also in hardware. This business was naturally a success. Mr. Berkey, however, was engaged in other business enterprises. He purchased a livery stable and


placed an acquaintance in charge. In 1867 he formed a copartnership with Isaac Staples, of Still- water, and engaged in the lumber business, with headquarters at St. Paul and Stillwater. This partnership was discontinued after but a short duration. In 1869 Mr. Berkey disposed of his in- terest in the firm of Nicols and Berkey to W. B. Dean, now Nicols and Dean, one of the oldest and best iron houses in Minnesota. Mr. Berkey also devoted his energies to aid the construction of railroads. In 1871 he built the St. Paul, Still- water and Taylor's Falls Railroad, and was its president until 1876, when the road was sold to the Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis and Omaha Railroad, now absorbed by the "Northwestern " Railroad Company.


Mr. Berkey has probably achieved the most prominence in the business world as a financier. In 1865 he assisted in organizing the Second National Bank of St. Paul, and during its entire existence he has been a director of this remark- ably successful financial institution, the stock of which is now worth two hundred and eighty dollars per share. He also was one of the organ- izers of the St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company in 1865, and since then he has contin- uously been a director of the company. He is now its vice-president. He has always been active in the management of the affairs of this company, and has done not a little to bring the value of the stock up to one hundred and eighty dollars per share. In 1883 he organized the St. Paul National Bank, with a capital of $500,000; this was later increased to $600,000. He was presi- dent of this bank from its organization until he re- signed in 1892.


Mr. Berkey has been unswerving in his alle- giance to the political principles he was taught in


IO31


BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY AND PORTRAIT GALLERY.


early youth. He was originally a Whig, and cast his first presidential vote for Henry Clay. When the Whig party was merged into the Republican organization Mr. Berkey continued a faithful sup- porter of its doctrines. He has never been a poli- tician, never craving official positions, but in 1859 he was elected alderman from his ward and served his neighbors in the city council off and on until 1870. He was county commissioner for six years. In 1871 he was elected to the legislature, serving for one term. He was appointed Indian commissioner to settle claims arising from the massacre of 1862.


Mr. Berkey has been very actively interested in the affairs of the Chamber of Commerce, and has always been a strong advocate of all the progres- sive measures adopted by that body. He was one of its organizers in 1867, and has been a member ever since.


Mr. Berkey's family consists of his wife, hereto- fore mentioned, his only son, John A., Mrs. John A. Berkey, née Miss Minnie DeGraff, only daughter of Andrew DeGraff, and their five chil- dren. John A. Berkey is engaged in conducting the light and water corporations of Little Falls Minnesota.


Mr. Berkey is modest and retiring in his dispo- sition, finding his happiest moments in the circle of his home and in the society of his grandchildren.


Such is the biography of one of the foremost men of Minnesota. He owes the position he has reached and the fortune he possesses entirely to his own unaided efforts. He struggled from the


poverty of his younger days to the possession of wealth. He climbed from the very bottom to the pinnacle of success.


For forty years he has resided in St. Paul, and during that time his name has never been con- nected with anything but the most honorable deeds. No man has ever assailed his character, nor none ever denied that he was public-spirited . and enterprising. He has lived during a remark- ble period of our country's history. He has seen the common highways superseded by railroads- the canal boat give away to the iron horse. Elec- tricity in all its stages has been put to practical uses during his lifetime. The great western prairies have been changed from a wild unbroken expanse to the fertile farms and beautiful cities and hamlets of our day. Such men as Mr. Berkey have developed this country. To the hard-work- ing, energetic, never-tiring sons of the eastern states the great development of the west and northwest is due. The men who have built up the cities of the west are entitled to a promi- nent position on the pages of the history of that section, and in years to come, when this and many future generations be underneath the sod-when this country of ours will have her place as the ar- bitrating commander of the earth-historians will examine the contemporary histories of the pres- ent and will write essays upon the character of the western pioneer, who not only developed the country which he made his home, but left to his descendants the proud title of being descended from a self-made man.


ROGER S. MUNGER,


DULUTH, MINN.


