USA > Massachusetts > Suffolk County > Boston > Boston of to-day; a glance at its history and characteristics: with biographical sketches and portraits of many of its professional and business men, 1892 > Part 71
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WINDSOR, SARAH SWEET, M.D., was born in Smith- field, R.I., Aug. 10, 1863. Her early education was obtained in Greenville, and in the Providence, R.I., High School. Then she entered the Boston University, and took the courses in the College of
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BOSTON OF TO-DAY.
Liberal Arts and the School of Medicine. After graduating from the latter, in 1885, she spent a year in the Massachusetts Homeopathic Hospital as house surgeon, and then went abroad. There .she studied in Vienna, Paris, and Freiburg. Re- turning to Boston in 1887, she began the practice of her profession. Her specialty is obstetrics, and she is assistant in obstetrics in the Boston University School of Medicine. She is a member of the Boston Homeopathic Medical Society.
. WINGATE, JAMES I., was born in Gorham, Me., June 4, 1837. He came to Boston in 1854, and builder of the well-known firm of Standish & Wood- was employed by the old house of Charles S. Burgess & Co., painters and decorators, on Hawley .street, until 1860. Then, in company with the late Thomas H. Burgess, brother of Charles S., he suc- ceeded to the business, under the firm name of Burgess & Wingate. In 1866 Mr. Wingate with- drew from the firm, and since then has been in business on his own account. He has decorated many of the largest public buildings and private residences in Boston and vicinity, notably the Hotel Brunswick, the Boylston, Hospital Life, Fiske, new State Street Exchange, Telephone and Equitable Buildings, and the new Court House, and their handsome interiors testify to his artistic taste and ability. He is an active member of the Master Builders' Association, one of the board of trustees in 1886 and 1887, vice-president in 1888, 1889, and 1890, and president in 1891.
WOOD, CHARLES GREENLEAF, son of David and Dolly (Greenleaf) Wood, natives of Newburyport,. was born in that city July 28, 1822. His father was a graduate of Harvard in 1814.and afterwards a sea captain. The son was educated at Dummer Academy and came to Boston in 1838. Here he obtained a position as clerk for John Wetherell in the dry- goods business, and later became his partner, under the firm name of Wetherell, Stone, & Wood. Mr. Wetherell died in 1854, and subsequently the firm of Stone, Wood, & Baldwin was established, later changed to Stone, Wood, & Co. Mr. Wood retired in 1867, and travelled abroad for a year and a half. In 1875 he became treasurer of the John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company, a posi- tion he still holds. He is a member of the board of government of the Homeopathic Hospital, and was treasurer for five years. He was treasurer of the American Unitarian Association also for five years. He is an active member of Rev. Edward E. Hale's church, and was a member of the standing committee for twenty-six years. In politics he is
Republican. He is a member of the Art Club, vice- president two years and president three years. He was married in 1847, to Miss Sarah H., daughter of the late John W. Bradlee, of Boston. She died in 1852. They had two children : Elizabeth Bradlee, now wife of Francis R. Allen, architect, Boston, and Charles G. Wood, who married a daughter of ex- Lieutenant-Governor Knight, of Massachusetts, and is in business in New York city.
WOODBURY, ISAAC F., was born in Salem, N.H., Oct. 31, 1849. He learned his trade as mason and
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ISAAC F. WOODBURY.
bury. In 1875 he formed a copartnership with George E. Leighton, under the firm name of Wood- bury & Leighton, and they have become one of the most important building-concerns in the city. Their large workshop and extensive lumber-yard on Malden street are thoroughly equipped for mason and carpenter work of every description, and they employ from two hundred to five hundred workmen. They are the builders of the new Public Library on Copley square, and the Harvard Medical School Building, next it on Boylston street ; of a large number of down-town business buildings, notably several of the new structures on Kingston street, the Boylston Building on Washington and Boylston streets, the John H. Pray Building, and the Farlow Building on State street ; of numerous pri-
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vate residences on the Back Bay ; the St. Stephen's Church in Lynn ; and many other fine structures. They are also the owners of the plant of the Mil- ford Pink Granite Co., of Milford, who received the diploma at the Charitable Mechanic Exhibition of 1890, for the beauty and fineness of texture of their granite. Of this material the Public Library and the Eliot Church are built. Mr. Woodbury is a member of the Master Builders' and of the Char- itable Mechanic Associations. He was married in 1873, to Miss Emma F. Woodbury, and resides in Allston, with his family of seven children.
WOODS, SOLOMON ADAMS, son of Colonel Nathaniel. dered more practical by the inventions of Mr. and Hannah (Adams) Woods, was born in Farm- ington, Me., Oct. 7, 1827. On the paternal side he is descended from Samuel Woods, an original landed proprietor of Groton, Mass., where the family long lived; and on the maternal side in the sixth generation from Captain Samuel Adams, magistrate and representative of Chelmsford, Mass., in its first half-century. Mr. Woods' paternal grandfather was a pioneer at Farmington, and his father a leading man in the town. The son. was brought up on a good farm, and attained his edu- cation in the district school and at the Farmington Academy. At the age of twenty he engaged with a
SOLOMON A. WOODS.
local carpenter to learn the use of tools and the trade of house-building. Four years later he came
to Massachusetts to purchase machinery for the manufacture of doors, sashes, and blinds, his purpose being to erect a mill in his native town and to enter this business in partnership with his former employer. Instead, however, of carrying out this plan he en- gaged in the same business in Boston, as a journey- man, with Solomon S. Gray. Within the first year Mr. Woods purchased the plant, and of the Ist of January, 1852, went into the manufacture on his own account. In 1854 he entered into partnership with Mr. Gray, under the firm name of Gray & Woods, for the manufacture and sale of a wood-planing machine, originally designed by Mr. Gray, but ren- Woods. This partnership continued for five years, during which period additional improvements were patented. In 1865 Mr. Woods' business, then conducted under his name alone, was considerably extended by the addition of the manufacture of the Woodbury planer, with the Woodbury patented im- provements, of which he was the sole licensee ; and to meet its demands, he erected manufacturing works in South Boston, and established branch houses in New York and Chicago. Eight years after, in 1873, the S. A. Woods Machine Company, with a. capital of three hundred thousand dollars, was formed, Mr. Woods as president. This position he still holds. More than fifty patents for devices and improvements in machines for planing wood and making mouldings have been issued to the suc- cessive firms of Gray & Woods, S. A. Woods, and the S. A. Woods Machine Company, and they have received nearly a hundred gold, silver, and bronze medals from the Massachusetts Charitable Mechanic
. Association and other similar institutions. Mr. Woods has been a member of the Boston common council (1869, 1870, and 1871), in which he served on important committees and took a leading part ; in 1870 and 1871 he was a director of the East Boston ferries; and in 1878 he declined a nomination to the board of aldermen, pressed upon him by both the Republican and Citizens' parties. Since 1870 he has been a trustee of the South Boston Savings Bank, and for many years a member of its board of investment. Mr. Woods was married in Boston, Aug. 21, 1854, to Miss Sarah Elizabeth Weathern, of Vienna, Me. She died in 1862, and he was again married, in 1867, to Miss Sarah Catharine Watts, of Boston. He has three children : Frank Forrest, Florence, and Frederick Adams Woods.
WOODWORTH, DWIGHT SIDNEY, M.D., son of Sidney and Gratia L. (Reed) Woodworth, was
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455
BOSTON OF TO-DAY.
born in Greenfield, Mass., Sept. 3, 1851. His dent of the common council, and of the board parents moved to Fremont, O., when he was quite of overseers of the poor. Dr. Woodworth was married Sept. 25, 1875, in Fitchburg, to Miss Emma L., adopted daughter of Dr. H. H. Brig- ham ; they have two children, Laura A. and Ethel A. Woodworth.
WORTHEN, ALBERT PARKER, son of Samuel K. and Sarah F. (Parker) - Worthen, was born in Bridgewater, N.H., Sept. 8, 1861. He attained his education in the town schools of Bristol, N.H., and the New Hampton Institute, from which he graduated in 1881. He studied law in the Bos- ton University Law School. Graduating in 1885, he was admitted to the bar the same year. Since that time he has practised his profession, with offices in Boston and Weymouth. Mr. Worthen is unmarried.