T "HE city of Duluth has all the natural ad- vantages requisite to enable her, the zenith city of the northwest, to become a great metrop- olis and take her position as a commercial rival of Chicago. Of all situations hers is by far the best in the west for the location of a commercial cen- ter. Roger S. Munger has virtually been the father of Duluth ; he has dearly loved his child, and anything that he considered would develop the infant in strength was bestowed with a lavish hand. The great flouring industry was nourished


by him, the still greater pig-iron furnaces are due to his foresight and confidence in the future of this city.


Roger S. Munger is a son of Sherman and Lucretia (Benton) Munger, natives of Connecti- cut. He was born in North Madison in that state, February 25, 1830. His boyhood was passed in New Haven, to which place the family removed. He had the benefit of the public schools of that city, and, in addition, completed a course at the Hopkins Grammar School, prepar-


1032


BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY AND PORTRAIT GALLERY.


atory to entering Yale College. He decided, however, not to take the college course, though fully prepared for it, and at the age of twenty-one began his business career. For six years he had sole charge of a large music store in New Haven. At the end of that time he went west, spent one year in Iowa and then removed to St. Paul, where he engaged in the music business with his brother, Russell C. Munger. Mr. Munger was largely in- strumental in securing the location of the capital and organizing the company that built the Grand Opera House in St. Paul.


In 1869 Mr. Munger settled in Duluth, and formed a partnership in the lumber business with Mr. R. A. Gray, which continued about six years. In 1872 the firm of Munger, Markell and Com- pany, consisting of Mr. Munger, Clinton Markell, Russell C. Munger (heretofore mentioned), and another brother, Gilbert Munger, a distinguished American artist, who, for several years, has re- sided in Paris, France. The firm built the second elevator at the head of Lake Superior, known as Elevator No. 1, which was burned in 1880. After a few years Russell C. and Gilbert Munger with- drew, and the firm has since been Munger and Markell. Mr. Munger has always been closely connected with the grain and elevator business of the city. Under the joint management of him- self and Colonel C. H. Graves the elevators of the Lake Superior Elevator Company, furnishing storage for eight million bushels of grain, have been constructed. In 1883 the firm of Munger and Markell built the Grand Opera House in Duluth. A pet scheme of Mr. Munger's had long been the building in Duluth of a large flouring mill, and his hopes in that direction are now real- ized in the Duluth Imperial Mill. Through his exertions on June 30, 1888, the Imperial Mill Company was organized, capitalized for one mill- ion dollars, with R. S. Munger, president and treasurer ; T. A. Olmstead, vice-president, and B. C. Church, secretary and manager. The capital paid up is five hundred and fifteen thousand dol- lars. In September, 1889, the mill began grind- ing, with a daily capacity of six thousand barrels, and is now one of the largest mills in the world. The " Allis Roller" system is used.


Mr. Munger is also president of the Duluth Iron and Steel Company, a corporation organized entirely through his efforts. Fifty per cent of all


the iron ore produced in the United States is mined in the Lake Superior region. The Duluth Iron and Steel Company was organized in May, 1888, and capitalized for one million dollars. Its officers are R. S. Munger, president, and W. H. H. Stowell, secretary and treasurer. Its property consists of forty acres at West Duluth, having a river frontage of one thousand feet on the St. Louis river. The depth of water at the docks is twenty feet, enabling large vessels to unload ore immediately on the company's docks. The plant consists of a single furnace with stack, sixteen feet bosh and seventy-five feet high, having a capacity of one hundred and fifty tons of pig- iron daily, and consuming two hundred tons of ore (estimated), one hundred and fifty tons of coke and forty tons of lime. The cast-house contains three Gordon, Whitwell and Cooper stoves, with capacity of fifteen thousand feet of air per min- ute ; sixteen boilers, one Weimer blowing engine, with pumps, hoisting engines and other parapher- nalia, making a complete furnace as modern in design and as substantial in construction as the country could furnish. The works constructed simply cover blast furnace for manufacturing pig- iron, but it is the intention to erect steel works to convert this iron into the different kinds of steel, such as plates, structural iron, merchant iron and steel rails. The products of this plant will be used in this immediate vicinity, but the country tributary to Duluth is so immense that after this furnace is running successfully others will be constructed to supply the demand.