WRIGHT, GEORGE, son of Samuel and Ann (Tone ) Wright, was born in Harlem (New York city), in 1847. He was educated in the public schools, and began his business career as clerk in a down-town office when a lad of fourteen. At a later period he took up ball-playing, and in course of time, when yet a young man, became a noted athlete and base- ball player. He has been a member of the Union
young, and there he obtained his early education in the public schools. When he was but fourteen years old his father died, leaving the family in somewhat straitened circumstances. He then "hired out " to a grocer, working noons and evenings for his board and clothes, with the privilege of attending school. He remained in the West, engaged suc- cessively in the grocery, clothing, and dry-goods trade, until 1870, when he -came to Boston and entered the employ of C. F. Hovey & Co. While here he began the study of medicine. Removing to Fitchburg in 1873, he continued his studies there with Dr. H. H. Brigham. Then he studied in the College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York city, and graduating in the class of 1876, he returned to Fitchburg and at once began the practice of his profession. From 1879 to 1886 he served as city physician of Fitchburg. He is now medical director of the Massachusetts Mutual Aid Society, medical examiner of numerous secret societies, and surgeon of the board of examiners for pensions. He is a member of the Massachu- setts Medical Society. He belongs to a number of the social and benevolent organizations of Fitch- GEORGE ZWRIGHT. burg, and is especially prominent in the Masonic and Odd Fellows orders. He has been a member of Morrisianna and Cincinnati Base Ball Clubs, and of the school board, and its president ; also presi- his wonderful playing as a short-stop has never been
DWIGHT S. WOODWORTH.
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BOSTON OF TO-DAY.
equalled. He is now of the well-known Boston firm of Wright & Ditson, dealers in athletic goods. Mr. Wright was married in 1872, to Miss Abbie A. Coleman ; they have four children : Lillie A., Georgiana, Beals Coleman, and Irving Cloutman Wright.
WYMAN, HENRY A., was born in Skowhegan, Me., Feb. 3, 1861. He received his early education in his native place. At the age of fourteen years he came to Boston and was employed here in a wholesale store. After a few years, having saved sufficient money, he went to Baltimore, Md., where he studied privately under his uncle, Professor Lovejoy, dean of the late Baltimore University. He returned to Boston, and was engaged as secre- tary to the chief engineer of the Hoosac Tunnel. He held this position one year and then entered the Michigan University, but remained there only a short time, owing to ill-health. In 1883 he en- tered the Boston University School of Law, and was graduated in 1885, eighth in a class of sixty. He was admitted to the bar the same year, from the office of Judge Bennett. Afterwards he en- tered the office of the attorney-general, first as clerk; then he was made second assistant at- torney-general, which place he held during the term of Mr. Waterman, and finally resigned to accept the position of first assistant United States district attorney. In the fall of 1889 he was ap- pointed lecturer on criminal law in the place of the dean at the Boston University Law School. His father, Henry A. Wyman, was a lawyer of Maine and partner of Hon. Stephen Coburn. Mr. Wyman was married in 1891.
YOUNG, JOHN FRANCIS, M.D., son of Neil Young, was born in Boston Feb. 12, 1854. His gen- eral education was begun in the public schools here, and continued in Clongowes Wood College, Ireland ; then, returning to Boston, he entered the Harvard Medical School, and graduated M.D. in 1879. Again going abroad, he further pursued his medical studies in Dublin, London, and Paris. Upon his return home he was appointed house surgeon to the Boston City Hospital. Later he was assistant sur- geon of the First Battalion Massachusetts Cavalry. In 1885 he was made a trustee of the City Hospi- tal. He is a member of the Massachusetts Medical ·Society. Dr. Young was married Sept. 24, 1884, to Miss Caroline M. Blake, of Boston.
YOUNG, WILLIAM N., was born in Provincetown, Mass., July 8, 1831, and was educated there. He came to Boston when a young man, and soon en- tered the building and contracting trade as a mem- ber of the firm of Ross & Young. When, in 1859, Mr. Ross removed to the West, he formed a co- partnership with George L. Richardson, who had been a member of the firm of Nottage & Richard- son, then dissolved, under the firm name of Rich- ardson & Young. They have continued together to the present time. Their work in Boston has been extensive and important, including the construction of substantial buildings entire, although their spe- cialty is interior finish in woods of all kinds." Mr. Young is an active member of the Master Builders' Association, and one of the directors of the Chari- table Mechanic Association. In 1856 he was mar- ried to Miss Betsey M. Small. He resides in the Charlestown district.
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INDEX TO BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES.
A.
Abbott, Josiah G., 120. (ill.) Adams, Charles D., 121. Adams, Henry S., 121. Adams, Melvin O., 121. (ill.) Adams, Waldo, 122. Aldrich, Henry O., 122. (ill.) Aldrich, Samuel N., 123. Alger, Alpheus B., 123.
Alger, Edwin A., 123. (ill.)
Allen, Frank D., 124. (ill.)
Allen, Gardner W., 124.
Allen, Stillman B., 125.
Allen, Walter B., 125. Amerige, C. Wardwell, 125.
Ames, Oliver, 125. (ill.)
Anderson, Elbridge R., 126.
Andrews, Augustus, 126. Andrews, Robert R., 126.
Andrews, William H. H., 127. (ill.)
Angell, George T., 127. (ill.)
Apollonio, Nicholas A., 128. Armstrong, George W., 128. (ill.)
Aspinwall, William, 129. (ill.)
Atkinson, Byron A., 130. Atwood, Harrison HI., 130. (ill.) Avery, Edward, 131. (ill.) Ayers, George D., 132.
.
B.
Babbitt, George F., 132.
Babcock, James F., 132.
Babson, Thomas M., 133. Bacon, Edwin M., 133. Bacon, Lewis H., 133. Bailey, Andrew J., 134. (ill.) Bailey, Dudley P'., 135. (ill.) Bailey. Hollis R., 135. Baker, Almena J., 135.
Baker, Charles II., 136. (ill.)
Baker, George T., 136.
Baker, Henry A., 136. Balch, George II., 137. Ball, Henry B., 137. Ball, Joshua D., 137. (ill.)
Ball, Josiah W., 137. Barnes, Charles M., 138. Barnes, Henry J., 138. (ill.)
Barrett, William E., 138. Bartlett, Charles W., 139. Bateman, Charles J., 139. (ill.)
Bates, Phineas, 140. Beach, Henry II. A., 140. (ill.)
Beal, Caleb G., 140. (ill.) Beard, Alanson W., 141. Belcher, Orlando F., 141. Bell, Thomas F., 141. Bellows, Howard P., 142.
Bennett, Edmund H., 142. (ill.)
Bennett, Frank P., 142. (ill.)
Bennett, Samuel C., 143.
Benton, Josiah H., jr .. 143. (ill.) Berry, John K., 144. Besarick, John II., 144.
Bigelow, George B., 144.
Bigelow, Jonathan, 144. Bigelow, Lyman F., 145.
Binney, Arthur A., 145. Bird, Francis W., 145. Birtwell, Joseph, 145. Blackall, Clarence II., 146. Blackmar, W. W., 146. Blair, Isaac, 146. (ill.) Blake, Francis, 147. (ill.)
Blake, George F., 148. (ill.) Blake, S. Parkman, 149. Blake, William P., 149. Blanchard, Benjamin S., 149. Blood, Hiram A., 149. (ill.) Blood, Robert A., 150. Blunt, William E., 150. Boardman, Halsey J., 150. (ill.)
Bond, Charles H., 151. (ill.)
Boothby, Alonzo II., 151. Bosson, Albert D., 151. Bosworth, Nathaniel, 152. Bouve, Walter L., 152. Bowen, Henry J., 152. (ill.)
Brackett, Elliott G., 152.
Brackett, John (. . A., 153. (ill.)