The quality of the ore of the Lake Superior district is conceded to be of the very finest in the United States. The ores are now shipped as far east as Troy, New York, and Pittsburgh, Penn- sylvania. The price of coal in Duluth is very low, owing to the low freights charged by return- ing grain vessels, and it is but reasonable to predict that within a quarter of a century Duluth will be the greatest iron and steel center of the United States. The ores of Lake Superior em- brace magnetic, red hematite and brown hema- tite, all lying in unheard-of quantities within a short distance.


Scarcely any large public enterprise has in re- cent years been undertaken in Duluth in which Mr. Munger has not been financially interested, and to the success of which he has not materially


IO33


BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY AND PORTRAIT GALLERY.


contributed. He is a director of the Duluth and Winnepeg Railroad Company, and has rendered valuable assistance in securing other railroad facili- ties for his city. Beside his connection with the firm of Munger and Markell, the Duluth Iron and Steel Company, the Lake Superior Elevator Com- pany and the Imperial Mill Company, he is inter- ested as president of the People's Savings Bank of Duluth. Mr. Munger has recently completed the finest block of residence buildings ever erected in the State of Minnesota. On an elevation, four blocks from the main business street of the city, this row of handsome dwellings is located. The grounds are laid out as a park, and from them one may get a view of surrounding country of sur- passing beauty and grandeur. The broad stretch of Lake Superior, and the entire city and harbor


of Duluth, can be seen from this location. The block of buildings will long stand as a monument to the enterprise of Mr. Munger.


In 1858 Mr. Munger married at Vassalboro, Maine, Miss Olive Gray. They have two daugh- ters. Such is the biography of the most enter- prising citizen of Duluth. Roger S. Munger has accomplished more for the city of Duluth than any individual that claims that city as his home. He has always assisted, both with his influence and his purse, any enterprise that would advance the prosperity of Duluth and the country tribu- tary to that city. His record of twenty-three years as a resident of Duluth has caused his name to be known and respected throughout the north west. He is admired for his enterprise and ambition, and esteemed and honored by all.


INDEX.


Adams, John Q.


204


Allen, Gordon W .


395


Allerton, Samuel W. 281


Altgeld, John P


278


Ames, Eli B.


853


Anderson, James C.


172


Andrews, Alexander B


563


Ankeny, Alexander T.


967


Armour, Philip D.


5


Ashcraft, Edwin M


57


Auerbach, Maurice


966


Avery, Daniel J


236


Ayer, Benjamin F


726


Babb, E. C ..


920


Baines, Oscar O.


755


Baker, William T. 722


Baldwin, Melvin R.


973


Banning, Ephraim.


220


Barber, Hiram.


645


Barber, Daniel R 886


Barbour, George M.


793


Barnard, Gilbert W.


I50


Barnes, William A


996


Barrett, John P.


39


Barrows, Rev. John H.


I37


Barton, Humphrey


925


Bassett, Daniel.


IO15


Bassett, Joel B.


882


Baxter, Lewis T.


639


Beidler, Henry.


168


Bell, John E.


975


Bell, James S.


980


Bemis, Henry V 697


Benton, Rueben C. 946


Berkey, Peter


1030


Best, William 294


Billings, Cornelius K. G. 265


Bishop, Judson W.


951


Blakeley, Russell


982


Block, W. Thomas. 461


Bogue, George M.


116


Bonney, Charles C.


224


Brackett, George A.


1018


Bradley, Alva W.


903


Brand, Michael.


802


Bredenhagen, William C. 929


Brown, Henry F


862


Brintnall, Solva.


120


Brisbin, John B. 970


Bristol, Rev. Frank M. 212


Bryan, Thomas B. 38


Bryant Henry B.


197


Buffum, Joseph H. 458


Bulloch, Augustus G.


517


Bunn, Charles W


919


Burgett, John M. H.


408


Burnham, Daniel H.


86


Burton, Hazen


926


Butler, Edward B.


306


Butler, Julius W


378


Byam, John W


695


Byford, Henry T


340


Byford, William H.


316


Byford, William H., Jr.


420


Caine, William H., M. D. 937


Camp, Isaac N.


685


Campbell, Benjamin H.


428


Carey, John R.


969


Case, Theodore G


805


Cass, George W


474


Castle, Henry A.