Bradford, Henry W., 153. Bradley, William L., 153. (ill.) Brady, Hugh E., 154. Brechin, William P., 155. (ill. ) Breed, Francis W., 155. (ill.) Breed, Joseph J., 155. (ill.) Bridgham, Percy A., 156. (ill.) Briggs, Frederick M., 156.
Brigham, Charles, 156. Bright, William E., 157. (ill.) Brine, William H., 157. (ill.) Broderick, Thomas J., 158. Brooks, Francis A., 158. (ill.) Brooks, George M., 158.
Brooks, Phillips, 158.
Brown, Buckminster, 159.
Brown, Enoch S., 160. (ill.) Brown, J. Merrill, 160. Bryant, John D., 160. Bryant, Lewis L., 160. Bryant, Napoleon B., 161. (ill.)
Buchanan, Joseph R., 162.
Buckley, Melville B., 162. (ill.)
Bullard, William N., 163. Burdett, Joseph O., 163. (ill.)
Burke, John H., 163. Burnham, Lamont G., 163. (ill.) Burns, Mark F., 164. (ill.) Burr, Chauncy R., 165. Burrage, Walter L., 165. Burrell, Herbert L., 165. Burrell, Isaac S., 165. Burt, George L., 166. (ill.) Burt, John HI., 166. (ill.) Bush, J. Foster, 167. (ili.) . Butler, J. Haskell, 167. (ill.) Butler, John H., 168.
C.
Cahill, Charles S., 168. Campbell, Charles A., 168. Campbell, Benjamin F., 168. (ill.) Campbell, Samuel S., 169. (ill.) Candage, Rufus G. F., 169. (ill.) Candler, John W., 170. (ill.)
Capen, G. Walter, 171. Capen, Samuel B., 172. (ill.) Carleton, Guy H., 172. Carney, Michael, 172. Carson, Howard .1., 173. Carter, Henry HI., 173. Carter, Solomon, 173. Chamberlain, Myron 1 .. , 174. (ill.) Chandler, Henry B., 174. (ill.) Chandler, Parker C., 175. Chandler, Peleg W., 175. (ill.)
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458
INDEX.
Cutter, Dexter J., 201. Cutter, Leonard . R., 201.
D.
Dabney, Lewis S., 201. (ill.)
Dabney, William H., 202.
Dale, William J., jr., 202.
Daly, James M., 202 (ill.)
Dallinger, William W., 202.
Damon, George L., 203. (ill. ) Damrell, Charles S., 204.
Damrell, John S., 204. (ill.)
Davis, Samuel A., 205. (ill.)
Davis, Thomas W., 205.
Day, Albert, 205.
Dean, Benjamin, 206. (ill.)
Dean, Josiah S., 206.
Flower, Richard C., 227. (ill.)
Floyd, David, 228.
Flynn, Edward J., 228.
Fogg, John S. H., 229.
Fogg, William J. G., 229.
Follett, John A., 229. (ill.)
Folsom, William A., 229. (ill.)
Forsaith, William J., 230.
Clough, George A., 186.
Disbrow, Robert, 210.
Cobb, Frederick C., 186.
Codman, Charles R., 186.
Codman, John T., 187. (ill.)
Doane, Thomas, 211.
Dobson, John M., 211. (ill. )
Dodge, Charles A., 212.
Dodge, Charles H., 212. (ill.)
Dodge, J. H., 212.
Doggett, Frederick F., 213. (ill.)
Doherty, Philip J., 213.
Donnelly, Charles F., 213.
Gahm, Joseph, 233. (ill.)
Gale, William B., 234.
Gallagher, Charles T., 234.
Galvin, George W., 234.
Galvin, John M., 235. (ill.)
Coolidge, Charles A., 192.
Coolidge, William H., 192. Cooney, P. H., 192. Corcoran, John W., 192. (ill.)
Corse, John M., 193.
Cotter, James E., 193. (ill.)
Dunn, William A., 216. (ill. )
Durgin, Samuel H., 217. Dutton, Samuel L., 217. (ill.)
E.
Eames, George F., 218. (ill.)
Eddy, Otis, 218.
Edgerly, Martin V. B., 218. (ill.)
Elder, Charles R., 219. Elder. Samuel J., 219. (ill.)