956


Chalmers, William J. 273


Chase, Horace G ..


594


Cheney, Orlando H.


297


Chumasero, John T


336


Chytraus, Axel .


640


Clarke, George R.


474


Claussenius, Henry


518


Clough, David M.


990


Cobb, Henry 1.


175


Coburn, Lewis L.


532


Coe, Albert L.


366


Colby, John A


149


Coleman, W. Franklin


787


Copeland, William L.


781


Corwith, Henry


656


Counselman, Charles


1007


Coy, Irus. .


74


Crane, Charles S.


482


Crerar, John


50


Cudahy, John.


232


Cudahy, Michael


200


Dale, William M.


255


Danforth, Isaac N.


190


Davies, Charles F.


309


Davis, Cushman K.


917


Davis, George R.


12


Davis, Marcus J


959


Dearing, Sam.


1010


Deering, William.


616


DeGraff, Andrew.


932


Delamater, Nicholas B ..


609


Dent, Thomas ..


I22


Depew, Chauncey M.


449


Dewar, Alexander L


252


Dewey, David B.


40


De Wolf, Calvin.


350


DeWolf, Oscar C.


159


De Young, Benjamin R.


667


De Young, M. H.


473


Dexter, Ransom


590


Dickinson, John T 756


Dixon, Arthur.


436


Dolese, John.


424


Donahower, Jeremiah C.


883


Donaldson, Willianı


943


Donnersberger, Joseph.


531


Doolittle, James R.


82


Doran, Michael.


993


Doud, Levi B.


153


Dudley, John ..


936


Dunphy, John M ..


457


Dunwoody, William H.


1002


Durant, Edward W.


977


Earle, Charles W.


785


Eiboeck, Joseph.


481


Elliot, Wyman. IO26


Elliott, Charles B.


994


Ennis, Alfred.


298


Erwin, William W


962


Espy, Major J


948


Eustis, William H.


876


Everingham, Lyman.


386


Ewing, Adlai T.


780


Exall, Henry.


510


Fairbank, Nathaniel K


740


Farwell, John V.


113


Ferguson, Charles H.


610


Ferguson, Sam T.


1000


Field, Marshall.


100


Fischer, Siegfried M.


768


Fishell, Albert.


643


Fisk, Franklin W.


184


Flandrau, Charles E.


814


Fletcher, Loren.


894


Fletcher, Henry E.


906


Forbes, Melvin J.


921


Forgan, James B


875


Foss, George E.


423


Foss, James F. R.


843


Foster, Charles H.


335


Fowler, Anderson.


52


Frake, James.


329


Freshwaters, Milton R.


682


Frost, Charles S. .


87


Furnas, Robert W.


513


Gage, Frank N 432


Gage, Lyman J. 8


Gale, Edwin O 400


Gardner, Peter G. 677


Gartside, John M


614


Gary, Noah E. 529


Gassette, Norman T 208


Getty, George F. 981


Giles, Charles K. 69


Gillett, Egbert W


374


Gilman, John E.


452


Gobel. Elias F.


5.36


Goodman, William O. 635


Goudy, William C


34


Gould, Elwyn B. 277


Grannis, Amos 760


Grannis, William C. D 33


Graves, Charles H.


991


Gray, William H. 244


Greene, Frank C 259


Greene, Frank R.


729


Greenfield, Charles E. 673


Greenleaf, Franklin L. 944


Greenlee, R. S. and R. L. 790


Gresham, Walter Q. 715


Griswold, Edward P 478


Gross, Samuel E. 78


Grosvenor, Lemuel C. 468


Gunderson, S. T. 692


Gunther, Charles F


310


Haas, Charles L. 928


Hamill, Charles D. 199


Hamilton, David G. 540


Hammer. D. Harry. 526


Harper, John E 548


Harris, N. W 240


Harvey, Turlington W 396


Haskell, Loomis P 655


Hatch, Azel F.


130


Head, Franklin H


584


Hedges, Samuel P.


176


Heffelfinger, Christopher B 1028


Henderson, Charles M I34


Henrotin, Charles 144


Henrotin, Fernand. 109


Herrick, Edwin W. 846


216


Law, William, Jr.


445


Lawrence, Edward F 286


Lawrence, James W.