Elliott, George B., 220.
Ely, Frederick D., 220 (ill.) Emerson, William R., 220. Emery, William HI., 221.
Emmons, Freeman, 221. (ill.) Endicott, William C., 221. English, James S., 222.
Ernst, George A. O., 222. (ill.) Evans, Alonzo H., 223.
F.
Fall, Charles G., 223. Faxon, Henry H., 223. (ill.)
Fee, Thomas, 224.
Fenderson, Lory B., 224.
Fisher, Theodore W., 224.
Fiske, George M., 224. (ill.)
Fiske, John M., 225. Fitch, Robert G., 225. (ill.)
Clapp, Charles M., 181. Clapp, Dwight M., 182. Clapp, Herbert C., 182. Clapp, James W., 182.
Clark, Augustus N., 182. Clark, Charles E., 182.
Clark, C. Everett, 183.
Clark, Chester W., 183.
Clark, Edward W., 183. (ill.)
Devens, Charles, 207. (ill.)
Devine, William H., 208.
Dewey, Henry S., 208.
Dexter, Wallace D., 209.
Dickinson, Marquis F., jr., 209. (ill.)
Dillaway, W. E. L., 209. (ill.)
Foss, James H., 230. Fox, John. A., 230. French, J. Warren, 230.
Frink, Alden, 231.
Frost, George E., 231.
Frost, Rufus S., 231. (ill.)
Fuller, Frank S., 232. (ill.)
Fuller, Lorin I .. , 233. (ill.)
G.
Connery, Walter J., 190. (ill.)
Converse, Alfred C., 190. (ill.) Converse, Elisha S., 191. Cook, John H., 192. Cooke, Frederick A., 192.
Doogue, William, 214.
Dore, John P., 214.
Dorr, Jonathan, 215. Dow, James A., 215.
Dowsley, John F., 215.
Draper, Henry S., 215.
Drisko, Alonzo S., 215. Duane, John H., 215. Dudley, Sanford H., 216.
Galvin, Owen A., 235. (ill.) Gannett, George, 236. Gargan, Thomas J., 236. (ill.) Garland, George MI., 236. Gaston, William, 237. (ill.) Gaston, William A., 237. (ill. )
Coy, S. Willard, 194. Creech, Samuel W., jr., 194. Crocker, George G., 194. Crocker, John M., 195. Cuddihy, John J., 195. Culver, Jane K., 196. Cunniff, Michael M., 196. (ill.) Cunningham, Thomas E., 196. Currier, Frank D., 197. Curry, George E., 197. (ill.)
Curtis, Benjamin R., 197. (ill.)
Cushing, Ernest .W., 198. (ill.) Cushing, Henry G., 199. Cushing, Ira B., 199. (ill.) Cushman, George T., 200. Cutter, Charles K., 200. Cutter, Charles R., 200,
Fitz, Frank E., 226.
FitzGerald, Desmond, 226.
Flood, Thomas W., 226.
Flower, Benjamin O., 227. (ill.)
Dearborn, Charles E., 206.
Dennison, George, 207.
Clarke, Augustus P., 184. (ill.) Clarke, Thomas W., 184. Clement, Edward H., 185. Clements, Thomas W., 185. Clifford, Henry M., 185. (ill.)
Ditson, Oliver, 210. (ill.) Dixon, Lewis S., 210.
Coggan, Marcellus, 188. (ill.) Colby, John H., 188. Coleman, E. B., 188. (ill.)
Collins, Patrick A., 189. (ill.) Comer, Joseph, 189. Conant, William M., 189.
Gavin, Michael F., 238. Gay, George W., 238. (ill.) George, Elijah, 238. (ill.) Gerrish, James R., 239. Gilman, Raymond R., 239. (ill.) Gilson, Alfred HI., 239. Glines, Edward, 239. (ill.) Gooch, Joseph L., 240. Goodrich, Frederick E., 240. Goodspeed, Joseph HI., 241. Gove, Wesley A., 241. Graham, Douglas, 241. Graham, John R., 242. (ill.) Grainger, William HI., 242. (ill.) Grant, Melville (., 243. (ill. ) Graves, Chester HI., 243. Gray, Orin T., 244.
Chandler, Thomas H., 176 Chapin, Charles T., 177. Chapin, Nahum, 177. (ill.) Chapman, John H., 177. Chase, Andrew J., 177. Chase, Caleb, 178. (il !. ) Chase, Horace, 178. (ill.) Chenery, Elisha, 178. (ill.) Cheney, John E., ISo. Child, Linus M., 18o. (ill.) Church, Adaline B., 180. Churchill, Gardner A., 18I. (ill.)
459
Green, Charles M., 244. (ill.) Greenough, Francis B., 245. (ill.) Grinnell, C. A., 245. Gunter, Adolphus B., 246.
·
H.
Haberstroh, Albert, 246. (ill.) Hadlock, Harvey D., 247. (ill. ) Haile, William H., 248. (ill.) Hale, Edwin B., 24S. Hall, Boardman, 248. (ill.) Hall, E. H., 249. Hall, William D., 249.
Halsey, Frederick W., 249.
Hamlin, Edward S., 250. (ill.)
Hammer, Charles D., 250.
Jones, Frank, 275. (ill.)
Jones, Leonard A., 276. (ill.)
Jordan, Henry G., 277.
K.
Keany, Matthew, 277. (ill.)
Kellogg, Edward B., 278.
Kellogg, Warren F., 278. (ill.)
Kendall, Henry H., 279.
Kendrick, George W., jr., 279. (ill.)
Kennedy, Alonzo L., 279.
Kennedy, George G., 279. (ill.)
Kenny, James W., 28o. (ill.)
Kimball, Charles W., 280. Kimball, John W., 281. (ill.)
Kimball, Leonard M., 282. Kimball, Samuel A., 282.
Kimpton, Carlos W., 282. (ill.)
Kimpton, Edwin S., 282. (ill.) Kingman, Hosea, 283. (ill.) `Kingman, Rufus A., 283.
Kinsman, Edgar O., 283. Knight, Frederick I., 283. Knight, Joseph K., 284. Knowles, William F., 284.
L.
I.aforme, Vincent, 284.
Langmaid, Samuel W., 285. (ill.)
Lathrop, John, 285. (ill.)
Lawrence, William B., 285. Leach, Elbridge C., 286.
Leach, Elbridge G., 286. Leatherbee, William II., 286. Lee, William H., 286. (ill.) Leighton, George E., 287. (ill.) Leighton, John W., 28S.
Leland, George A., 288. (ill.) Leonard, George H., 288. (ill.)
Leseur, Horatio, 289. Lewis, Charles H., 289. (ill.)
Lewis, Edwin J., jr., 200. Lewis, G. Wilton, 290. Lewis, Isaac N., 290. (ill.) Lewis, Weston, 291.
Lewis, William W., 291. Lincoln, Albert L., 291. Lincoln, Solomon, 292. (ill.)
Lincoln, William, 292.
Linscott, Daniel C., 293. (ill.)
Litchfield, George A., 293. (ill.)
Little, Arthur, 294. Little, John M., 294. Locke, Fred A., 294.
Lockwood, Rhodes, 294.
Longfellow, Alexander W., jr., 295.
Loring, Caleb W., 295.
Loring, Edward P., 296.
Loring, George F., 296.
Lothrop, Augustus, 296. (ill.)
Lothrop, Daniel, 297. (ill.)
Lovell, Benjamin S., 297.
Lovell, John P., 298. Lovering, Henry B., 298.
Lovett, Joseph, 299.
Lowell, John, 299. (ill.)
Lund, Rodney, 300.
M.
Mainland, John Y., 300. (ill.)
Manchester, Forrest C., 300. (ill.)
Manning, John P., 301.
Marcy, Henry O., 301.
Martin, Augustus P., 301. (ill.)
Martin, William H., 302. (ill.)
Matthews, Nathan, jr., 302. Maxwell, J. Audley, 303. (ill.) Maynadier, James E., 304. McCall, Samuel W., 304. McCormack, Alexander L., 304. McDonald, James A., 304. (ill.) Macdonald, William L., 305.
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