960


Lee, William 924


Leiter, Levi Z. 321


Leland, Warren F 179


Leslie, John H.


602


Lindsay, William.


419


Linton, Alonzo H. . 978


Lowry, Thomas 1004


Ludlam, Reuben.


228


Lyman, David B. 558


McCormick, Cyrus H.


62


McCormick, Cyrus H., Jr.


718


McDonald, John S. 899


McFatrich, James B. . 390


McGill, Andrew R. 838


Mcintyre, Robert. . 743


McKey, Henry 407


McNeil, Malcom. 260


Mahoney, Joseph P 415


Mallette, James P: 606


Marshall, Charles B. 871


Marshall, James D. 315


Martin, John. 930


Mason, William E. 160


Massey, George V 501


Mead, Aaron B. 362


Mead, Warren H. 880


Menage, Louis F. IO16


Mendenhall, Richard J. 918


Menzel, Gregor.


1008


Merriam, William R ..:


878


Millard, Sylvester M. 411


Miller. John S. 717


Mitchell, Clifford. 721


Mitchell, Joseph S. 490


Moore, James H 404


Morrison, Clinton. 848


Morrison, Darilus 872


Morse, J. C. 953


Moulton, George M. 564


Munger, Roger S. IO31


Munn, Benjamin M. 171


Munn, Daniel W. 77


Murray, William P. 933


Nathan, Adolph. 774


Neiler, Samuel E .. 854


Nelson, Benjamin F. 884


Nelson, Rensselaer R. 1024


Newman, Jacob 583


Nickerson. Samuel M. 18


Norton, James S.


305


Noyes, Henry C.


483


O'Brien, Christopher D. IO23


Odell, John J. P.


215


Ogden, Edwy J . 772


Olmstead, Stanley C. 961


Ostrom, Olof N.


888


Oswald, John C. 898


Otis, E. A.


243


Owings, Francis P


777


Palmer, Percival B 247


Palmer. Potter.


702


Palmer, Thomas W. 416


Payne, John B.


799


Pearsons, Daniel K


330


Peck, Ferdinand W. 106


Peyton, Hamilton M. 931


Phelps, Edmund J. 870


Pillsbury, Charles A. 816


Hulbert, Alvin.


572


Hunt, Charles N. 891


Hurlbut, Vincent L. 544


Hutchins, Albert E. 57 1


Hutchinson, Charles L


Hutchinson, Jonas. 148


lves, John H. 899


Jackson. Huntington W 119


Jacobs, Benjamin F. 290


Jacobs, William V .. 597


Jamieson, Malcolm M 61


Jaycox, Elbert E.


98


Jeffery, Edward T 708


Jenney, William L. 92


Johnson, Charles 598


Johnson, Edward M. IO12


Johnson, Hosmer A. 194


Johnson, John P. 873


Johnson, William E. W 730


Jones, Edwin S. 909


Jones, J. M. W 522


Jones, Joseph R. 140


Jones, Samuel J .. 164


Judd, Edward J


557


Judson, Charles E.


789


Kahn, Felix. 539


Keith. Edson. 58


Keith, Elbridge G.


Kelley, Austin F. 923


Kellogg, Frank B. 893


Kennett, Francis J. 514


Kent, Sidney A. 126


Kern, Charles. 580


Kerr, Charles D. 836


Ketcham, James P. 759


Ketcham, William P 377


Kimball. Mark. 349


King, Henry W. 104


King, William F 552


Kirk, James S. 223


Kirk, John B. 248


Kistler, Louis.


733


Kittelson, Charles 902


Kuh, Abraham 779


Lacey, Edward S. 712


Langdon, Robert B. 826


Herrick, Roswell Z


497


Hesing, Washington


105


Higgins, Van H.


46


Hill, Henry 938


Hill, Lysander 274


Hilliard, Laurin P 322


Hoch, James J 659


Hoffmann, Francis A., Jr. 803


Holdom, Jesse. 589


Hollister, John H. 628


Horn, Henry J. 842


Howard, Martin. 365


Pillsbury, Fred. C.


889


Pillsbury, George A.


913


Herrick, John J.


INDEX.


Pillsbury, John S. 910


Pike, Eugene S 16


Pinkerton, Allan 671


Pluemer, Adolph. 463


Porter, Rev. Jeremiah.


344


Porter, Washington


502


Porter, Willard H.


431


Pratt, Horace W. 890


Pratt, Willis H. 863


Pratt, Edwin H.


746


Prince, John S.


824


Pullman, George M. 734


Purdy, Warren G. 339


Purington, D. V


615


Quick, John H. S 262


Ramsey, Alexander 818


Ray, James D. 892


Rea. John P. 954


Ream, Norman B. 22


Remy. Curtis H.


494


Rend, William P 28


Revell, Alexander H. 486


Reynolds, Henry J. 530


Reynolds, Stephen A 509


Rhodes, J. Foster


632


Rich, Arthur D.


561


Robinson, Lewis W 587


Rosenberg, Jacob.


389


Rothschild, Abram M. 506


Russell, Edward W


44 1


Russell, Robert D.


867


Ryder, Merrell 908


Sanborn, John B. 828


Saul, George W 767


Sawin, George. 361


Sawyer, Andrew J. 874


Scales, Frank.


187


Scheffer. Albert 922


Schintz, Theodore. 412


Schneider, George. 70


Schuyler, Daniel J. 797


Schwab, Charles H. 125


Scott, Albert G.


613


Scott, James W


56


Searles, Jasper N. 999


Seeberger, Anthony F 133


Seeley, Francis W. 985


Senn, Nicholas. 370


Sexton, James A. 251


Shaw, John M .. 856


Shepard, Jason H. 446


Sherman, John B. 110


Shufeldt, Henry H.


442


Sibley, Henry H. 986


Sidle, Henry G. 822


Silverman, Lazarus 664


Singleton, William F 764 801


Skiff, Fred. J. V


Smith, Abner.


189


Smith, George T. 668


Smith, James, Jr. 852


Smith, Robert A. 844


Smith, Willard A.


467


Southworth, John M.


795


Spalding, Albert G. 686


Staples, Isaac 904


Stearns, William M 663


Stecle, D. A. K. 435


Stensland, Paul O. 624


Stevens, Hiram F. 860


Stickney, Alpheus B. 984


Stickncy, Edward S. 620


Stobie, Charles S


555


Stocker, Henry D. 841


Streeter, John W. 698


Strong, William E. 88


Swenie, Denis J.


745


Symonds, Henry R.


464


Tawney, James A 958


Tenney, William M. 887


Thatcher. Augustus T. 674


Thoman, Leroy D 326


Thomasson, Nelson.


282


Thompson, William H. 266


Thorpe, John . . 725


Tobey, Frank B. 704


Tousley, Orson V. 547


Truax, Charles


256


Tucker, Henry S 382


Tuohy, James W. 782


Tuthill, Richard S.


129


Tyler, Milton R.


855


Vanderburgh, Charles E 895


Van Inwagen, James 636


Vocke, William. 568


Wacker, Charles H 648


Wacker, Frederick. 646


Wadsworth, Francis L 498


Walker, Edwi 24


Walker, Francis W 605


Walker, James H. 358


Walker, Thomas B 807


Waller, Thomas M 505


Warvelle, George W. 678


Washburn, Cadwallader C. 868


Washburn, William D. 864


Washburne, Hempstead. 385


Watry, Joseph. 652


Weigley, Frank S.


572


Welles, Henry T. 834


Wellington, Cyrus. 1001


Wheeler, George H 236


Wheeler, Harris A. 659


Wheeler, Newton C. 68 [


Whitfield, George W 485


Whitney, Loren H. 354


Widener, Peter A. B. 493


Wilce, Thomas 576


Willard, George 354


Williams, Abram. 180


Williams, George T. 94


Williams, J. Fletcher 821


Williams, John F 751


Wilson, John P. 631


Wilson, John R.


73


Windrow, Sven. 752


Winston, Fendall G 900


Winston, Philip B. 974


Wolff, Ludwig 660


Wolford, Peter.


950


Wyman, James T


879


Yerkes, Charles T 154


Young, Austin H. 945


Young, George B 845


Young, James C.


850


Young, Winthrop.


849


Zier, Edward B.


1014


INDEX.


1038





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